| Literature DB >> 25284893 |
Stefanie Caroline Linden1, Edgar Jones2.
Abstract
During the First World War the National Hospital for the Paralysed and Epileptic, in Queen Square, London, then Britain's leading centre for neurology, took a key role in the treatment and understanding of shell shock. This paper explores the case notes of all 462 servicemen who were admitted with functional neurological disorders between 1914 and 1919. Many of these were severe or chronic cases referred to the National Hospital because of its acknowledged expertise and the resources it could call upon. Biographical data was collected together with accounts of the patient's military experience, his symptoms, diagnostic interpretations and treatment outcomes. Analysis of the notes showed that motor syndromes (loss of function or hyperkinesias), often combined with somato-sensory loss, were common presentations. Anxiety and depression as well as vegetative symptoms such as sweating, dizziness and palpitations were also prevalent among this patient population. Conversely, psychogenic seizures were reported much less frequently than in comparable accounts from German tertiary referral centres. As the war unfolded the number of physicians who believed that shell shock was primarily an organic disorder fell as research failed to find a pathological basis for its symptoms. However, little agreement existed among the Queen Square doctors about the fundamental nature of the disorder and it was increasingly categorised as functional disorder or hysteria.Entities:
Keywords: Case histories; First World War; Hysteria; Neurology; Psychopathology; Trauma
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25284893 PMCID: PMC4176276 DOI: 10.1017/mdh.2014.51
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Hist ISSN: 0025-7273 Impact factor: 1.419
Figure 1:Minutes from the Board of Management meeting, 10 November 1914, Queen Square Archives; appended to the minutes is an article by Lord Knutsford: ‘To the editor of the Daily Mail’ (exact date unknown).
Clinical and socio-demographic characteristics of all soldiers with functional symptoms admitted to the National Hospital from August 1914 to the end of 1919.
| Number of cases/Consultant | Dr Tooth: 84 |
| Dr Collier: 78 | |
| Dr Taylor: 71 | |
| Dr Turner: 55 | |
| Dr Russell: 52 | |
| Dr Buzzard: 32 | |
| Dr Batten: 32 | |
| Dr Wilson: 21 | |
| Dr Howell: 14 | |
| Dr Steward: 12 | |
| Dr Holmes: 7 | |
| Dr Saunders: 4 | |
| RMO (junior doctor) | Yealland: 196 |
| Walshe: 45 | |
| Adrian: 14 | |
| Military rank | Privates: 382 (83%) |
| NCOs: 76 (16%) | |
| Officers: 4 (1%) | |
| Average age [years] | |
| Duration of symptoms [weeks] | |
| Length of stay at QS [days] | |
| Nationality | British: 411 |
| Irish: 19 | |
| Belgian: 13 | |
| Canadian: 9 | |
| Australian: 9 | |
| South African: 1 | |
| Year of admission | 1914: 5 |
| 1915: 122 | |
| 1916: 121 | |
| 1917: 94 | |
| 1918: 87 | |
| 1919: 33 | |
| Marital status | Married: 281 |
| Single: 181 | |
| Referred from | British hospital/home: 204 |
| Front line (Hospital): 53 | |
| Wounded in battle | |
| Exposed to front-line service | |
| Past history of mental problems | |
| Family history of mental illness | |
| Contemporaneous diagnosis* | Functional disorder: 166 |
| Neurasthenia: 76 | |
| Hysteria: 85 | |
| Neurosis: 61 | |
| Shell shock: 32 | |
| Traumatic neurosis/concussion: 15 | |
| Psychasthenia: 7 | |
| Dementia praecox: 8 | |
| Depression: 3 | |
| (Exhaustion psychosis): 5 | |
| Reflex nervous disorder: 2 | |
| Malingering: 2 | |
| Symptoms* | Involuntary movements (shaking, tremor, choreatic movements, abnormal gait etc.): 85 |
| Visual disturbance (blindness, diplopia etc.): 10 | |
| Deafness: 11 | |
| Motor disturbances other than involuntary movements: 201 | |
| Somato-sensory disturbance: 139 | |
| Speech disturbances (aphonia, stutter etc.): 65 | |
| Pseudo-seizures: 34 | |
| Anxiety and depression: 98 | |
| Dissociative states: 17 | |
| Catatonic symptoms: 6 | |
| Pain and autonomic dysfunction: 105 | |
| Psychotic symptoms: 5 | |
| Result of treatment (as indicated in notes) | Cured: 186, |
| Improved: 212, | |
| In status quo: 60 | |
| Worse: 4 | |
| Recommendation for ‘Fitness for military service’ | Active service: 3, |
| Home service: 41, | |
| Garrison service: 1, | |
| Discharge, ‘no further use’: 64, | |
| Furlough and duty: 11, | |
| Furlough and light duty: 38, | |
| Already discharged from military service: 57 | |
| Treatment | Faradism: 191 (commonly combined with re-education and suggestion), |
| Isolation: 44 | |
| Physical treatment (massage, baths, heat etc.): 189, | |
| Exercises: 100, | |
| Persuasion: 5 |
One patient can have several diagnoses and symptoms from several symptom groups.
Figure 2:Consultants at Queen Square, 1906. Back row, left to right: Donald John Armour, Frederick Eustace Batten, James Collier, Percy Sargent, Edward Farquhar Buzzard. Middle row, left to right: Walter Tate, Charles Edward Beevor, James Samuel Risien Russell, Alphonso Elkin Cumberbatch, William Richard Gowers, Victor Alexander Haden Horsley, Charles Alfred Ballance, William Aldren Turner, James Taylor, Marcus Gunn, Howard Henry Tooth. Front row, left to right: Felix Semon, Thomas Buzzard, John Hughlings Jackson, Henry Charlton Bastian, David Ferrier, Joseph Arderne Ormerod; Gordon Holmes was appointed consultant in 1909; Queen Square Archives, QSA/880.
Cases of soldiers with functional disorders where triggering event was mentioned, .
| Trauma category | Specific trauma | Number of men affected |
|---|---|---|
| Physical | Injury during front-line service | 76 |
| Burial | 50 | |
| Accident during construction work (bridge, dugout etc.) | 10 | |
| Accident with horses (horse fell on him, kicked soldier, fall from horse) | 8 | |
| Operation | 2 | |
| Accident during home leave (fell down underground stairs, stepped out of bus) | 3 | |
| Total physical | 149 | |
| Psychological | Shell explosion (without injury) | 111 |
| Gas attack | 9 | |
| Prospect of returning to front-line | 5 | |
| Vaccination | 3 | |
| Trouble at home (wife affair, children or wife ill) | 6 | |
| Witness of comrade’s injury/death | 20 | |
| Air raid, Zeppelin raid | 4 | |
| Emergency landing | 2 | |
| Total psychological | 160 | |
| Somatic illness | Flu, syphilis, tuberculosis etc. | 18 |
| Total somatic illness | 18 |
Figure 3:Private Henry M. with functional facial spasm; photograph attached to case record; Henry M., Queen Square Records, Dr Tooth, 1915, Queen Square Archives.