Literature DB >> 22530374

The fight for 'traumatic neurosis', 1889-1916: Hermann Oppenheim and his opponents in Berlin.

Bernd Holdorff1.   

Abstract

The concept of traumatic neurosis conceived by Hermann Oppenheim (1858-1919) located post-traumatic nervous symptoms between hysteria and neurasthenia, considering them a consequence of physical reactions to fright and a cause of molecular tissue changes. As early as 1890, his concept was criticized at an international congress in Berlin. In February 1916, there was a significant debate of the issue in Berlin, and eventually Oppenheim's concept was completely defeated at the war meeting of German neuropsychiatrists in September 1916 in Munich. In the Berlin debate, a range of views on war neurosis was presented. Partly as a result of this, but also due to the powerful position of Oppenheim himself, it was not until after the end of WWI that traumatic neurosis was excluded from medico-legal assessments. The differing views of physiological brain-mind relations from that time do not differ greatly from present concepts. However, Oppenheim's traumatic neurosis with its more quasi-neurological picture should not be equated with PTSD.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22530374     DOI: 10.1177/0957154X10390495

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hist Psychiatry        ISSN: 0957-154X


  1 in total

1.  [Hermann Oppenheim. Comments on his life and works].

Authors:  L Färber; B Lattrell; A-K Adloff; T Welsh; V Heeschen; H-P Hartung
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 1.214

  1 in total

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