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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mental diseases; a public health problem, by
-James Vance May
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Mental diseases; a public health problem
-
-Author: James Vance May
-
-Release Date: April 26, 2017 [EBook #54611]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MENTAL DISEASES ***
-
-
-
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-Produced by MWS, Ralph, Bryan Ness and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note:
-
-Punctuation and possible typographical errors have been changed.
-Archaic and variable spelling have been preserved.
-Footnotes appear at the end of the text, after the Index.
-Cover image created by the transcriber and placed in the public domain.
-
-
-
-
- MENTAL DISEASES
-
- _A Public Health Problem_
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES V. MAY, M.D.
-
- Superintendent, Boston State Hospital, Boston, Mass.; Fellow, and
- Chairman of the Committee on Statistics, of the American Psychiatric
- Association; Fellow of the American Medical Association, etc.
-
- Formerly, Superintendent, Grafton State Hospital, North Grafton, Mass.;
- Medical Member, The New York State Hospital Commission, Albany, N. Y.;
- and Superintendent, Matteawan State Hospital, Beacon, N. Y.
-
- WITH A PREFACE BY
-
- THOMAS W. SALMON, M.D.
-
- Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University; Medical Advisor to the
- National Committee for Mental Hygiene, New York City
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- BOSTON
-
- RICHARD G. BADGER
-
- THE GORHAM PRESS
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY RICHARD G. BADGER
-
- All Rights Reserved
-
-
- Made in the United States of America
-
- The Gorham Press, Boston, U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-Interest in mental disorders is no longer confined to the relatively
-small number of persons whose duties or family ties bring them into
-daily contact with the mentally ill. Disorders that so profoundly
-affect human conduct were certain, sooner or later, to attract the
-attention of those who are interested in the study of human behavior
-in its broadest relations or who have special responsibilities with
-reference to the conduct of individuals and require all the information
-that they can secure on factors that modify the reactions of men,
-women or children in the social environments in which they live and
-die. Uncertain of themselves until they made sure of the sciences
-upon which their future work was to develop, social workers since the
-commencement of organized social work in this country demanded of the
-sciences concerned with the human mind some information that might aid
-them in dealing with the difficult problems in human adaptation which
-they found constituted the chief part of social work. Judges and those
-who are interested in penology have within recent years turned also
-to the students of abnormal human behavior for light upon problems of
-crime and delinquency. With mental hygiene becoming firmly established
-as a practical field of preventive medicine, another group of persons
-not directly concerned with the care of the mentally ill has become
-deeply interested in the forms, types and causes of mental illness.
-It is by such readers, quite as much as physicians, medical students
-and nurses, that Dr. May's work in bringing together the main facts
-regarding mental diseases and the people who suffer from them will be
-appreciated. For those whose interest in the subject is incidental
-and not part of a life-long study, the information here presented will
-be of special value. There are, it is true, many technical works on
-mental diseases in their medical, social and legal relations, but it
-is doubtful whether elsewhere there can be found in a single volume as
-much varied information as that which Dr. May has brought together.
-
-There is probably no group of diseases about which there is such
-widespread popular ignorance or misinformation as those that affect
-the mind. People who would be ashamed not to have accurate information
-regarding the more important infectious diseases and more than
-general knowledge of the means by which they are transmitted speak
-of "insanity" as if there were a single disorder to which that name
-could properly be applied, and are without the slightest knowledge
-of the different forms of mental diseases, the periods of life in
-which they appear, their main characteristics and the means by which
-they terminate. Statistics relating even to those persons with mental
-disorders who are cared for in special institutions are usually
-quite unfamiliar to persons who have more than an ordinary amount of
-information regarding the prevalence of other diseases. Such a book as
-this will go far toward supplying the extraordinary lack of knowledge
-of conditions that have exceedingly important social and economic
-relations and from the study of which many lessons can be drawn that
-are applicable to human affairs far removed from those relating to
-patients in our hospitals for the insane.
-
- THOMAS W. SALMON.
-
- Larchmont, New York,
- January 11, 1922.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PART I. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS.
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF MENTAL
- DISEASES 15
-
- II. THE EVOLUTION OF THE MODERN HOSPITAL 34
-
- III. LEGISLATION AND METHODS OF ADMINISTRATION 50
-
- IV. THE STATE HOSPITALS—THEIR ORGANIZATION AND
- FUNCTIONS 68
-
- V. THE HOSPITAL TREATMENT OF MENTAL DISEASES 84
-
- VI. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PSYCHOPATHIC HOSPITAL 104
-
- VII. THE MENTAL HYGIENE MOVEMENT 121
-
- VIII. THE ETIOLOGY OF MENTAL DISEASES 138
-
- IX. IMMIGRATION AND MENTAL DISEASES 155
-
- X. MENTAL DISEASES AND CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 169
-
- XI. THE PSYCHIATRY OF THE WAR 185
-
- XII. ENDOCRINOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY 202
-
- XIII. THE MODERN PROGRESS OF PSYCHIATRY 217
-
- XIV. THE CLASSIFICATION OF MENTAL DISEASES 234
-
-
- PART II. THE PSYCHOSES
-
- I. THE TRAUMATIC PSYCHOSES 253
-
- II. THE SENILE PSYCHOSES 266
-
- III. THE PSYCHOSES WITH CEREBRAL ARTERIOSCLEROSIS 280
-
- IV. GENERAL PARALYSIS 293
-
- V. THE PSYCHOSES WITH CEREBRAL SYPHILIS 308
-
- VI. THE PSYCHOSES WITH HUNTINGTON'S CHOREA,
- BRAIN TUMOR AND OTHER BRAIN OR NERVOUS
- DISEASES 323
-
- VII. THE ALCOHOLIC PSYCHOSES 344
-
- VIII. THE PSYCHOSES DUE TO DRUGS AND OTHER EXOGENOUS
- TOXINS 363
-
- IX. THE PSYCHOSES WITH PELLAGRA 378
-
- X. THE PSYCHOSES WITH OTHER SOMATIC DISEASES 392
-
- XI. THE MANIC-DEPRESSIVE PSYCHOSES 409
-
- XII. INVOLUTION MELANCHOLIA 427
-
- XIII. DEMENTIA PRÆCOX 440
-
- XIV. PARANOIA AND THE PARANOID CONDITIONS 461
-
- XV. THE EPILEPTIC PSYCHOSES 475
-
- XVI. THE PSYCHONEUROSES AND NEUROSES 489
-
- XVII. THE PSYCHOSES WITH PSYCHOPATHIC PERSONALITY 504
-
- XVIII. THE PSYCHOSES WITH MENTAL DEFICIENCY 524
-
- INDEX 537
-
-
-
-
-AUTHOR'S PREFACE
-
-
-In presenting a preliminary consideration of the subject of mental
-diseases as a public health problem the author is actuated by no other
-motive than that of stimulating the undertaking, at some future time,
-of a comprehensive investigation and survey of an important field which
-has never been systematically and adequately studied in the past.
-Under existing circumstances the facts necessary for an intelligent
-discussion of this question are unfortunately not obtainable. We
-have, as will be shown, practically no information whatever as to the
-incidence of mental diseases in the community. Hospital statistics are
-still in such a chaotic state that we are not even in a position to
-speak authoritatively of that part of the population which is entirely
-within our supervision and control in institutions. Before any progress
-can be hoped for we must at least have at our disposal accurate data
-relative to the patients within the walls of our hospitals. This
-presupposes a uniform scheme of statistical reports based upon some
-common viewpoint. Adequate preparations for this undertaking have been
-made by the American Psychiatric Association and the National Committee
-for Mental Hygiene. Every hospital for mental diseases in the country
-has been urged to cooperate in this movement. To show the necessity for
-more actively prosecuting this research has been one of the principal
-purposes of this book.
-
-In elaborating somewhat briefly the conception of the various psychoses
-generally accepted by American psychiatrists, and for that reason
-included in the classification adopted by the Association, every effort
-has been made, as far as possible, to show the steps which have led up
-to present developments. The author has endeavored to confine himself
-to reflecting the views of others throughout and has used actual
-quotations from recognized authorities as far as was deemed advisable.
-In the discussion of the various psychoses frequent references will be
-noted to the description of the various clinical groups contained in
-the manual prepared by the Committee on Statistics for the American
-Psychiatric Association. As is shown in the manual, these definitions
-and explanatory notes were formulated by Dr. George H. Kirby.
-
-Special reference should be made to the important contributions to
-the literature of psychiatry of such well-known American writers as
-Meyer, Hoch, Kirby, White, Barrett, Campbell, Southard, Peterson,
-Diefendorf, Jelliffe, Paton, Salmon, Russell, Buckley, Rosanoff,
-Orton, Singer and many others. The work of Kraepelin, Bleuler, Nissl,
-Alzheimer, Freud, Jung, Stekel, Janet and others abroad has exercised
-an influence on the psychiatry of the day which must be recognized. We
-are very largely indebted to Pollock and to Furbush for the available
-information relating to the incidence of the various psychoses in this
-country. To the American Psychiatric, for many years the American
-Medico-Psychological, Association we owe an exhaustive historical
-review of the institutional care and treatment of mental diseases in
-the United States and Canada.
-
-Obviously this work was not intended as a textbook, nor was it designed
-to serve the purpose of one. It is an appeal to those who are already
-familiar with the fundamental principles of psychiatry. For that
-reason the interpretation of mental mechanisms given so much space in
-textbooks has been entirely omitted and no reference is made to the
-treatment of the individual psychoses. Such reliable statistical data
-as could be gathered from recent hospital reports and publications
-have been utilized in full. The following institutions were represented
-in this study:
-
-
- 1. MASSACHUSETTS—fourteen hospitals (1919-1920): Boston State
- Hospital, Boston; Bridgewater State Hospital, State Farm; Danvers
- State Hospital, Hathorne; Foxborough State Hospital, Foxborough;
- Gardner State Colony, Gardner; Grafton State Hospital, North Grafton;
- McLean Hospital, Waverley; Medfield State Hospital, Harding; Monson
- State Hospital, Palmer; Northampton State Hospital, Northampton; State
- Infirmary, Tewksbury (Mental Wards); Taunton State Hospital, Taunton;
- Westborough State Hospital, Westborough; Worcester State Hospital,
- Worcester.
-
- 2. NEW YORK—thirteen hospitals (1912-1919): Binghamton State
- Hospital, Binghamton; Brooklyn State Hospital, Brooklyn; Buffalo
- State Hospital, Buffalo; Central Islip State Hospital, Central Islip;
- Gowanda State Homeopathic Hospital, Collins; Hudson River State
- Hospital, Poughkeepsie; Kings Park State Hospital, Kings Park, L. I.;
- Manhattan State Hospital, Ward's Island, New York City; Middletown
- State Homeopathic Hospital, Middletown; Rochester State Hospital,
- Rochester; St. Lawrence State Hospital, Ogdensburg; Utica State
- Hospital, Utica; Willard State Hospital, Ovid.
-
- 3. Twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other states:
-
- ARKANSAS—State Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Little Rock (1917-1918).
-
- COLORADO—Colorado State Hospital, Pueblo (1917 and 1918).
-
- CONNECTICUT—Connecticut State Hospital, Middletown (1917 and 1918);
- Norwich State Hospital, Norwich (1905-1918 inclusive).
-
- MARYLAND—Springfield State Hospital, Sykesville, 1919; Spring Grove
- State Hospital, Catonsville, 1918 and 1919.
-
- MICHIGAN—Pontiac State Hospital, Pontiac, 1917 and 1918; State
- Psychopathic Hospital, Ann Arbor, 1917 and 1918; Traverse City State
- Hospital, Traverse City, 1917 and 1918.
-
- MONTANA—Montana State Hospital, Warm Springs, 1917 and 1918.
-
- NEW JERSEY—Essex County Hospital, Overbrook, 1918.
-
- PENNSYLVANIA—State Hospital Southeastern District of
- Pennsylvania, Norristown, 1919.
-
- SOUTH CAROLINA—South Carolina State Hospital, Columbia, 1918.
-
- UTAH—State Mental Hospital, Provo, 1918.
-
- VERMONT—Vermont State Hospital, Waterbury, 1917 and 1918.
-
- VIRGINIA—Central State Hospital, Petersburg, 1919; Western State
- Hospital, Staunton, 1919.
-
- WASHINGTON—Eastern State Hospital, Medical Lake, 1917 and 1918;
- Northern State Hospital, Sedro Woolley, 1917 and 1918.
-
- WEST VIRGINIA—Spencer State Hospital, 1917 and 1918; Weston State
- Hospital, Weston, 1917 and 1918.
-
-These institutions may, I think, be looked upon as fairly
-representative of the hospitals of this country. Based on their
-official reports an analysis has been made of over seventy thousand
-consecutive first admissions.
-
-There is no disposition on the part of the writer to overestimate the
-value of statistical studies. Our conclusions should, however, be
-based as fully as possible on facts rather than on abstract theories
-or individual observations alone. The social, economic and clinical
-aspects of mental diseases must all be given adequate consideration if
-psychiatry is to fulfill its obligation to the community and assume a
-dignified rôle in the advancement of modern medicine.
-
- JAMES V. MAY.
-
- Boston, Mass.,
- December 15, 1921.
-
-
-
-
- PART I
-
- GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
-
-
-
-
- MENTAL DISEASES
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF MENTAL DISEASES
-
-
-The importance of mental diseases as a factor in the social and
-economic welfare of the community has not been given adequate
-consideration, notwithstanding the remarkable progress of modern
-psychiatry. Nor is this influence, unfortunately, one which can be
-easily estimated or accurately determined. We have, as a matter of
-fact, no data at hand to show the prevalence of disease, either
-physical or mental, with any degree of exactness even under our most
-elaborately organized forms of government. There is no complete
-information available which will enable us to determine the frequency
-of such important conditions as appendicitis, cardiac or renal
-diseases, peritonitis, septic infections, diseases of the eye, ear,
-skin or nervous system. It is true that there are, in the majority of
-states, records of contagious or readily communicable diseases which
-are probably fairly reliable. Aside from this, the only information at
-our disposal is confined to mortality statistics.
-
-This suggests a further consideration of the advisability, if not
-absolute necessity, of more extensive statistical studies of diseases,
-both mental and physical, if the welfare of the community is to be
-safeguarded and the future of medical science assured. Every physician
-should be required by law to make careful reports to the Board of
-Health of his state showing all medical conditions requiring treatment
-by him or coming to his professional notice. The value of such
-information to medical science would much more than compensate for the
-comparatively small cost of such an undertaking. Nor is this procedure
-more radical either in theory or practice than was the proposal to
-report all communicable diseases only a few years since. The data thus
-made available in the various states should be correlated and published
-by the Public Health Service.
-
-The mortality statistics of the United States Census Bureau furnish
-us with a valuable index of the relative frequency of the various
-disease processes which determine the death rate of the community.
-They are based on the transcripts of death certificates received
-from the so-called registration area, which in 1920 had an estimated
-population of 87,486,713. The total number of deaths reported in 1920
-was 1,142,558, a rate of 13.1 per 1,000 of the population. It is true
-that the epidemic of influenza was still a factor of some importance at
-that time. The rate for 1916, however, was fourteen, for 1917 fourteen
-and two-tenths, for 1918 eighteen and one-tenth and for 1919 twelve
-and nine-tenths per 1,000 of the population. The registration area
-now includes thirty-four states:—California, Colorado, Connecticut,
-Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana,
-Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi,
-Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North
-Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
-Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin. It
-is interesting, at least, to note the states not included in the
-registration area:—Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa,
-Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, West
-Virginia and Wyoming. The results obtained from a study of the reports
-from such an extensive district must be looked upon as thoroughly
-representative of the country at large. The last complete statistics
-available are those for 1920. Influenza was still an important factor
-at that time, it being responsible for a death rate of 71 per 100,000.
-The influenza rate was 98.8 in 1919, 302.1 in 1918, 17.3 in 1917, 26.5
-in 1916, 16 in 1915, 9.1 in 1914 and 10.3 in 1912.
-
-The important causes of death in 1920 were as follows:
-
- _Rate per _Percentage_
- 100,000_
- Typhoid fever 7.8 .6
- Malaria 3.6 .3
- Measles 8.8 .7
- Whooping cough 12.5 1.0
- Diphtheria and croup 15.3 1.2
- Influenza 71.0 5.4
- Tuberculosis of the lungs 100.8 7.7
- Other forms of tuberculosis 7.8 .6
- Cancer and other malignant tumors 83.4 6.4
- Simple meningitis 6.0 .5
- Cerebral hemorrhage 80.9 6.2
- Organic diseases of the heart 141.9 10.9
- Pneumonia (all forms) 137.3 10.5
- Other diseases of the respiratory system
- (tuberculosis and pneumonia excepted) 11.6 .9
- Appendicitis and typhlitis 13.4 1.0
- Hernia, intestinal obstruction 10.6 .8
- Cirrhosis of the liver 7.1 .5
- Acute nephritis and Bright's disease 89.4 6.8
- Puerperal septicaemia 6.6 .5
- Other puerperal accidents of pregnancy and labor 12.5 1.0
- Congenital debility and malformation 69.8 5.3
- Violent deaths (suicide excepted) 78.5 6.0
- Suicide 10.2 .8
- Unknown or ill-defined diseases 17.7 1.4
-
-The pneumonia rate (all forms) for 1920 was quite unusual, 137.3 per
-100,000, as compared with 123.5 in 1919, 286.6 in 1918, 150.5 in 1917,
-137.8 in 1916, 133.1 in 1915, 127.3 in 1914, 132.6 in 1913, 132.4 in
-1912, etc.
-
-The following table shows the average rate per 100,000 of some of the
-more important general diseases during a period of eight years (1912,
-1913, 1914, 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918 and 1919):
-
- Typhoid fever 13.86
- Measles 9.01
- Scarlet fever 4.87
- Whooping cough 10.11
- Diphtheria and croup 16.30
- Tuberculosis (all forms) 144.52
- Cancer and other malignant tumors 80.27
- Cerebral hemorrhage, apoplexy 78.91
- Acute endocarditis and organic diseases of the heart 153.65
- Pneumonia (all forms) 152.98
- Acute nephritis and Bright's disease 101.63
-
-The death rate from diseases of the nervous system is of particular
-interest. The average annual rate per 100,000 of the population for the
-years 1916, 1917, 1918 and 1919 was as follows:
-
- Encephalitis 1.0
- Meningitis (total) 8.17
- Locomotor ataxia 2.27
- Other diseases of the spinal cord (total ) 8.57
- Cerebral hemorrhage, apoplexy 80.57
- Softening of the brain 1.25
- Paralysis without specified cause 7.65
- General paralysis of the insane 6.77
- Other forms of mental alienation 2.17
- Epilepsy 4.07
- Chorea .10
- Other diseases of the nervous system 3.85
-
-This shows a total death rate for nervous and mental diseases of 126.44
-per 100,000. It is a fairly reasonable assumption that of the above,
-the following, at least, may be classified as having been definitely
-associated with psychoses:
-
- _Rate per 100,000_
- Encephalitis 1.0
- Meningitis 8.17
- Softening of the brain 1.25
- General paralysis of the insane 6.77
- Other forms of mental alienation 2.17
-
-We may, therefore, reasonably conclude that there was an average number
-of at least 19.36 per 100,000 (from 1906 to 1910 this amounted to
-32.1) in which the primary cause of death was associated with mental
-diseases, an exceedingly conservative estimate. This does not take into
-consideration the deaths due to senility (15.5) or suicide (12.8),
-conditions which might very logically be included for obvious reasons.
-It is, of course, well known that the psychoses rarely, if ever, appear
-in the death certificates as a primary cause of death. As a matter of
-fact, they are not always shown in the secondary causes. Information
-on this subject is still less satisfactory from a statistical point of
-view. During the year 1917 (contributory causes have not been reported
-since that year) there was a total of 1,066,711 primary causes of death
-shown in the registration area and only 372,291 contributory causes. Of
-this number the following may be classified as having been associated
-with psychoses:
-
- _Disease_ _Primary _Contributory
- Cause_ Cause_
- Encephalitis 620 904
- Meningitis (total) 6,673 6,815
- Softening of the brain 888 722
- General paralysis of the insane 5,248 648
- Other forms of mental alienation 1,651 3,895
- —————— ——————
- Total 15,080 12,987
-
-The contributory causes definitely showing mental diseases constitute
-only 3.4 per cent of the whole number, and the death rate for 1917,
-including both primary and contributory causes suggestive of probable
-psychoses, was 37.2 per 100,000. This would indicate that the number
-of deaths from mental diseases shown in the primary causes represents
-only about fifty-three per cent of all mental cases which are actual
-factors in determining the death rate of the community. A comparison
-of these figures with the number of cases dying in hospitals shows
-that they cannot be looked upon as determining the percentage of the
-general population showing psychoses. Of the 1,952 persons dying
-in the institutions for mental diseases in Massachusetts in 1919,
-approximately nineteen per cent showed the psychoses in the primary
-causes of death. This percentage would probably be fairly constant
-throughout the country. It is, of course, a well recognized fact that
-the death certificate at best is not beyond suspicion and does not
-furnish information regarding the cause of death which can be accepted
-without question.
-
-Dr. Richard C. Cabot[1] has made an elaborate study of errors in
-diagnosis as shown by autopsies. His work shows the following
-percentage of diagnostic accuracy:
-
- _Per cent._
- Diabetes mellitus 95
- Typhoid fever 92
- Aortic regurgitation 84
- Lobar pneumonia 74
- Cerebral tumor 72.8
- Tubercular meningitis 72
- Gastric cancer 72
- Mitral stenosis 69
- Brain hemorrhage 67
- Aortic stenosis 61
- Phthisis, active 59
- Miliary tuberculosis 52
- Chronic interstitial nephritis 50
- Hepatic cirrhosis 39
- Acute endocarditis 39
- Bronchopneumonia 33
- Acute nephritis 16
-
-It must be admitted that Cabot's findings are discouraging. They
-are not so bad as they would seem, however, at first thought. Death
-certificates, unfortunately, do not have the significance which they
-should have. Physicians are well known to be entirely too careless
-in their preparation and inclined to look upon them merely as legal
-formalities which cannot readily be avoided. It is furthermore
-difficult, as every doctor knows, to point to one immediate primary
-cause of death in every instance. Very often there is a combination
-of factors concerned and it is possible at practically every autopsy
-to find lesions not represented in any way whatever in the death
-certificate. It is unquestionably true that statistics of any kind
-must be based on information some of which we know to be inaccurate.
-This should not be used as an argument for discontinuing, absolutely,
-our search for knowledge. It is merely a reason why our clinical
-standards should be improved.
-
-An exceedingly important contribution to our rather limited fund of
-accurate information regarding the general health of the country was
-the publication recently issued by the Metropolitan Life Insurance
-Company[2] on the mortality statistics of wage earners and their
-families. This covers a period of six years (1911 to 1916) and
-represents a study of 635,449 deaths. The cases reported came from
-every state in the union with the following exceptions: Mississippi,
-North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Texas, Nevada, Arizona
-and New Mexico. Canada and many other localities outside of the
-"Registration Area" of the United States Census Bureau were included.
-The facts presented in this report are unique in that they render
-available for the first time a careful and detailed consideration
-of the diseases which may be looked upon as representative of the
-industrial population of the country. The various occupations shown in
-the order of their numerical importance were as follows:—Laborers,
-teamsters, drivers and chauffeurs, machinists, textile mill operatives,
-clerks, office assistants, etc. It covers a study of ten million policy
-holders and nearly fifty-four million years of life in the aggregate.
-The age groups studied range from one year to seventy-five in ratios
-not very different from those exhibited in the general population. The
-death rate for all persons exposed was 11.81 per 1,000 as compared with
-a rate of over thirteen per 1,000 (white) of the general population of
-the registration area during the same period of time. The death rate
-per 100,000 from 1911 to 1916 of some of the more important general
-diseases was as follows:
-
- Typhoid fever 16.8
- Diphtheria and croup 24.3
- Scarlet fever 8.6
- Acute articular rheumatism 6.3
- Diabetes 14.4
- Cancer and other malignant
- tumors 70.0
- Bronchopneumonia 30.2
- Diarrhea and enteritis (over
- two years old) 13.9
- Cirrhosis of the liver 15.0
- Puerperal septicemia 8.1
- Accidents of all forms 75.1
- Ill-defined diseases 10.1
- Measles 8.9
- Influenza 15.0
- Tuberculosis (all forms) 205.1
- Tuberculosis (pulmonary) 173.9
- Alcoholism 4.7
- Diseases of the arteries,
- including atheroma,
- aneurysm, etc. 17.0
- Pneumonia (lobar and
- undefined) 77.5
- Intestinal obstruction 5.9
- Bright's disease 96.8
- Suicide 12.2
- Homicide 7.0
-
-The death rate for syphilis, locomotor ataxia and general paralysis of
-the insane, combined, was 14.3 per 100,000. The percentage of deaths
-due to diseases of the nervous system, many of which must be looked
-upon as probably having been associated with mental disturbances, is
-somewhat surprising, as shown by the following table:
-
- Encephalitis 1.0
- Meningitis 7.8
- Locomotor ataxia 1.5
- Acute anterior poliomyelitis 3.5
- Other diseases of the spinal cord 4.0
- Cerebral hemorrhage (apoplexy) 68.1
- Softening of the brain .9
- Paralysis without specified cause 5.2
- General paralysis of the insane 4.1
- Other forms of mental alienation 1.4
- Epilepsy 3.5
- Convulsions (non-puerperal) .2
- Chorea .2
- Neuralgia and neuritis .6
- Other diseases of the nervous system 2.5
-
-This shows a total rate of 104.5 per 100,000 due to diseases of the
-nervous system. If to this we add those dying of senility and the
-suicides as probably representing psychoses it would bring the total
-up to 123.2 per 100,000. It must be confessed, however, that such
-speculations mean comparatively little.
-
-Practically the only other source of information at our disposal
-relative to the incidence of general diseases in the community is the
-tabulation of communicable diseases by Boards of Heath. The annual
-report of the United States Public Health Service for 1919 shows a
-case rate for diphtheria of 137 per 100,000 of the population based
-on the reports of thirty-seven states. The case rate for measles in
-thirty-seven states was 170. Poliomyelitis in thirty states showed a
-rate of 2.5 and scarlet fever a rate of 110 in thirty-seven states. The
-smallpox rate was sixty-eight and represented thirty-six states. The
-typhoid fever rate for thirty-seven states was only forty. The case
-rate for tuberculosis, all forms, was 346.7 in 1918. It was 274.2 in
-New York, 271.6 in the District of Columbia and 271.3 in New Jersey.
-These were the highest reported in the United States during that year.
-Unfortunately these statistics relate to communicable diseases only.
-This difficulty is due largely to the fact that comparatively few
-states have made attempts to keep elaborate records. The reports of
-Massachusetts are probably as comprehensive as any. The case rate per
-100,000 of the population of all reportable diseases during the year
-1920 was as follows:
-
- Influenza 938.5
- Measles 830.7
- Pneumonia, lobar 143.6
- German measles 12.5
- Pulmonary tuberculosis 173.1
- Tuberculosis, other forms 20.7
- Diphtheria 194.2
- Gonorrhea 186.7
- Whooping cough 258.3
- Scarlet fever 265.2
- Chicken pox 138.4
- Mumps 154.1
- Syphilis 77.2
- Ophthalmia 42.3
- Typhoid fever 24.2
- Dysentery 1.0
- Epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis 4.7
- Malaria 1.6
- Pellagra .4
- Smallpox .7
- Trachoma 2.2
-
-The case rates for influenza and pneumonia cannot be looked upon as
-representative, owing to the epidemic of 1919 and 1920. During 1917
-the death rate from influenza was 12.9 per 100,000 and from pneumonia
-163.8. The death rate from heart diseases (organic diseases of the
-heart and endocarditis) in Massachusetts in 1920 was 178 per 100,000
-of the population, from apoplexy 108.4, cancer and other malignant
-diseases 116.7, Bright's disease and nephritis 92.4, diarrhea and
-enteritis 52.9, violence 76.3, automobile accidents and injuries 11.9
-and suicides 10.1.
-
-It must be admitted that it is exceedingly difficult to establish a
-definite basis for a comparison of our statistics relating to mental
-disorders and those dealing with the frequency of other diseases
-in the community. As has been shown, our information on the latter
-subject, such as it is, has to do only with communicable diseases
-and the reported death rates. In making an analysis of the reports
-of mental diseases we are limited almost entirely to the institution
-population. It is true that these statistics are much more reliable
-than the others, as we are dealing with a stable population entirely
-under control. The cases, furthermore, are almost invariably subject
-to a prolonged observation and careful study. The diagnosis in almost
-every instance is based on elaborate mental examinations and exhaustive
-personal and family histories. It is, of course, true that there are
-innumerable cases of mental diseases outside of institutions. There
-were 18,268 patients at home on visit from the state hospitals alone
-on January 1, 1920. Those not requiring hospital treatment or custody
-in an institution can, however, be eliminated for the purpose of
-comparative studies. The fact that an analysis of death rates alone
-does not throw any light whatever on the frequence of psychoses for
-reasons already given will, I think, be conceded. For statistical
-purposes, at least, it may be assumed that the frequence of mental
-diseases as shown by a study of the hospital population is fairly
-representative of conditions existing in the community.
-
-For purposes of comparison we may contrast the admission rate of mental
-diseases per 100,000 of the population in Massachusetts in 1920 with
-the case rate of communicable diseases as follows:
-
- Mental diseases 101.7
- Chicken pox 138.4
- Diphtheria 194.2
- German measles 12.5
- Gonorrhea 186.7
- Measles 830.7
- Mumps 154.1
- Scarlet fever 265.2
- Syphilis 77.2
- Tuberculosis, pulmonary 173.1
- Tuberculosis, other forms 20.7
- Typhoid fever 24.2
- Whooping cough 258.3
-
-The total institution population (mental cases) at the end of the
-year 1920 represented a rate of 395.49 per 100,000 of the population.
-It should be borne in mind that, with the exception of tuberculosis
-and syphilis, the communicable diseases reported above represent,
-as a rule, the total number of cases in the state during the year.
-Comparative studies should, therefore, be based not on the number
-of mental cases in the hospitals at any one given time, but on the
-total number under treatment during the year. This would indicate _an
-incidence of mental diseases of 566.98 per 100,000 of the population_.
-
-On January 1, 1916, there were 147 state and federal institutions
-for the care and treatment of mental diseases in the United States,
-as shown by the Census Bureau reports. There were at this same time
-twenty-seven institutions for the feebleminded, nine for epileptics,
-three for inebriates, forty-five for tuberculosis, twenty-eight for the
-blind, thirty-three for the deaf, twelve for the blind and deaf and
-eighty-four for the dependent classes.[3]
-
-The appropriations for the maintenance of these institutions for 1915
-amounted to $33,557,058.29. This constituted 7.6 per cent of the
-appropriations made by those states for all purposes. In Massachusetts
-it represented 14.8 per cent, in New Hampshire 10.1, in New York 12.7,
-in Ohio 12, in Indiana 10.7, in Illinois 13.4, and in a number of other
-states over ten per cent of the appropriations for all purposes. It was
-equivalent to an average of $431.16 per million of the total assessed
-valuation of these states. In Massachusetts it was as high as $653.62
-and in New York $567.37. This means thirty-three cents per capita for
-all states, eighty-four cents for Massachusetts and sixty-eight cents
-for New York.
-
-The actual expenditure for the maintenance of these institutions was
-$36,312,662.20. For purposes of comparison, attention should be called
-to the fact that the maintenance of the tuberculosis hospitals of the
-United States for the same year cost $3,539,454.95, institutions for
-criminals $21,244,892.00, for the feebleminded $3,341,442.85, for
-epileptics $1,345,821.57, for the blind $1,066,973.14, for the deaf
-$1,893,490.09 and for the dependent classes $9,675,932.37.
-
-The value of the property invested in the state and federal hospitals
-for mental diseases in 1916 was estimated at $187,028,728.00. The
-valuation of these institutions per 100,000 of the population
-was $184,795.81. This does not include establishments for mental
-defectives. The average value per patient was $938.43. In Massachusetts
-it was $1,097.85 and in New York $1,039.85. In Arkansas it was as high
-as $2,264.00. The total acreage of land was 109,503.2, an average of
-744.9 acres per hospital. There were 33,124 persons employed, an
-average of 226.9 for each institution. This represented one employee
-for every six patients.
-
-The census taken by the National Committee for Mental Hygiene[4]
-in 1920 shows 156 state hospitals for mental diseases, two federal
-institutions, 125 county or city hospitals and twenty-one institutions
-of a temporary care type. In the public and private hospitals for
-mental diseases on January 1, 1920, there were 232,680 patients under
-treatment. Of these, 200,109 were in public and 9,238 in private
-hospitals. This represented an increase of 8,723 in two years. It is
-interesting to note that city and county institutions cared for 21,584
-persons.
-
-The first authoritative information relative to the institution care of
-mental diseases was obtained from the federal census reports of 1880.
-In that year there were 40,942 patients in the public hospitals. In
-1890 there were 74,028; in 1904, 150,151; in 1910, 187,791; in 1917,
-232,873 and in 1918, 239,820. The rate per 100,000 of the population
-increased from 81.6 in 1880 to 229.6 in 1918. From 1910 to 1918 the
-general population increased 13.6 per cent and the hospital population
-27.7 per cent. The rate per 100,000 of the population in institutions
-in Massachusetts[5] on January 1, 1920, was 373.8, in New York 374.6,
-in Connecticut 317.8, in Iowa 248.1, in Wisconsin 300.6, in California
-297.2, in Pennsylvania 215.2, in Ohio 212.1, in Illinois 229.5 and in
-Michigan 210.8. The admission rate per 100,000 of the population in
-1917 was 151.6 in Massachusetts, 109.2 in Illinois, 124.8 in Montana,
-97.3 in New York, 80.9 in Connecticut and 85.7 in California.
-
-The cost of maintenance in the state hospitals increased to
-$43,926,888.88 in 1917 with an average per capita cost of $207.28.
-The number of cases cared for in some of the more populous states is
-of interest. On January 1, 1920, the institution population of New
-York was 38,903, Pennsylvania 18,764, Ohio 12,217, Illinois 14,884,
-Massachusetts 14,399 and California 10,184.
-
-Based on the estimated population of Massachusetts on July 1, 1920
-(3,869,098), the 1,475 deaths in institutions for mental diseases
-would represent a death rate of 38.12 per 100,000 of the population.
-The death rate for other diseases for that year was: diphtheria 15.4,
-measles 9.0, pulmonary tuberculosis 96.7, typhoid fever 2.5, whooping
-cough 14.0, scarlet fever 5.5, syphilis 5.8, lobar pneumonia 71.9
-and influenza 43.9. The importance to be attached, however, to such
-comparisons is very uncertain at best. From the standpoint of social
-and economic importance to the community there is another factor under
-consideration which should not be overlooked. The duration of other
-diseases, as a general rule, is comparatively short. A study of over
-ten thousand deaths in New York state hospitals for mental diseases
-shows the average hospital residence of these cases to have been over
-six years. At the rate of admission to public institutions for 1917
-(62,898) and the average per capita cost for that year ($207.28) the
-care of persons admitted annually, during their years of hospital life,
-would mean an expenditure of over seventy-eight millions of dollars.
-
-If we figured the earning capacity of the 62,000 persons admitted to
-institutions for mental diseases in the United States as averaging only
-one thousand dollars per year, it would represent an economic loss to
-the country of sixty-two millions of dollars annually. Estimated in
-the same way, the total population of the hospitals would represent
-the staggering sum of nearly two hundred and forty million dollars.
-This, of course, does not take into consideration at all the cost of
-maintenance or the property investment represented by hospitals.
-
-To avoid any possibility of confusion, no reference has been made
-heretofore to statistical studies of mental deficiency or epilepsy.
-From a public health point of view, however, and as social and
-economic problems, they are questions which cannot be disregarded
-in a consideration of mental diseases. As a matter of fact, they
-are very closely correlated in many ways. A survey made by the
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene shows that on January 1, 1920,
-there were in this country thirty-two state institutions for mental
-defectives, eleven admitting both feebleminded and epileptics and
-twenty exclusively for the latter class.[6] In addition to this, one
-city institution was reported. Of the private hospitals twenty-seven
-care for the feebleminded only, and six for epileptics, while
-nineteen admit either of these classes. The total number of mental
-defectives in institutions on January 1, 1920, was 40,519. At that
-time 34,836 were in state, 2,732 in other public institutions and
-2,951 in private hospitals. In the following states they are cared
-for in hospitals for mental diseases, no other provisions having
-been made for their treatment:—Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida,
-Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah and
-West Virgina. The states reporting the largest number are New York
-5,762, Pennsylvania 4,281, Massachusetts 3,192, Illinois 3,147, Ohio
-2,435, Michigan 1,849, Iowa 1,704, New Jersey 1,762, Wisconsin 1,624,
-Minnesota 1,502, Indiana 1,264 and Missouri 1,047. At the same time
-there were 14,937 epileptics under treatment, 13,223 in state, 859 in
-other public institutions and 855 in private hospitals. Colorado,
-Delaware, Georgia, Nebraska, New Mexico and Washington take care of
-the epileptics in their hospitals for mental diseases. The intimate
-relation between mental diseases and epilepsy is shown by the fact
-that as nearly as can be determined at this time approximately thirty
-per cent of all of the epileptics in our state institutions have been
-committed as insane. This, however, nowhere nearly includes all of the
-cases which actually show mental disorders of one kind or another. The
-states showing the largest numbers of epileptics are New York with
-1,683, Ohio 1,680 and Massachusetts 1,227. No other states report
-over one thousand, although Michigan and Pennsylvania have over eight
-hundred and Illinois and Missouri over seven hundred.
-
-Although the incidence of mental as compared with other diseases
-prevalent in the community cannot be established with absolute
-accuracy, sufficient evidence has been presented to warrant the
-statement that from the standpoint of the public health we are dealing
-with no other problem of equal importance today. The state care of
-mental defects, epilepsy, tuberculosis and the deaf, dumb and blind is,
-for various reasons, of much less consequence to the community than
-the hospital treatment of mental diseases. The defective, delinquent,
-criminal and dependent classes combined do not equal in number the
-population housed in our state hospitals for mental diseases. Nor
-does the number of cases cared for in the general hospitals of the
-state, county or municipal type compare in any way with the mental
-cases coming under state or federal supervision. It can, I think, be
-said without any fear of contradiction that no other disease or group
-of diseases is of equal importance from a social or economic point
-of view. Perhaps nothing emphasizes this fact more strongly than the
-report recently issued from the Surgeon General's office relative to
-the second examination of the first million recruits drafted in 1917.
-Twelve per cent of these were rejected on account of nervous or mental
-diseases. The number disqualified for service finally reached a total
-of over sixty-seven thousand.
-
-Mental integrity is now looked upon as a military necessity and is
-insisted upon as one of the important requirements of the soldier. It
-has been demonstrated conclusively that only men of the most stable
-mental equilibrium can withstand the stress and strain of modern
-methods of warfare. Nor are peacetime requirements any less exacting.
-In commercial competition the law of the survival of the fittest is
-practically absolute. The feebleminded often inherit wealth, but they
-rarely acquire it. Vaccination for the prevention of smallpox is
-compulsory and the isolation of communicable diseases dangerous to the
-public welfare is rigidly enforced. At the same time we allow many
-paranoics the freedom of the country and they occasionally assassinate
-a President. Psychopaths are not infrequently elected to public office
-and epileptics are not disqualified from driving high-powered and
-dangerous motor vehicles. The engineers of our fastest trains must
-not be color blind, but they occasionally are victims of the most
-fatal of all mental diseases,—general paresis. The navigating officer
-of a transatlantic liner, responsible for the lives of hundreds of
-passengers, must pass an examination for a license, but he may be
-dominated by delusions which escape observation because they are
-not looked for. Important trials, where human lives were at stake,
-have been presided over by insane judges. Army officers in command
-of troops in time of war have been influenced by imaginary voices.
-Insurance companies issue large policies to individuals suffering from
-incipient mental diseases which could be detected by even a superficial
-psychiatric examination.
-
-Serious consideration should be given to the advisability of subjecting
-to a careful mental examination such persons, at least, as are to be
-charged with an entire responsibility for the lives of others. It is
-a question as to whether this procedure is not indicated in the case
-of other important public trusts where the interest of the community
-should be safeguarded.
-
-The correlation of psychiatry and psychology as scientific aids to
-industrial efficiency promises to open up entirely new and important
-sociological fields of research which have only recently attracted
-attention.[7] This is a subject of far reaching importance. The extent
-to which the industrial classes of the country are affected is shown
-by the following analysis of the occupations represented by 104,013
-admissions to New York state hospitals: 1. Professional—(clergy,
-military and naval officers, physicians, lawyers, architects, artists,
-authors, civil engineers, surveyors, etc.) 1,926 or 1.8 per cent;
-2. Commercial—(bankers, merchants, accountants, clerks, salesmen,
-shopkeepers, shopmen, stenographers, typewriters, etc.) 7,572 or
-7.2 per cent; 3. Agricultural—(farmers, gardeners, etc.) 5,942 or
-5.7 per cent; 4. Mechanics—at Outdoor Vocations—(blacksmiths,
-carpenters, enginefitters, sawyers, painters, etc.) 8,564 or 8.2 per
-cent; 5. Mechanics at Sedentary Vocations—(bootmakers, bookbinders,
-compositors, tailors, weavers, bakers, etc.) 7,501 or 7.2 per cent;
-6. Domestic Service—(waiters, cooks, servants, etc.) 21,037 or 20.2
-per cent; 7. Educational and Higher Domestic Duties—(governesses,
-teachers, students, housekeepers, nurses, etc.) 21,861 or 21 per cent;
-8. Commercial—(shopkeepers, saleswomen, stenographers,
-typewriters, etc.) 1,140 or 1.09 per cent; 9. Employed at Sedentary
-Occupations—(tailoresses, seamstresses, bookbinders, factory workers,
-etc.) 4,310 or 4.1 per cent; 10. Miners, Seamen, etc., 581 or .56 per
-cent; 11. Prostitutes, 81 or .08 per cent; 12. Laborers, 12,962 or 12.4
-per cent; No occupation, 7,820 or 7.5 per cent; Unascertained, 2,715 or
-2.6 per cent.[8] This certainly indicates an enormous economic loss to
-the community.
-
-The intimate relation between mental diseases, alcoholism, ignorance,
-poverty, prostitution, criminality, mental defects, etc., suggests
-social and economic problems of far reaching importance, each one
-meriting separate and special consideration. These problems, while
-perhaps essentially sociological in origin, have at the same time an
-important educational bearing, invade the realm of psychology and
-depend largely, if not entirely, upon psychiatry for a solution.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE EVOLUTION OF THE MODERN HOSPITAL
-
-
-The medical treatment of mental diseases had its inception, in this
-country, in the wards of the Philadelphia Hospital, established in
-1732 and referred to officially for over a century as an almshouse. It
-included an infirmary for the "sick and insane," although it apparently
-had no distinct and separate hospital department for many years. "In
-1742," to use the words of Dr. D. Hayes Agnew, "it was fulfilling a
-varied routine of beneficent functions in affording shelter, support
-and employment for the poor and indigent, a hospital for the sick,
-and an asylum for the idiotic, the insane and the orphan. It was
-dispensing its acts of mercy and blessing when Pennsylvania was yet
-a province and her inhabitants the loyal subjects of Great Britain."
-In 1772 it housed as many as three hundred and fifty persons. In 1769
-the General Assembly passed an act authorizing the "Managers of the
-Contributions for the Relief and Employment of the Poor," who had
-charge of the almshouse, to issue bills of credit for the purpose of
-relieving their indebtedness. This paper currency was issued in three
-denominations—one shilling, two shillings and a half crown. The law
-provided that counterfeiters or persons altering the denomination of
-these bills should be "sentenced to the pillory, have both his or her
-ears cut off and nailed to the pillory and be publicly whipped on his
-or her back with thirty-nine lashes, well laid on, and, moreover,
-every such offender shall forfeit the sum of one hundred pounds, to be
-levied on his or her land, tenements, goods and chattels."[9] This
-certainly must have discouraged counterfeiting. It was not until after
-the institution was removed to the Hamilton estate in Blockley (now
-a part of West Philadelphia) in 1834 that it came to be known as the
-"Philadelphia Hospital and Almshouse," although there was no change
-made in its organization or functions. In 1902, after one hundred
-and seventy years of continuous existence, it was finally divided
-officially for administrative purposes into The Philadelphia Home or
-Hospital for the Indigent, The Philadelphia General Hospital and The
-Philadelphia Hospital for the Insane. At that time the hospital was, as
-it is today, the largest on the American continent. The institution,
-which has admitted mental cases uninterruptedly since 1732, had over
-seventeen hundred patients in the department for the insane. In 1917
-this number had increased to nearly three thousand.
-
-One of the reasons set forth by sundry petitioners in 1751 for a
-"small Provincial Hospital" in Philadelphia, which at that time had
-made provision for the care of indigent cases only, was "THAT with the
-Numbers of People, the Number of Lunaticks or Persons distempered in
-Mind and deprived of their rational Faculties, hath greatly increased
-in this Province. That some of them going at large are a Terror to
-their Neighbours, who are daily apprehensive of the Violences they may
-commit; And others are continually wasting their Substance, to the
-great Injury of themselves and Families, ill disposed Persons wickedly
-taking Advantage of their unhappy Condition, and drawing them into
-unreasonable Bargains, etc. That few or none of them are so sensible
-of their Condition, as to submit voluntarily to the Treatment their
-respective Cases require, and therefore continue in the same deplorable
-State during their Lives; whereas it has been found, by the Experience
-of many Years, that above two Thirds of the Mad People received into
-Bethlehem Hospital, and there treated properly, have been perfectly
-cured."[10] This resulted eventually in the opening of the Pennsylvania
-Hospital in 1752. This institution is a general hospital supported
-by private funds and has always received mental cases. A separate
-department for mental diseases was established in West Philadelphia in
-1841. Before this was done considerable difficulty was experienced on
-account of the annoyance of the patients by curious-minded citizens
-of the neighborhood. This developed into such a nuisance in 1760 that
-it was suggested "That a suitable Pallisade Fence, either of Iron or
-Wood, the Iron being preferred, shall be erected in Order to prevent
-the Disturbance which is given to the Lunatics confined in the Cells
-by the great Number of People who frequently resort and converse with
-them."[11] It was also deemed advisable to employ "Two Constables or
-other proper Persons, to attend at such times as are necessary to
-prevent this Inconvenience until ye Fence is erected." The public
-was notified later "that such persons who come out of curiosity to
-visit the house should pay a sum of money, a Groat at least, for
-admittance."[12] The Pennsylvania Hospital has played a very important
-part in the history of the care and treatment of mental diseases in
-this country. In 1919 it had over three hundred patients.
-
-The first institution designed and used exclusively for mental diseases
-in this country was the Eastern State Hospital at Williamsburg,
-Virginia. It was incorporated by the House of Burgesses in 1768 and
-opened for patients on October 12, 1773. It is interesting to note
-that the act of incorporation, except in the title, makes no use of
-the word lunatic, refers frequently to the care and treatment of the
-patients, authorizes the appointment of physicians and nurses, and
-specifically designates the institution as a hospital and not an
-asylum. The original building was one hundred feet long by thirty-two
-feet two inches wide. During the first year thirty-six patients were
-admitted. The first pay patient was received in 1774 at a rate of
-fifteen pounds per annum. An allowance of twenty-five pounds per year
-was made by the legislature for the maintenance and support of each
-person admitted. Visiting physicians prescribed for the patients, and
-the "keepers" for the first few years were not graduates in medicine.
-The superintendents were, however, physicians after 1841. Known for
-many years as the "Publick Hospital," the legislature made the mistake
-of changing this designation to The Eastern Lunatic Asylum in 1841
-and it was not until 1894 that it again officially became a hospital.
-Virginia opened its second institution, The Western State Hospital for
-the Insane, at Staunton on July 25, 1828. Its third hospital was opened
-at Weston on September 9, 1859. Virginia is thus entitled to the credit
-of being the first commonwealth to furnish state care for mental cases
-and make adequate provision for them.
-
-The next step in the evolution of hospital treatment of mental diseases
-was taken by Maryland in incorporating a hospital for "The Relief of
-Indigent Sick Persons and for the Reception and Care of Lunatics" in
-1797. The hospital was formally opened in 1798 under the management of
-the city of Baltimore, which leased the establishment in 1808 to two
-physicians, who conducted it as a private institution until 1834. It
-then reverted to the state and was operated as the Maryland Hospital.
-The institution was removed to Catonsville in 1872 and is now known as
-the Spring Grove State Hospital, the Johns Hopkins Hospital occupying
-the site of the original building in Baltimore. Another interesting
-event in the history of this institution was the founding of what
-subsequently became the Mount Hope Retreat by the Sisters of Charity,
-who withdrew from the Maryland Hospital in 1840.
-
-The earliest hospital care of mental diseases in New York was in the
-wards of the New York Hospital which was opened in 1791. A separate
-building for mental cases was ready for the reception of patients in
-1808. The total number of cases treated up to July 1820 was 1,553. The
-Bloomingdale Asylum replaced this in 1821, on a piece of property which
-now belongs in part to Columbia University. Public patients were cared
-for at the expense of the state until the opening of the New York City
-Asylum in 1839. Church services were inaugurated in 1819. The hospital
-buildings furnished accommodations for about three hundred patients. In
-1894 the property on Bloomingdale Road was abandoned and the hospital
-removed to White Plains in Westchester County. It is still known as the
-Bloomingdale Hospital and is supported entirely by public contributions
-and the income derived from the care of patients. It has about three
-hundred and fifty beds.
-
-The activities of the "Religious Society of Friends," which were
-indirectly responsible probably for the inception of the Pennsylvania
-Hospital, ultimately led to the establishment of the Friends' Asylum
-for the Insane at Frankford, Pennsylvania, in 1817. It was under
-sectarian control until 1834, when its doors were thrown open to
-all, without regard to religious belief. It claims to be the first
-institution "erected on this side of the Atlantic in which a chain was
-never used for the confinement of a patient."[13] The hospital is still
-in a flourishing condition and has accommodations for over two hundred
-patients.
-
-Massachusetts at the beginning of the nineteenth century had no
-hospitals of any kind. In 1764, on the death of Thomas Handcock, it was
-found that provision had been made in his will for the establishment of
-a hospital for mental diseases in Boston. An expenditure of six hundred
-pounds was authorized for the purpose of "erecting and furnishing a
-convenient House for the reception and more comfortable keeping of such
-unhappy persons as it shall please God, in His Providence, to deprive
-of their reason in any part of this Province."[14] The Selectmen of
-Boston declined this legacy on the grounds that there were not enough
-mental cases in the vicinity to warrant the existence of such an
-establishment. This proved to be an error of judgment on their part.
-In 1811 the Massachusetts General Hospital was incorporated and a fund
-of over $93,000 was subscribed for building purposes. As it was deemed
-more urgent, the department for mental diseases in Charlestown was
-opened first. It was ready for the reception of patients on October 6,
-1818, when it admitted a young man supposed to be possessed of a devil.
-This department became the McLean Asylum in 1826 as the result of a
-legacy of $25,000 left to the institution by a Boston merchant of that
-name. The corporation finally received in all an amount approximating
-$120,000 from the McLean estate. As early as 1822 the first published
-report of the hospital[15] called attention to the fact that the various
-amusements offered the patients included "draughts, chess, backgammon,
-ninepins, swinging, sawing wood, gardening, reading, writing, music,
-etc." A carriage and pair of horses for the use of patients was
-purchased in 1828. In 1835 the first pianos and billiard tables were
-installed and a library of one hundred and twenty volumes placed in
-the wards. Hot water heating was introduced in 1848. It is interesting
-to note that in 1827 the visiting committee reported that the rates
-for the maintenance of patients should not be less than three dollars
-or more than twelve dollars per week. In 1882 the McLean Hospital
-established the first training school for nurses connected with any
-institution for mental diseases in this country. The first class was
-graduated in 1886. In 1895 the hospital was removed to Waverley,
-Massachusetts. A chemical laboratory was opened in 1900 and a
-psychological laboratory in 1904. Hydrotherapy was first used in 1899,
-and a gymnasium was built in 1904. In 1913 the hospital owned three
-hundred and seventeen acres of land and had a capacity of two hundred
-and twenty beds, with a plant valued at nearly two million dollars.
-
-The first provision for the care of mental diseases in Connecticut was
-a direct result of the activities of the State Medical Society. It was
-on their petition that the Hartford Retreat was chartered in 1822.
-Over two thousand persons subscribed to a fund for the opening of the
-hospital. These subscriptions included "$30 payable in medicine," "One
-gross New London bilious pills, price $30" and two lottery tickets.[16]
-About fourteen thousand dollars was subscribed in all, the citizens of
-Hartford contributing four thousand. The hospital building, designed to
-accommodate forty patients, was opened on April 1, 1824, and has always
-been conducted on an unusually high plane. It now averages about one
-hundred and seventy-five patients.
-
-Mental cases were first provided with hospital care in Kentucky when
-the Eastern State Hospital was opened in Lexington on May 1, 1824.
-Governor Adams, who suggested the establishment of this institution,
-in a message written in 1821 expressed the opinion that it would be of
-great benefit to the students of Transylvania University, "which would
-in time repay the obligation by useful discoveries in the treatment of
-mental maladies."
-
-The State Hospital at Columbia, South Carolina, was opened in December,
-1828. A curious fact in connection with its history is that in 1829 the
-management, having received no patients as yet, advertised for them in
-the newspapers of South Carolina and adjoining states.
-
-In 1829 the necessity of making further provision for mental diseases
-in Massachusetts became the subject of a legislative investigation and
-a committee was appointed "to examine and ascertain the practicability
-and expediency of erecting or procuring, at the expense of the
-Commonwealth, an asylum for the safe keeping of lunatics and persons
-furiously mad."[17] The report of this committee, of which Horace
-Mann was Chairman, is exceedingly interesting. The following is an
-illustration:—"To him whose mind is alienated, a prison is a tomb,
-and within its walls he must suffer as one who awakes to life in the
-solitude of the grave. Existence and the capacity for pain alone are
-left him. From every former source of pleasure or contentment he is
-violently sequestered. Every former habit is abruptly broken off.
-No medical skill seconds the efforts of nature for his recovery, or
-breaks the strength of pain when it seizes him with convulsive grasp.
-No friends relieve each other in solacing the weariness of protracted
-disease. No assiduous affection guards the avenues of approaching
-disquietude. He is alike removed from all the occupations of health,
-and from all the attentions everywhere but within his homeless abode
-bestowed upon sickness. The solitary cell, the noisome atmosphere,
-the unmitigated cold and the untempered heat, are of themselves
-sufficient soon to derange every vital function of the body, and this
-only aggravates the derangement of his mind. On every side is raised up
-an insurmountable barrier against his recovery. Cut off from all the
-charities of life, endued with quickened sensibilities to pain, and
-perpetually stung by annoyances which, though individually small, rise
-by constant accumulation to agonies almost beyond the power of mortal
-sufferance; if his exiled mind in its devious wanderings ever approach
-the light by which it was once cheered and directed, it sees everything
-unwelcoming, everything repulsive and hostile, and is driven away
-into returnless banishment."[18] The investigation conducted by this
-committee led to the establishment of the Worcester Lunatic Hospital,
-later the Worcester State Hospital, opened on January 19, 1833. The
-original building was designed to care for one hundred and twenty
-patients. After many years of agitation on the part of the public,
-the hospital was removed to a site overlooking Lake Quinsigamond in
-the outskirts of Worcester in 1877. It was soon found that it was
-impracticable to dispense with the use of the old building on Summer
-Street and it became the Worcester Insane Asylum, later the Worcester
-State Asylum, and finally the Grafton State Hospital. In 1919 it again
-became a part of the Worcester State Hospital. The original building is
-in excellent condition today and promises an indefinite continuation of
-an unusual career of usefulness. Many men destined to occupy positions
-of importance in the psychiatric world were trained within its walls.
-
-The death of a prominent politician in 1806 is said to have led
-indirectly to the establishment of the first hospital for mental
-diseases in Vermont.[19] His medical advisers treated him for some
-form of mental alienation by submerging him in water until he became
-unconscious. It was thought that this "would divert his mind and, by
-breaking the chain of unhappy associations, thus remove the cause of
-his disease." As this plan failed he was given opium as "the proper
-agent for the stupefaction of the life forces." In spite of this
-vigorous treatment he died. The immediate event which made possible
-the incorporation of the Vermont Asylum for the Insane in 1835 was a
-legacy of ten thousand dollars rendered available for this purpose
-by the will of Mrs. Anna Marsh of Hinsdale. The hospital was opened
-in Brattleboro in 1836 and became the Brattleboro Retreat after the
-establishment of the State Hospital at Waterbury. The state care of
-mental diseases began in Ohio with the establishment of the Columbus
-State Hospital, which was opened on November 30, 1838. This was the
-first of a number of institutions now under the supervision of the Ohio
-Board of Administration.
-
-The study of the development of the state hospital system of care
-now takes us back to Massachusetts. Notwithstanding the fact that
-the state already had two institutions for mental cases, McLean and
-the Worcester Lunatic Hospital, further accommodations were urgently
-indicated. This was largely on account of the needs of the metropolitan
-population centering in the city of Boston. To meet this situation the
-city established a hospital of its own in South Boston in 1839,—the
-first municipal institution for this exclusive purpose in America.
-Originally known as the Boston Lunatic Hospital and afterwards as the
-Boston Insane Hospital, it finally became the Boston State Hospital in
-December, 1908. Charles Dickens on the occasion of his visit to America
- was very profoundly impressed by the hospital and made the following
-references to it in 1842[20]:—"At South Boston, as it is called, in
-a situation excellently adapted for the purpose, several charitable
-institutions are clustered together. One of these is the hospital for
-the insane; admirably conducted on those enlightened principles of
-conciliation and kindness which 20 years ago would have been worse
-than heretical, and which have been acted upon with so much success in
-our own pauper asylum at Hanwell...." "At every meal, moral influence
-alone restrains the more violent among them from cutting the throats of
-the rest; but the effect of that influence is reduced to an absolute
-certainty, and is found, even as a measure of restraint, to say nothing
-of it as a means of cure, a hundred times more efficacious than all the
-straight waistcoats, fetters and handcuffs that ignorance, prejudice
-and cruelty have manufactured since the creation of the world." ... "In
-the labor department every patient is as freely trusted with the tools
-of his trade as if he were a sane man. In the garden and on the farm
-they work with spades, rakes and hoes. For amusement they walk, run,
-fish, paint, read, and ride out to take the air in carriages provided
-for the purpose. They have among themselves a sewing society to make
-clothes for the poor, which holds meetings, passes resolutions, never
-comes to fisticuffs or bowie-knives as sane assemblies have been known
-to do elsewhere; and conducts all its proceedings with the greatest
-decorum. The irritability which would otherwise be expended on their
-own flesh, clothes and furniture is dissipated in these pursuits. They
-are cheerful, tranquil and healthy." ... "It is obvious that one great
-feature of this system is the inculcation and encouragement, even among
-such unhappy persons, of a decent self-respect." The institution was
-removed to the Dorchester district of Boston in 1895, where it now
-houses in the neighborhood of two thousand patients. The Boston State
-Hospital was the first institution of its kind in the United States to
-establish a separate psychopathic department, which was opened in 1912.
-
-Influenced doubtless by the attention given to this subject in other
-states, Maine opened its first state hospital at Augusta in 1840.
-There were between two and three hundred mental cases in the state
-at that time. A second hospital was opened at Bangor in 1889. This
-humanitarian movement naturally extended to New Hampshire. Governor
-Dinsmore in 1832[21] called attention to the condition of the insane,
-seventy-six of whom were in confinement. Of this number seven were in
-cells or cages, six in chains and irons and four in jail. Of those not
-in confinement at the time, some had been handcuffed previously, while
-others had been in cells or chained. After much unavoidable delay the
-New Hampshire State Hospital was opened at Concord on October 29, 1842.
-The next hospital development appeared in Georgia. After an active
-campaign inaugurated by the physicians of the state and continued for
-several years, the Georgia State Sanitarium was opened in Milledgeville
-in December, 1842. It now houses over four thousand patients.
-
-By this time it became evident that further procedures on behalf of
-the persons requiring treatment for mental diseases in New York were
-imperative. The Bloomingdale Hospital, although taxed to its utmost
-capacity, was not able to meet the needs of the situation. In 1830
-the population of the state had increased to nearly two million.
-The report of a legislative committee showed that there were 2,695
-insane persons in the state in 1830, with hospital accommodations at
-Bloomingdale and one other private hospital at Hudson for only two
-hundred and fifty of these cases. An extensive system of state care
-was inaugurated by the opening of the Utica State Hospital on January
-16, 1843. In addition to numerous other industries and occupations, a
-printing office was established in the hospital and the publication
-of the "American Journal of Insanity" was undertaken in 1844. This
-was the first journal in the world to be devoted exclusively to the
-subject of mental diseases. "The Opal," edited, published and printed
-by the patients of the hospital, was started at the same time. In the
-early days, strong rooms, padded cells and mechanical restraint of all
-kinds were used extensively. The "Utica Crib" has received a great
-deal of attention. This consisted of an ordinary ward bed enclosed in
-wooden slats, making it impossible for the patient to escape. These
-were eliminated for all time by Dr. G. Alder Blumer in 1887. Attendants
-were first required to wear uniforms in 1887. During the following
-year female nurses were assigned for the first time to male wards.
-Annual field day exercises for the benefit of the patients have been
-held since 1887. Baseball games, steamboat excursions, Fourth of July
-celebrations and Christmas entertainments have been in vogue since
-1888. With the development of a large department on the "Marcy" site,
-nine miles from the city, the Utica State Hospital promises to add new
-accomplishments to an already dignified history.
-
-The early care of mental cases in Rhode Island, as shown by a report
-to the legislature by Thomas R. Hazard in 1851, was perhaps no worse
-than that of other states, although the conditions he described
-so graphically have not been attributed to other New England
-communities by historians. The following extract from a codicil to
-the will of Nicholas Brown, who died in 1843, is proof of the fact
-that this unfortunate state of affairs had not entirely escaped
-notice[22]:—"And whereas it has long been deeply impressed on my mind
-that an insane or lunatic hospital or retreat for the insane should
-be established upon a firm and permanent basis, under an act of the
-Legislature, where that unhappy portion of our fellow beings who are,
-by the visitation of Providence, deprived of their reason, may find
-a safe retreat and be provided with whatever may be most conducive
-to their comfort and to their restoration to a sound state of mind:
-Therefore, for the purpose of aiding an object so desirable and in the
-hope that such an establishment may soon be commenced, I do hereby set
-apart and give and bequeath the sum of $30,000 towards the erection
-or endowment of an insane or lunatic hospital or retreat for the
-insane, or by whatever other name it may be called, to be located in
-Providence or its vicinity." Supplemental contributions by Cyrus Butler
-made it possible for the incorporators to found the Butler Hospital in
-Providence. The first patients were received on December 1, 1847.
-
-More than any other one person, Miss Dorothea L. Dix of Massachusetts
-was undoubtedly directly responsible for the inauguration of the state
-care of mental diseases in this country. She is credited with having
-memorialized twenty-two different state legislatures on this subject.
-One of her first accomplishments consisted in inducing the New Jersey
-legislature to make an appropriation for the establishment of the state
-hospital at Trenton. This institution was opened in 1848, after some of
-the hardest campaigning that Miss Dix conducted. The last years of her
-life were spent as an honored guest of the hospital and she died there
-in 1887 at the advanced age of eighty-five.
-
-Indiana inaugurated a system of state care by the establishment of the
-Central Hospital for the Insane in 1848. The East Louisiana Hospital
-at Jackson was opened in the same year. Missouri made its first
-provision for mental cases by opening a hospital at Fulton in 1852.
-Notwithstanding the fact that the first hospitals for mental diseases
-in this country were located in Philadelphia, the Commonwealth of
-Pennsylvania did not make any provision for a state institution until
-the State Hospital at Harrisburg was opened in 1851. This was only
-undertaken after a vigorous campaign on the part of Dorothea Dix had
-made some legislative action almost imperative. This is probably the
-only hospital in the country which has found it necessary to demolish
-all of the original buildings and replace them by others. In 1847 Miss
-Dix visited Tennessee and started a movement which resulted in the
-opening of The Central Hospital for the Insane at Nashville, the first
-institution of the kind in the state. California entered the state
-hospital field in 1853 with the establishment of an institution at
-Stockton. The St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, D.C., the first
-federal institution for mental diseases, was opened for patients in
-1855. It receives cases from the United States Government Services and
-from the District of Columbia. Dorothea Dix was largely instrumental
-in its origin. The St. Elizabeths Hospital was an early invader of the
-field of scientific research. A pathologist was appointed in 1883. It
-was one of the first institutions to use hydrotherapy extensively. It
-now cares for nearly four thousand patients. Mississippi established
-its first state hospital for mental diseases in 1856, North Carolina
-in 1856, West Virginia in 1859, Michigan in 1859, Wisconsin in 1860,
-Texas in 1861, Kansas in 1866, Minnesota in 1866, Connecticut in 1868,
-Rhode Island in 1870 and Vermont in 1891. The Sheppard and Enoch Pratt
-Hospital, a well known private institution in Baltimore, was also
-opened in 1891.
-
-It is hardly worth while at this time to emphasize the fact that the
-necessity of providing adequate facilities for the care and treatment
-of mental diseases, a problem which received little consideration
-of any kind for many years, gradually led to the elaboration of an
-extensive system of state hospitals. These are to be found now in every
-part of the country. They have long since passed through the purely
-custodial stage and have developed into highly specialized modern
-hospitals of most advanced type. Their function is to provide proper
-treatment for persons who cannot for financial or other reasons be
-cared for in the private hospitals which are to be found in almost all
-localities. These institutions, originating in Virginia in 1773, now
-represent one of the most important activities conducted by any state
-government. The extent of the field which they cover is illustrated by
-the fact that Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
-Tennessee, Texas, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin each maintain
-three state hospitals for mental diseases; Iowa, Maryland, Missouri
-and Virginia each have four institutions of this type, Minnesota five,
-California, Indiana and Michigan six, Pennsylvania seven, Ohio and
-Illinois nine, Massachusetts twelve and New York fifteen. In addition
-to this eight other states have two hospitals each and seventeen find
-one such institution sufficient for their needs. It is worthy of note
-that every state without any exception has now recognized the necessity
-of making provision for the care and treatment of mental diseases.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-LEGISLATION AND METHODS OF ADMINISTRATION
-
-
-The administration of the earlier hospitals for mental diseases
-was placed very wisely in the hands of local boards of directors,
-managers or trustees. These were made up of persons prominent in the
-community in which they lived, well known as having a keen interest
-in humanitarian movements, and fully deserving of the confidence
-reposed in them by the public. They received no compensation other
-than the satisfaction of having served in a worthy cause. The state
-hospital at Williamsburg, Virginia, the first of its kind in America,
-was controlled by a court of directors which was made up of some of
-the most prominent Virginians of colonial days. It included Thomas
-Nelson, Jr., a signer of the Declaration of Independence who served
-with distinction in the Revolutionary War, Peyton Randolph, the
-President of the first Continental Congress, and George Wythe, the
-preceptor in law of both Marshall and Jefferson, as well as a signer
-of the Declaration of Independence and professor of law at William
-and Mary College, together with various other distinguished citizens,
-some perhaps of less prominence, but all men of the highest standing
-in Virginia. The first "court" consisted of fifteen members. The
-second state institution, the Maryland Hospital, under the management
-of the city of Baltimore for some years, was eventually placed under
-the control of a board of visitors in 1828. Kentucky's first hospital
-was from the beginning in the charge of a board of ten commissioners.
-When the second Virginia institution was opened at Staunton, the
-form of organization adopted at Williamsburg was duplicated and a
-court of directors appointed. There were, however, thirteen instead of
-fifteen members. The state hospital at Columbia, South Carolina, was
-originally, and still is, under a board of regents. The Massachusetts
-hospitals, dating from the opening of Worcester in 1833, have always
-had trustees. The Vermont Asylum, later the Brattleboro Retreat, was
-also managed by a board of trustees, as was the New Hampshire State
-Hospital at Concord. The Georgia State Sanitarium, opened in the same
-year, adopted a similar form of control. The Utica State Hospital has
-been conducted from the first by a board of managers, a term which is
-generally used by the New York institutions. When the Trenton State
-Hospital was founded it was placed under a board of ten managers,
-more or less along the lines followed at Utica. The State Hospital at
-Raleigh, North Carolina, had a board of directors. For many years the
-earlier institutions for mental diseases were under no other form of
-control, the powers of the trustees being absolute. This is still the
-case in a few states. Usually, however, there is some additional form
-of supervision.
-
-Boards of trustees, managers, directors, or some other local
-governing body, exist in the following states but without exclusive
-control:—Alabama, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho,
-Indiana, Louisiana (administrators), Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts,
-Mississippi, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania,
-South Carolina (regents), Texas and Virginia.[23]
-
-In the following states the hospitals have no local boards of any
-kind:—Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas,
-Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
-Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode
-Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Washington, West
-Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.[24]
-
-As the state hospitals increased in number and importance, steps
-were taken to coordinate their activities and for various obvious
-reasons they were soon grouped together in departments. In the states
-having a sufficient number of hospitals to warrant such a procedure,
-separate specialized administrative units were established under
-lunacy commissions, etc. In less populous communities where there were
-only a few hospitals there soon developed a tendency to associate
-them with the charitable, correctional and, in some instances, penal
-institutions. Seventeen states, as has been shown, now have only
-one hospital for mental diseases, eight have two and ten only three
-institutions. This led either to placing the hospitals under boards of
-charities and corrections or to the organization of new departments
-known as boards of control. The hospitals for mental diseases are under
-the supervision of boards of charities and corrections in the following
-states:—Colorado, Connecticut, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska,
-North Carolina, South Carolina, South Dakota and Virginia.[24]
-
-Boards of control exist in Arkansas, California, Iowa, Kentucky,
-Minnesota, North Dakota, Oregon, Vermont, West Virginia and
-Wisconsin. California has, in addition to this, a board of charities
-and corrections and a commission in lunacy. Vermont has a director
-of state institutions. In New Hampshire the board of trustees of
-the state hospital constitutes a commission in lunacy. A number of
-states have special departments for the supervision of hospitals
-for mental diseases and in some instances for the control of
-all institutions. Delaware has a board of supervisors of state
-institutions. This is essentially a board of control. This is true
-of the board of commissioners of state institutions in Florida.
-Illinois has a department of public welfare, which places the control
-of the charitable, penal and corrective institutions, as well as the
-hospitals for mental diseases, largely in the hands of one man, a
-layman. Michigan and Pennsylvania also have departments of public
-welfare. Kansas has placed its hospitals under the control of a board
-of administration of state charitable institutions. Maryland has a
-lunacy commission and Missouri a board of managers. Montana and Nevada
-each have a board of commissioners for the insane. New Jersey has a
-state board of control of institutions and agencies, the direction of
-the state hospitals being delegated to a commissioner of charities and
-corrections. New York has the largest department in the country having
-exclusive state hospital functions. It is under the supervision of a
-hospital commission. Ohio has a board of administration which manages
-and governs all of the charitable, corrective and penal institutions
-of the state. This is, of course, a board of control pure and simple.
-Oklahoma has a commissioner of charities and corrections who is an
-elective officer, and has, in addition, a lunacy commission and a board
-of public affairs. Rhode Island has a penal and charitable commission
-of nine members. Utah has a board of insanity and Wyoming a board of
-charities and reform. Massachusetts has a department of mental
-diseases under the direction of a medical commissioner, with four
-unpaid associates. In addition to the hospitals for mental diseases
-the department has under its jurisdiction the institutions for the
-feebleminded and the epileptics.
-
-The necessity of some form of central supervision or control, of
-state institutions in general and hospitals for mental diseases in
-particular, has long been a subject of serious consideration and
-discussion. The administration of hospitals, prisons, reformatories,
-etc., by a central board of control may be indicated in states
-where there are only a few institutions and the creation of highly
-specialized and expensive departments obviously would not be warranted.
-The question may very properly be raised as to the necessity of any
-supervision other than that by local boards of trustees in such
-communities. A study of methods of supervision made some years ago by
-the medical director of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene[25]
-shows that the board of control system leaves much to be desired.
-He has expressed himself on this subject in no uncertain terms,
-as is shown by the following:—"Under Boards of Control, politics
-influence the care of the sick to a degree unknown under different
-types of supervision and the scientific and humane aspects of the
-work undertaken are generally subordinated to doubtful administrative
-advantages. With hardly an exception, these Boards of Control have not
-endeavored to secure better commitment laws, to lead public sentiment
-so that higher standards of treatment will be demanded or to deal with
-the great problems of mental disease in any except their narrowest
-institutional aspects. There has been striking absence of evidences
-of any feeling of personal responsibility in these matters; indeed
-many members of these boards would doubtless unhesitatingly state that
-their duties do not involve such considerations. What the results
-would have been if efficient and fearless local boards of managers had
-been retained when these states created Boards of Control cannot be
-stated. It is an essential part of the policy which places the care
-of the insane under this form of administration that there shall be
-no "division of responsibility" and, seemingly, there is no place
-in such a scheme for bodies which are as much interested in the
-personal welfare of the wards of the State as they are in governmental
-"efficiency" and, which, moreover, are directly accountable to their
-neighbors—the friends and relatives of patients. It is interesting to
-compare some of the conditions mentioned with those existing in States
-in which the care of the insane is entrusted to Boards created for that
-special purpose. In these States,—California, Maryland, Massachusetts
-and New York,—it can be said truly that the care of the insane reaches
-its highest level."
-
-The experience of the past has shown that the injection of politics
-into the administration of state institutions is almost invariably
-due to the over-centralization of power in state departments, the
-local boards of trustees or managers either being abolished or largely
-deprived of their authority. The greatest menace to the future welfare
-of the hospitals for mental diseases is, in the opinion of many, the
-unfortunate result of a popular and more or less legitimate demand for
-the reorganization of state governments, reducing their administrative
-activities to a few separate departments, each one under the entire
-charge of a director responsible only to the Governor. The argument
-for this procedure is that it does away with innumerable commissions,
-boards and departments working along independent lines without any
-reference to the desirability of coordinating the activities of the
-state as a whole and places the affairs of the commonwealth on an
-efficient, systematic and economical basis. There is no question as to
-the theoretical advisability of such methods. The difficulty is, that
-in putting into practical operation this unquestionably commendable
-undertaking, the humanitarian aspect of the charitable enterprises
-conducted by state governments for more than a century, is likely to
-be lost sight of. It is almost invariably urged that the directors
-of these various departments should be experienced business men of
-recognized ability and that in only such a way can the affairs of the
-state be put on a "businesslike basis." It must be confessed that
-this argument is one which appeals very strongly to the taxpayer,
-who naturally has not given the matter very careful thought. There
-are other important considerations, however, where the question of
-administering hospitals is involved. As Commissioner Kline[26] has
-said:—"If it be conceded that the care and treatment of the mentally
-sick is a highly specialized medical problem, requiring the services
-of medical experts, and that the institutions function primarily
-for the welfare of the patient, then the supervision and control of
-institutions should be in the hands of medical men especially trained
-for the purpose."
-
-In some instances where the state governments have been reorganized and
-the proposed consolidation of departments effected, the administration
-of the state hospitals has come under the direction of a single
-individual without hospital or institution experience of any kind and
-without any special knowledge of medicine or psychiatry. There is no
-escaping the fact that the administration of a hospital is a medical
-problem. Nor is there any question as to the advisability of some
-central supervision and financial control of institutions. The hospital
-departments in our more populous states are, however, so extensive and
-so important that they cannot be merged with other interests without
-sacrificing to a considerable extent the welfare of the patients. It
-should be remembered, moreover, that the administration of hospitals
-for mental diseases is a specialty and a large one, not specifically
-related to the problems arising in the management of charitable
-institutions or prisons. The best results have been obtained where
-there is a division of responsibility between local boards of trustees
-or managers and a central body charged with the supervision, and a
-limited or complete financial control, of institutions for mental
-diseases only. The head of such a department should unquestionably be a
-medical man with psychiatric hospital experience. This policy has been
-responsible for the high standards maintained in the state hospitals of
-Massachusetts and New York.
-
-It is, unfortunately, true that the care of mental diseases is not
-exclusively a function of the state or private hospitals. In thirteen
-states, county or municipal institutions are maintained and in
-twenty-five, persons suffering from mental diseases may legally be
-cared for in almshouses or poorhouses.
-
-There is little uniformity in the laws of the various states relative
-to the hospital care of mental diseases, aside from the fact that
-almost without any exception they are designed to provide solely for
-the legal custody of the so-called "insane" and the protection of the
-public. "Insanity," as a matter of fact, is a purely legal and not a
-medical term, and may be said to relate to mental diseases only in so
-far as they come within the jurisdiction of the courts.
-
-Statutory enactments relative to the forms of mental disease which
-render the individual subject to legal custody and detention in an
-institution are illustrated by the provisions of the Civil Code of
-Illinois. This defines an "insane" person as one "who by reason of
-unsoundness of mind is incapable of managing his own estate, or is
-dangerous to himself or others, if permitted to go at large, or in such
-condition of mind or body as to be a fit subject for care and treatment
-in a hospital or asylum for the insane." In Alabama a person is legally
-insane "if he has been found by a proper court deficient or defective
-mentally so that for his own or others' welfare his removal is required
-for restraint, care, and treatment." As a general rule, provision by
-law is made 1, for an application for commitment; 2, for a medical
-certificate of two or more properly qualified physicians showing the
-person to be insane and a proper subject for care and treatment in an
-institution, and 3, for the order of the Judge of a Court of Record for
-commitment to a state hospital. The necessity of some form of legal
-authorization for detention is a result of the fundamental principle
-in English procedure that no man, against his will, may be deprived
-of his liberty without due process of law. This right was recognized
-and perpetuated by the Magna Charta signed by King John in 1215 and is
-very definitely referred to in at least two different articles in the
-Constitution of the United States.
-
-As a rule the application for commitment can be made only by certain
-persons definitely specified in the law,—parents, near relatives, the
-guardian or various public officials such as overseers of the poor.
-In Massachusetts any person may sign such a petition. In Florida a
-request must be jointly made by five reputable citizens. This would
-not appear to be a material point in law. Some courts require that a
-notice of the application be served upon the person whose commitment
-is requested. In New York a notice must be served at least one day
-prior to the hearing of the case unless the judge personally certifies
-that substituted service has been made upon some other person or that
-personal service was considered inadvisable for some adequate reason
-noted and has therefore been dispensed with. The Arizona law requires
-the judge to hold a hearing and have the alleged insane person before
-him for examination. In California a jury trial may be requested and
-a commitment made only on a verdict of insanity requiring a vote of
-at least three-fourths of the jurors. A trial by jury may be asked
-for in Colorado, Connecticut and many other states and must be
-granted. Trial by jury is necessary in all cases in Georgia. Provision
-is usually made for an appeal to some higher court. In many states
-hearings are mandatory, in others they are optional with the court. In
-Iowa each county has a board of three commissioners of insanity, one
-of whom must be a physician. They have full authority under the law
-to make commitments to institutions. Hearings are required in Kansas
-but inquests in lunacy may be either by jury or commission at the
-discretion of the court. In Kentucky inquests in lunacy must be held by
-the Circuit Court of a county. The hearings are always in the presence
-of a jury. In Louisiana two physicians must examine the patient in the
-presence of the court. If the physicians do not agree the judge himself
-decides the case. In Maine parents and guardians may send insane
-minors to an institution without a commitment. Other insane persons
-are subject to examination by the municipal officers of towns. In
-Mississippi the Chancery Courts have jurisdiction over writs of lunacy
-and an inquest may be made by jury. Nebraska has three commissioners in
-insanity in each county, appointed by the judge of the District Court.
-In the case of persons found insane they issue a warrant authorizing
-admission to a state hospital. Each county in New Jersey has a
-commissioner in lunacy, who has jurisdiction over the steps relating
-to admission to institutions. Commitments are made by the judge of a
-Court of Record. All orders for commitments in North Carolina must be
-made by the clerk of a Superior Court. No person who has moved into the
-state while insane is deemed a resident. North Dakota has a board of
-three commissioners of insanity in each county, the county judge being
-a member. The commissioners authorize hospitals to receive persons
-found to be insane. Appeal may be made to a commission of three persons
-to be appointed by the county judge. A jury trial is provided for, on
-demand, in Oklahoma. In cases of appeal the county judge must appoint
-a commission of three, one of whom is a physician, for the examination
-of the patient. Examination by a commission of three is required in
-Pennsylvania before commitment by a justice of a Court of Common Pleas
-or Quarter Sessions. South Dakota has a board of three commissioners
-of insanity in each county, the county judge being a member. An insane
-person may be received in a hospital in Vermont on the certificate of
-two physicians or by the order of a County or Supreme Court without
-a physician's certificate. Appeal may be made to the state board
-of control. In Virginia the committing judge and two physicians
-constitute a commission for the examination of alleged insane persons.
-In West Virginia there is a county commission of lunacy composed
-of the president and clerk of the County Court and the prosecuting
-attorney. Commitments are ordered by the commission. On the arrival
-of the patient at a hospital a board composed of the Superintendent
-and assistant physicians must be convened for the examination of the
-patient. Application for commitment must be made in Wisconsin by three
-reputable citizens. The determination of insanity in Wyoming must be
-made in all instances by a jury of six men.
-
-When an insane person has been committed to an institution it is
-sometimes the duty of an officer of the court to accompany the patient
-to the hospital. The order of the court in Massachusetts includes
-the following:—"Now, Therefore, You, the said Sheriff, Deputies,
-Constables or Police Officers, and each of you, with necessary
-assistance, ... are hereby commanded, in the name of the Commonwealth
-of Massachusetts, forthwith to convey the said —— to the hospital
-aforesaid, and to deliver h— to the Superintendent thereof, and make
-due return of a copy of this precept with your doings therein." This
-practically amounts to a warrant of arrest and makes the removal of
-the patient to the hospital to all intents and purposes analogous to a
-criminal proceeding.
-
-Attention should be called to one of the very excellent and humane
-provisions of the New York Law:—"All county superintendents of the
-poor, overseers of the poor, health officers and other city, town or
-county authorities, having duties to perform relating to the poor,
-are charged with the duty of seeing that all poor and indigent insane
-persons within their respective municipalities, are timely granted
-the necessary relief conferred by this chapter. The poor officers or
-authorities above specified, except in the city of New York and in the
-county of Albany, shall notify the health officer of the town, city
-or village of any poor or indigent insane or apparently insane person
-within such municipality whom they know to be in need of the relief
-conferred by this chapter. When so notified, or when otherwise informed
-of such fact, the health officer of the city, town or village, except
-in the city of New York and the county of Albany, where such insane or
-apparently insane person may be, shall see that proceedings are taken
-for the determination of his mental condition and for his commitment
-to a state hospital. Such health officer may direct the proper poor
-officer to make an application for such commitment, and, if a qualified
-medical examiner, may join in making the required certificate of
-lunacy. When so directed by such health officer it shall be the duty
-of the said poor officer to make such application for commitment. When
-notified or informed of any poor or indigent insane or apparently
-insane person in need of the relief conferred by this chapter such
-health officer shall provide for the proper care, treatment and nursing
-of such person, as provided by law and the rules of the commission,
-pending the determination of his mental condition and his commitment
-and until the delivery of such insane person to the attendant sent to
-bring him to the state hospital, as provided in this chapter."
-
-In New York City these responsibilities are delegated to the trustees
-of Bellevue and Allied Hospitals and in the county of Albany to the
-Commissioner of Public Charities. In New York City a medical examiner
-or nurse from the psychopathic wards of Bellevue Hospital, or both,
-may be sent "to the place where the alleged insane person resides
-or is to be found." If in the opinion of this examiner medical care
-is necessary, the patient is taken to the psychopathic ward for
-observation for a period of not to exceed ten days. When a person has
-been committed to a state hospital in New York, the Superintendent
-is required by law to send a trained nurse or attendant to bring the
-patient to the institution. The desirability of having such cases under
-the immediate care of nurses who have had psychiatric training would
-seem to be obvious. There is no reason why persons suffering from
-mental diseases should be subjected to the same form of supervision
-that is given to criminals. The New York plan of holding the health
-officer responsible for providing proper hospital care and treatment
-for mental cases not coming directly under the legal jurisdiction of
-other persons or officials is well worthy of serious consideration.
-There would appear to be no reason why the health officer should not
-be responsible for mental conditions in somewhat the same way that he
-is for communicable diseases. Nor is there any public official to whom
-the supervision of the insane pending commitment can more logically be
-delegated.
-
-In twenty-nine states voluntary patients may be received by state
-hospitals. The provisions of the law usually are that the patient must
-make application on his own initiative, that his mental condition
-must be such as to understand the purpose of this proceeding and
-the need of treatment and that he must be released on a demand in
-writing in from three to seven days of such request. In the twelve
-following states the temporary care of the insane in jails, usually
-as an emergency measure, is still authorized:—Arkansas, Colorado,
-Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota,
-Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin. Arrangements of some kind
-for the emergency care of cases pending examination and commitment
-are provided for in Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts,
-Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
-Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Washington and Wisconsin.
-Massachusetts has the most comprehensive provisions for temporary care
-and observation. The Superintendent of a state hospital may receive and
-detain, for not more than five days without a court order, any person
-whose case is "certified to be one of violent and dangerous insanity
-or of other emergency" by two qualified medical examiners. Officers
-authorized to serve a criminal process, or police officers, must, on
-the request of the applicant or one of the examining physicians, bring
-such a person to the hospital. The applicant for this form of admission
-must within five days arrange for the commitment of the person so
-received, or for his removal from the hospital.
-
-Under the provisions of the Massachusetts Law a person found by two
-qualified examiners to be in such mental condition that his admission
-to a hospital for the insane is necessary for his proper care or
-observation may be committed for a period of thirty-five days "pending
-the determination of his insanity." The superintendent must discharge
-such a person within thirty days if not insane or report to the
-committing judge his opinion that the patient's mental condition is
-such as to require a further residence in the hospital necessary.
-
-Under the provisions of the so-called "Boston Police Act" (chapter 307
-of the Acts of 1910) all persons suffering from delirium, mania, mental
-confusion, delusions or hallucinations, under arrest or "who come under
-the care or protection of the police of the city of Boston" shall be
-taken to the Psychopathic Hospital "in the same manner in which persons
-afflicted with other diseases are taken to a general hospital." Cases
-suffering from delirium tremens or drunkenness may be refused by
-the hospital authorities; otherwise, all such persons are admitted,
-observed and cared for "until they can be committed or admitted to the
-hospital or institution appropriate in each particular case" unless the
-patient recovers or is discharged.
-
-Under the provisions of the Massachusetts Law "No person suffering from
-insanity, mental derangement, delirium or mental confusion, except
-delirium tremens and drunkenness, shall, except in case of emergency,
-be placed or detained in a lockup, police station, city prison, house
-of detention, jail or other penal institution, or place for the
-detention of criminals. If, in case of emergency, any such person is
-so placed or detained, he shall forthwith be examined by a physician
-and shall be furnished suitable medical care and nursing and shall not
-be so detained for more than twelve hours." In Boston these cases are
-sent to the Psychopathic Hospital. In other parts of the state they
-are cared for by the board of health of the city or town in question
-until they can be committed to a hospital or cared for by relatives or
-friends.
-
-The superintendent of a state hospital, under the authority of chapter
-123 of the General Laws, "When requested by a physician, by a member of
-the board of health or a police officer of a city or town, by an agent
-of the institutions registration department of the city of Boston, or
-by a member of the district police 'may' receive and care for in such
-hospital as a patient, for a period not exceeding ten days, any person
-who needs immediate care and treatment because of mental derangement
-other than delirium tremens or drunkenness." Such cases are received
-on application in writing filed at the time of the reception of the
-patient or within twenty-four hours thereafter and must be discharged
-or committed within ten days unless they make a request for voluntary
-care. During 1920 there were 1,929 temporary care cases reported by the
-various Massachusetts state hospitals, as follows:
-
-Boston State Hospital (Psychopathic Department) 1,049, Danvers 217,
-Northampton 188, Worcester 159, Taunton 154, Westborough 68, Foxborough
-56, Medfield 33, Grafton 2, and Gardner State Colony 3.
-
-Nowhere else in the country has this particular form of legislation
-been used so extensively. It is something more than a mere
-authorization for the reception of mental cases in observation or
-detention wards. Under its provisions, at the request of any reputable
-practicing physician and without further legal formalities, mental
-cases may be cared for in a state hospital until their condition
-can be definitely determined and arrangements made for their proper
-disposition and treatment. The criticism to which this plan is open is
-that the period of time, ten days, is not long enough. It should be
-extended to thirty days at least.
-
-The provision of the Massachusetts Law for the determination of the
-mental condition of persons under arrest or held under criminal charges
-is an excellent one and well worthy of consideration. This is covered
-by chapter 123 of the General Laws:—"If a person under complaint
-or indictment for any crime, is, at the time appointed for trial or
-sentence, or at any time prior thereto, found by the Court to be
-insane or in such mental condition that his commitment to a hospital
-for the insane is necessary for the proper care or observation of
-such person pending the determination of his insanity, the Court may
-commit him to a State hospital for the insane under such limitations
-as it may order." The Court may in its discretion employ one or more
-experts to examine such persons. These cases are on recovery returned
-by the hospital authorities to the custody of the Court. One of the
-interesting features of the Massachusetts Law is the provision relating
-to persons indicted for murder or manslaughter but acquitted by a jury
-by reason of insanity. Such cases are committed to a state hospital
-for life and can be discharged only by the Governor of the state, with
-the advice and consent of the Executive Council, when he is satisfied,
-after an investigation by the Department of Mental Diseases, that such
-a person may be discharged "without danger to others." Persons charged
-with a crime "other than murder or manslaughter" and acquitted by a
-jury by reason of insanity may also be committed by the Court to a
-state hospital "under such limitations as it deems proper" and such
-orders may be revoked at any time.
-
-A recent enactment (Chapter 415, Acts of 1921) provides that "Whenever
-a person is indicted by a grand jury for a capital offense or whenever
-a person, who is known to have been indicted for any other offense more
-than once or to have been previously convicted of a felony, is indicted
-by a grand jury or bound over for trial in the superior court, the
-clerk of the court in which the indictment is returned, or the clerk of
-the district court or the trial justice, as the case may be, shall give
-notice to the department of mental diseases, and the department shall
-cause such person to be examined with a view to determine his mental
-condition and the existence of any mental disease or defect which would
-affect his criminal responsibility. The department shall file a report
-of its investigation with the clerk of the court in which the trial
-is to be held, and the report shall be accessible to the court, the
-district attorney and to the attorney for the accused, and shall be
-admissible as evidence of the mental condition of the accused."
-
-The whole question of methods of commitment was made the subject of an
-extended study by the National Committee for Mental Hygiene in 1919. A
-comprehensive report covering such legislation as was deemed necessary
-was submitted by a committee consisting of the following:—Dr. George
-M. Kline, Commissioner, Massachusetts State Department of Mental
-Diseases; Dr. Charles W. Pilgrim, Chairman of the New York State
-Hospital Commission; Dr. Owen Copp, Superintendent, Pennsylvania
-Hospital, Department for Nervous and Mental Diseases: Dr. Frank P.
-Norbury, of the Board of Public Welfare Commissioners of Illinois;
-and Dr. Frankwood E. Williams, Associate Medical Director, National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene. In addition to the ordinary form of
-commitment by a court of record in a civil proceeding, they recommended
-legislation in all states authorizing temporary and emergency care,
-observation pending the determination of insanity, and voluntary
-admissions. In a general way, the legislation recommended followed the
-lines of the present laws of Massachusetts and New York.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE STATE HOSPITALS—THEIR ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTIONS
-
-
-The efficiency of the hospital is very largely a reflection of its
-organization, administration and personnel, but the material equipment
-of the institution and the financial resources available are factors of
-no less importance. The future of a hospital is often settled for all
-time by the degree of judgment exercised in determining its location.
-The founders must be guided to a very great extent by the purposes
-which they hope to accomplish. In the location of a public institution
-of any considerable size, however, there are certain considerations
-which, if overlooked, will eventually lead to serious difficulties. The
-initial cost of the property is unfortunately a factor which cannot be
-disregarded. It is usually considered desirable for obvious reasons
-to choose a site somewhat removed from great centers of population. A
-sufficient acreage must be obtained to guarantee an adequate amount of
-land for farming and gardening on a fairly large scale. This not only
-insures a ready occupation for patients, but will materially reduce
-the cost of maintenance. A point which should never be lost sight of
-is the necessity of choosing a location which can be reached easily by
-railroads, trolley cars and motor trucks. The hospital must be readily
-accessible to the relatives and friends of patients. It is equally
-important that it should be convenient for employees; otherwise an
-adequate force of nurses and attendants can only be maintained with
-great difficulty. Above all, the hospital should be in the community
-which it is destined to serve. The patients should not be removed
-to any great distance from their homes. In numerous instances severe
-hardships have been inflicted upon all persons concerned owing to the
-fact that state institutions have been located in districts where they
-are not needed by the community and where they cannot be easily reached.
-
-Every large public hospital should be in almost immediate contact with
-a railroad. Otherwise thousands of dollars must be expended annually
-for the transportation of coal, food and other necessary supplies.
-The fertility of the soil to be used for agricultural purposes is
-only second in importance to the necessity of obtaining satisfactory
-building sites. A practically unlimited supply of pure water is
-absolutely essential. The possibility of utilizing some existing system
-of sewerage or providing the institution with one of its own should be
-given serious consideration. Drainage must be provided for and sanitary
-surroundings obtained. There should always be opportunity for future
-expansion of the plant. Practically every state of any importance
-has at least one institution which has been seriously handicapped
-throughout its entire existence by an unfortunate neglect of one or
-more of these important considerations.
-
-In 1917 a special commission was appointed by the Governor of New York
-for the purpose of preparing an intelligent and comprehensive plan for
-the future development of the institutions of the state. In a report
-presented during the following year the commission called attention
-to a phase of hospital construction the importance of which cannot be
-too strongly emphasized.[27] "Nearly all of the state hospitals suffer
-from the fact that as originally planned they were smaller institutions
-and of a different type from those that are now desired, and the
-additions which have been made from time to time during the past
-twenty-five years, in order to meet the immediate demands for increased
-space, have not always been made with a completed and well rounded
-institution in mind. The results are badly balanced institutions,
-lacking in efficiency and ease of administration.... In planning a
-hospital for the insane the ultimate maximum capacity should be decided
-upon even if it is not possible to build the entire institution at
-once. A well co-ordinated plan should then be developed, which would
-permit the building of various sections as appropriations become
-available, with the idea of finally having a complete institution,
-harmonious in arrangement, and so planned as to attain the most
-desirable classification and the maximum of efficiency and economy in
-administration." The classification of the population which an average
-state hospital should provide buildings for is shown by the commission
-as follows:—Reception building, six per cent; convalescents, four
-per cent; hospital buildings, two per cent; buildings for the infirm,
-eight per cent; noisy, disturbed, etc., twenty per cent; epileptics,
-three per cent; working patients, forty per cent; quiet, clean and
-appreciative chronic class, fourteen per cent; and tuberculous,
-three per cent. They also suggest that every hospital should have a
-small isolation building for the care of contagious diseases. Their
-recommendation as to the amount of floor space per patient in the
-various buildings is exceedingly interesting and no less important.
-"First, That single rooms should have about eighty square feet of
-floor space. A room seven feet by eleven or eight by ten, while large
-enough for one bed, a bureau and a chair, is not large enough to permit
-placing two beds end to end or alongside of each other. If a room
-measures ten feet by twelve, there is always a temptation to place
-two beds in it if the hospital becomes crowded, and the advantage
-of single rooms is wholly lost. The number of single rooms in an
-institution should be from fifteen per cent to twenty per cent of the
-population, varying with the character of the cases to be cared for.
-Second, Dormitories should have above fifty square feet of floor space
-per patient, and no dormitory should have more than fifty beds nor
-less than six. This, of course, applies to the wards for the chronic
-cases. An adequate system of ventilation throughout the hospital is
-presupposed. Third, The day space allotted should provide forty to
-fifty square feet per patient. Fourth, The dining room allowance should
-be from fourteen to sixteen square feet per patient, in order to permit
-the use of small tables and to provide adequate passages for the
-expeditious service of food."
-
-In former years much time and space was devoted to a discussion of the
-respective merits of the congregate type of hospital construction, the
-so-called "Kirkbride" or block plan (although it was in use long before
-Kirkbride described it) and the arrangement of buildings in groups.
-There is no question but what an institution that is all under one roof
-can be administered much more economically and operated at a lower
-maintenance cost. Very little, if any, advantage is derived by the
-patient from the group scheme. In its practical operation in the state
-hospitals almost the only point of difference, as far as the patient
-is concerned, is that he must go out of doors as a rule to get to the
-dining room in the summer as well as in the winter, in good weather and
-bad. This has been responsible for much discomfort and has resulted in
-a great increase in the number of escapes. When buildings are arranged
-in groups they should be connected with a central dining room either
-by corridors or tunnels. Small cottages, except for special purposes,
-are out of the question as far as state institutions are concerned, on
-account of the cost involved. As a matter of fact, in the development
-of a large hospital all types of construction must be ultimately
-employed. The reception building should be separate and detached
-from the other parts of the hospital, as should, of course, the wards
-for the tuberculous cases, the contagious building, the building for
-convalescents, the farm cottages, etc. The noisy and violent patients
-certainly should be in separate buildings far enough away so that they
-will not disturb others. The hospital wards, for the exclusive care of
-bed patients, may well be detached. The larger part of the hospital
-population, consisting of the quiet, orderly, chronic, custodial cases,
-can be cared for just as well in the large buildings as in groups or
-cottages.
-
-The reception building, from the standpoint of the patient, is the
-most important building in the hospital. It should be equipped to care
-for from five to ten per cent of the hospital population, depending
-entirely upon the location and special problems of the institution in
-question and the community which it serves. In any event it should
-include both large and small dormitories, the larger accommodating
-from fifteen to thirty patients, and the smaller not more than six or
-eight, adequate day-room space, numerous single rooms and commodious
-enclosed verandas. There should, of course, be ample dining room
-facilities as well as diet rooms to provide for those whose condition
-makes it necessary or advisable for them to be served in the wards.
-Special provision should be made for the separate care of the noisy,
-violent, disturbed, etc., and they should be in a part of the building
-which can be isolated. The suicidal cases must be given special care
-and separate supervision. A well equipped hydrotherapeutic department
-is an essential part of the reception building. Continuous bath and
-pack rooms are equally necessary. No less important are admission and
-examination rooms, a pharmacy, laboratories, rooms for the special
-treatment of eye, ear, nose and throat conditions, recreation rooms, a
-library, space for occupational therapy, provision for social service
-and psychological departments, etc. At least two physicians should
-reside in the building. It is unfortunate that reception buildings as
-a rule are entirely too small. They should be large enough so that the
-acute and recoverable cases, as well as those found on observation not
-to require hospital treatment, can be returned to their homes without
-any further contact with the hospital or the necessity of a protracted
-residence with the chronic and purely custodial cases.
-
-The experience of many years has shown quite conclusively that the
-supervision and general direction of a hospital for mental diseases
-should be delegated to a medical superintendent with such clinical and
-administrative assistants as the nature and size of the institution
-may indicate. The dual system of management frequently suggested
-by politicians, with a layman as the executive head and a medical
-director subordinated to his authority, has proved to be a failure
-in every instance in which it has been tried. The administrative
-details necessary to the successful operation of a large institution
-are such as to require the entire time and attention not only of the
-superintendent but usually of an assistant superintendent. In a large
-hospital the activities of the medical staff should be under the
-immediate supervision of a specialist whose training and experience
-qualify him to direct the clinical and psychiatric work of others.
-This is a quite sufficient task to require the constant attention and
-undivided energies of a clinical director who has no other interests
-or responsibilities. In this way recent graduates with proper
-qualifications may be interested in entering the psychiatric field.
-Every state hospital, in addition to fulfilling its entire duty to the
-patients in its charge, should be a training school for psychiatrists,
-social workers, psychologists, occupational therapists and psychiatric
-nurses. The hospital staff, as well as providing for the services of
-physicians well trained in psychiatry, must include other specialists.
-A hospital of any size should have a staff of consulting and visiting
-physicians including several internists and surgeons, a gynecologist, a
-neurologist, a dermatologist, an ophthalmologist, a laryngologist and
-an otologist. These consultants should visit the hospital regularly and
-direct and supervise the work of the resident staff along the lines
-of their specialty. It is hardly necessary to suggest today that a
-hospital of any size without a resident dentist is one which is not
-properly equipped to care for its patients.
-
-Nothing is more important in the modern hospital than the training
-school for nurses. It is the nursing care of the patients more than
-any other one thing perhaps that has made the difference between the
-old time asylum and the psychiatric hospital of the highest type. The
-state hospital training school of the present day offers its pupils
-a three years' course of instruction, including a year of practical
-experience in an affiliated general hospital. Its graduates, moreover,
-are trained not only in psychiatric and general nursing, as well as
-the care of neurological cases, but in hydrotherapy, occupational
-therapy, reeducational, industrial and social work. The nurse of the
-future who has had no psychiatric training and experience is one whose
-education is not complete. Every effort should be made to encourage the
-training schools of general hospitals to send their senior nurses to a
-hospital for mental diseases for a service of at least three months.
-The specialized care and treatment of cases suffering from tuberculosis
-has been neglected in many institutions. It should not be necessary to
-suggest that such cases have no place in a ward with other patients
-who have not contracted that disease, and yet in many of our large and
-important hospitals there are no separate buildings for that purpose.
-It has been shown by statistical studies that persons suffering from
-dementia praecox have an unusual and remarkable susceptibility to
-tuberculosis. Unfortunately, it has never been possible to completely
-segregate the epileptics in our public hospitals for mental diseases.
-They constitute a special problem and should receive a different diet
-as well as an entirely different type of treatment. Their presence in
-the wards with mental cases is highly detrimental to both. This is
-equally true of drug cases and mental defectives, and especially the
-so-called defective delinquents.
-
-There are many reasons why every hospital of any consequence that
-is engaged in the care of mental diseases should be provided with a
-well trained and experienced pathologist. Examinations of urine and
-sputum must be made daily. Widal tests are sometimes necessary for
-the diagnosis of typhoid fever. Analyses of water and milk should
-be made at frequent intervals. Bacteriological vaccines should be
-available at any time. Only laboratory investigations can throw any
-light on the source of the frequent infections which are found in large
-institutions. Diphtheria is a disease which must be guarded against
-constantly. Lumbar punctures, Wassermann tests, the colloidal gold
-reaction, cell counts, etc., are daily necessities in a large hospital.
-We lose much information of value to us if autopsies are neglected. A
-definite program of pathological research work should be carried on in
-every hospital for mental diseases. It has been suggested frequently
-that the microscope has no part to play in studying the etiology of
-the psychoses and that they are purely functional in origin. Many of
-them are functional. It is nevertheless equally true that we have a
-definite pathological basis for the traumatic psychoses, the senile
-conditions, cerebral arteriosclerosis, general paresis, brain syphilis,
-cerebral growths, mental deficiency and many other brain and nervous
-diseases. The psychosis most clearly understood from the standpoint of
-etiology, pathology, symptomatology and diagnosis is general paresis.
-Our definite knowledge of that condition was obtained entirely from the
-laboratory. Further information may be secured in the same way. While
-it is true that we have not had any great amount of success as yet with
-the treatment of general paresis with salvarsan, the positive knowledge
-that the disease is of syphilitic origin should encourage us in our
-efforts to solve the problem of curing it. Histological, pathological,
-bacteriological, chemical, clinical and psychological researches must
-be pushed vigorously if psychiatry is to keep pace with the general
-progress shown by modern medicine in other fields.
-
-In connection with this subject some reference should be made to
-the general neglect of statistical studies. They should be based on
-detailed, accurate and exhaustive clinical records, which unfortunately
-are not now available to the extent that they should be. It is true
-that in a general way some progress has been made. The studies
-instituted by the American Psychiatric Association will ultimately
-tell us quite definitely the frequency of the various psychoses,
-the recovery and death rates to be expected, etc. We should not be
-satisfied with that alone. The great wealth of material which we have
-in our hospitals, together with the excellent clinical and laboratory
-facilities at our disposal, should enable us to accomplish much more.
-An analysis of our case records, if properly made, would give us
-definite information as to the clinical aspects of the mental diseases
-we are dealing with. These should be made the subject of exhaustive
-study by the scientific institutes and other research departments
-conducted by the various state authorities to an extent never yet
-undertaken or even attempted. If it cannot be done by the states it
-should be instituted by the federal government.
-
-The fact that the field of influence of our public institutions should
-extend far beyond the walls of the hospital is one which has received
-general recognition only within the last few years. Every hospital
-has a large number of patients still within its legal custody but who
-have been allowed to return temporarily to their homes or occupations
-while still under observation pending their final discharge. These
-are now, to a very limited extent, under the supervision of social
-workers. The hospitals have unfortunately, owing to a lack of funds,
-never had a sufficient number of social workers to look after them
-properly. The hospitals as a rule now maintain out-patient departments
-where those who have been allowed to go home on visit or resume their
-occupations are encouraged to come for assistance and advice. The
-public is gradually learning to take advantage of this opportunity to
-obtain expert advice on matters relating to mental hygiene and secure
-professional opinions as to the disposition and treatment of members
-of the family showing symptoms of incipient mental disorders. This
-field of influence extends even further. Clinics have been established
-in various locations outside of the hospitals in the larger cities
-in several states. In New York they are conducted by state hospital
-physicians in Binghamton, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Plattsburg, Dunkirk,
-Jamestown, Olean, Salamanca, Poughkeepsie, Peekskill, Yonkers, Mount
-Vernon, Mineola, Newburgh, Kingston, Rochester, Middletown, Ogdensburg,
-Malone, Watertown, Utica, Schenectady, Ovid, Ithaca and New York City.
-Physicians and social workers are in attendance at all of these places.
-The last published report of the New York State Hospital Commission
-(1919) shows that 7,203 visits were made to these clinics during the
-year. Paroled patients made 5,102 of these, discharged patients 265
-and others who had no connection with the hospitals at all, 1,836.
-In addition to this the hospital social workers made 3,496 visits to
-paroled patients as well as four hundred and sixty-two visits to other
-patients for the purpose of preventing mental diseases. Situations
-were obtained for one hundred and sixty-seven discharged patients. An
-enormous amount of work was also done in history taking, etc. Numerous
-clinics have been established in Massachusetts by the Department of
-Mental Diseases.[28] During the year ending November 30, 1919, a total
-of 4,333 visits were reported. Of these 3,057 were first visits. The
-number reported by the various hospitals was as follows:—Worcester
-State Hospital 1,278, Taunton State Hospital 182, Northampton State
-Hospital 458, Danvers State Hospital 282, Westborough State Hospital
-177, Grafton State Hospital 129, Gardner Colony 65, Monson State
-Hospital 70, Foxborough State Hospital 27, Massachusetts School for
-the Feebleminded 541, Boston State Hospital (Psychopathic Department)
-2,112. Clinics were maintained in the following localities:—Athol,
-Boston, Brockton, Danvers, Fitchburg, Foxborough, Gardner, Grafton,
-Gloucester, Greenfield, Haverhill, Lawrence, Lynn, Malden, Medfield,
-Monson, New Bedford, Newburyport, Northampton, Pittsfield, Salem,
-Springfield, Taunton, Waverley, Westborough, Worcester and Wrentham.
-
-This is a gratifying evidence of progress. There are indications of an
-awakening. The hospital treatment of mental diseases will eventually be
-conducted on a much higher plane and along lines more nearly comparable
-to those of the general hospital. A study of legislation relating to
-mental disease shows that efforts are being made very generally to
-make their treatment a medical problem rather than a legal question.
-It has been no easy matter to obtain treatment for mental diseases,
-assuming a desire on the part of the individual to take advantage
-of such an opportunity. A review of our legal enactments shows that
-as a general rule it means a formal application, properly verified,
-an elaborate examination by two qualified physicians, an order of
-commitment by the judge of a court of record, a legal notice and an
-opportunity for a hearing if one is demanded. Pennsylvania as early
-as 1883 made provision for the immediate admission of such cases as
-required it, pending the usual court procedure. As has been shown in
-another chapter, arrangements have been legalized in many states for
-the emergency reception of mental cases, at least for those persons
-who are known to be dangerous to themselves or others. Temporary care
-enactments have been written into the law in various communities,
-making it possible to keep mental cases under observation for a limited
-period of time. In a large number of states it is now possible for
-a person requesting treatment voluntarily to receive it on his own
-application without any other legal formalities. Perhaps the greatest
-advance is the custom, not so infrequent now, of sending persons held
-by courts under a criminal process to a hospital for observation as to
-their mental condition. The fact should not be lost sight of that it is
-still possible to find "insane" persons in jails, poorhouses and county
-institutions in many parts of the country. Worse than this, however, is
-the custom of delegating their care to police officers. Nevertheless,
-distinct progress has been made.
-
-As has already been shown, a study of methods of care in this country
-indicates that every state has passed through several very definite
-preliminary stages. These may be summarized as follows:—
-
- 1. A period of home care only. During the colonial days mental cases
- were cared for at home or not at all. There was nothing else that
- could be done for them at the time.
-
- 2. Confinement with criminals. In cases of unusual violence, dangerous
- persons were confined in jails, lockups and prisons. If necessary,
- under certain circumstances the law in some states even authorized the
- use of chains.
-
- 3. Almshouse care. There has been a time in practically every state
- when the poorhouse has been looked upon as the proper place for the
- insane.
-
- 4. Asylum care. As a result of the agitation of Dorothea Dix and
- others, mental diseases were eventually given custodial care in
- asylums.
-
- 5. Modern hospital care.
-
-In 1894 Dr. S. Weir Mitchell[29] delivered the annual address at
-the semi-centennial meeting of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association in Philadelphia. It was a very painful occasion for many.
-His remarks may be summed up as a vigorous arraignment of the asylum
-methods of that day. He severely criticized the public, the state
-legislatures, boards of management and the hospital superintendents.
-His principal charge was that they were operating asylums along the
-lines of the past and were perfectly satisfied with what they had
-accomplished. He pointed out the necessity of properly qualified
-physicians, more scientific methods and modern treatment. "We have
-done with whip and chains and ill usage, and having won this noble
-battle have we not rested too easily content with having made the
-condition of the insane more comfortable?" It seems incredible that
-in the case records of that day he should have found no evidences "of
-blood counts, temperatures, reflexes, the eye-ground, color fields, all
-the minute examinations with which we are so unrestingly busy." One
-institution was unable to furnish Dr. Mitchell with a stethoscope or
-an ophthalmoscope! One of his criticisms was that few institutions for
-mental diseases had a training school for nurses or any provisions
-for hydrotherapy. His last words were almost a prophecy: "Fifty years
-hence, when we must all have been swept away, another will possibly
-stand in my place and tell your history, and to him and the bountiful
-wisdom of time I leave it to be declared whether I was right or wrong."
-Dr. Mitchell's description of the asylums and their methods was
-bitterly resented. Who is there today who would not feel that he was
-fully justified?
-
-The time has come when we must again look to the future and prepare for
-it. The purely custodial care of mental diseases has led to a dread of
-asylums on the part of the public. There are unfortunately too many
-hospitals that are asylums in everything but name. The establishment
-of psychopathic hospitals and psychiatric clinics and the way in which
-they have been welcomed by the public is suggestive. The problems of
-mental diseases, as far as possible, must be approached from a general
-hospital point of view and the psychiatric hospital of the future must
-have a modern equipment, an efficient staff and adequate facilities
-for the employment of the latest methods. Above all, the institutions
-must be such that they will be looked upon by the community not merely
-as a place to which the insane may be sent for final disposition, but
-as hospitals where the development of mental diseases may be prevented
-and where recoveries may be reasonably expected if the patient is given
-early treatment. This should be the principal object of the state
-hospital of the future. "The concept of its beneficent ministration to
-the mind diseased as any physical part of the human body," as Copp[30]
-has pointed out, "is just appearing in shadowy outline in public
-consciousness. The effacement of this barrier to early treatment is
-slowly but steadily progressing. Its pace will be hastened if every
-mental hospital continues to become, as speedily as may be, the
-real hospital in the broadest sense, with emphasis laid upon its
-treatment function and subordination of its control relation within
-the reasonable limit of caution. The mental hospital and the general
-hospital are essentially alike. Mental factors predominate in the
-former, but are potent influences in the latter. The difference is
-one of degree only. All the imperative requirements of the one must
-be met by the other. They are supplementary agencies in curing and
-alleviating disease and must be, eventually, viewed in the same light
-and administered in the same spirit on even planes of humaneness and
-efficiency."
-
-One thing should be made clear at the outset. A comprehensive and
-progressive program for further development means an expenditure of
-money. If the state hospitals are to fulfill their obligations to the
-community which they serve they must have more physicians. Provisions
-must be made for directors of clinical psychiatry, pathologists,
-internists, surgeons, dentists, and specialists of various kinds.
-Experts in hydrotherapy, massage and electrical treatments are
-necessary, as well as dietitians, industrial instructors, occupational
-teachers, specialists in reeducational work, psychologists, social
-workers, etc. Furthermore, they must be provided in sufficient numbers
-if anything is to be accomplished. As a matter of fact, no very great
-outlay of funds would be required in making a tremendous increase in
-efficiency. Although the institutional expenditures have increased
-enormously of late years, largely as a result of war conditions,
-increased costs, higher wages, etc., the amount actually invested in
-this humanitarian movement by the various states is not commensurate in
-any way with the results which are to be obtained. If we leave out of
-consideration everything except the saving in dollars and cents to be
-effected by methods which will in many instances render a protracted
-hospital residence unnecessary, the outlay involved would be well
-warranted. It should be brought to the attention of the public that
-very few states are expending as much as one dollar per day for the
-maintenance of the individual patient. Modern hospital treatment of the
-highest type, under these circumstances, is manifestly impossible. The
-time has come when we should no longer be satisfied with the purely
-custodial care of mental cases.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE HOSPITAL TREATMENT OF MENTAL DISEASES
-
-
-The responsibility of the hospital for the future of the patient
-begins with his arrival at the institution and the ultimate outcome
-of the case often depends entirely upon the developments of the first
-few weeks of his residence in the wards. A complete understanding of
-the patient's mental condition, the prospects of an ultimate recovery
-and the line of treatment to be followed can only be determined by a
-thorough and accurate examination on admission. This constitutes the
-basis for all further procedure. If satisfactory results are to be
-obtained this task should be delegated to a medical officer who has
-had an extended psychiatric experience. For purposes of completeness,
-as well as uniformity, a definite plan should be followed. The form
-used in writing the initial history and in recording the results of the
-routine mental and physical examinations at the Boston State Hospital
-are described in full in the "Medical Staff Manual" which is furnished
-to all assistant physicians entering the service. This has been found
-to be of great assistance in the training of new men along proper lines
-and insures a uniformity of hospital records which is indispensable.
-In a general way the form of examination employed by Meyer and
-Kirby[31] for some years has been followed. As this scheme is fairly
-representative of the method of procedure used by hospitals for mental
-diseases throughout the country it has been thought worth while to
-reproduce it in full.
-
-
- HISTORY
-
- _Name of Physician_: _Date_:
-
- _Name of Informant, Address, Relation to Patient_:
-
- It is often desirable to make a note on the intelligence and apparent
- reliability of the informant.
-
- _Residence and Citizenship of Patient_:
-
- Birthplace? Date of birth? Time in Massachusetts? If foreign born,
- date of arrival in U. S.? Naturalized or alien?
-
- _Family History_:
-
- It is not sufficient to ask simply the general question: Has any
- member of the family been insane or nervous? A great many persons will
- answer in the negative, whereas a detailed inquiry will often bring
- out a number of instances of nervous or mental troubles.
-
- Specific inquiry must be made concerning the persons of the direct
- ancestral lines as follows:
-
- (a) Paternal grandparents—nervous or mental disease?
-
- (b) Maternal grandparents—nervous or mental disease?
-
- (c) Father: Age, nervous or mental disease, alcoholism? If dead, age
- at death and cause of death?
-
- (d) Mother: Age, nervous or mental disease, alcoholism? If dead, age
- at death and cause of death?
-
- (e) Number of children in family (brothers and sisters of patient).
- Nervous or mental trouble in any of these besides patient?
- Psychopathic personality, alcoholism, criminality, etc.?
-
- (f) Collateral branches: mention any known cases of insanity or
- nervous diseases in uncles, aunts or cousins.
-
-
- PERSONAL HISTORY OF PATIENT
-
- 1. _Early Development_:
-
- Birthplace and age, unusual incidents attending birth, retardation
- in talking or walking, infantile convulsions, night terrors, fits of
- temper, etc.—Severe illness or infectious diseases in infancy or
- childhood—Sequella? Frights, shocks or injuries?
-
- 2. _Education, Intellectual and Moral Development_:
-
- Educational opportunities, time spent in school, interest in studies,
- progress, marks, behavior, truancy, etc.?
-
- As an adult, regarded as bright, intelligent or dullminded? Well
- informed or ignorant? Reading, memory, judgment?
-
- Moral responsibility, reliability, religious interests? Church
- affiliations?
-
- Criminal traits, tramp life, police record?
-
- 3. _Sexual Life_:
-
- Precocious interests in childhood, masturbation, abnormal practices,
- assaults or seduction?
-
- Love affairs and disappointments? Age at marriage or reasons for
- single life. Moderate or excessive sexual desires, irregularities or
- prostitution.
-
- Miscarriages, number of children, date of birth of youngest? If barren,
- what explanation; what effect on patient?
-
- Frigidity, loss of power, refusal of partner, infidelity, measures to
- prevent conception. Treatment of partner, abuse, separation, divorce.
-
- Perversions, abnormal methods of gratification with same or opposite
- sex.
-
- In women, unusual symptoms at menstrual periods; age at menopause,
- nervous symptoms accompanying climacterium?
-
- 4. _Diseases and Injuries_:
-
- Any previous nervous affection or symptoms, such as headaches, nervous
- prostration, chorea, epilepsy, hysterical attacks, etc.?
-
- Mention severe infections diseases and sequella, if any. Inquire
- concerning tuberculosis, rheumatism, heart disease, nephritis, etc.
-
- Venereal disease, _syphilis and gonorrhea_, full account, if possible,
- of how acquired, age, treatment and after affects.
-
- Severe injuries, particularly head traumata, should be described as
- regards their immediate and subsequent effects.
-
- 5. _Occupation_:
-
- Kinds of work undertaken, ambition, efficiency, wages, etc. Length of
- time in different positions, reasons for change, etc.
-
- 6. _Alcoholism and Other Toxic Influences_:
-
- Intemperate, moderate or total abstainer? If intemperate, age at which
- drinking began, apparent cause of same, kind of beverage consumed and
- approximate amounts. Periodic or steady drinker? Usual reaction to
- alcohol?
-
- Inquire about attacks of neuritis, delirium, hallucinatory episodes,
- suspicions, ideas of jealousy.
-
- _Other toxic influences_: Drug habits, occupational poisons, lead,
- arsenic, phosphorus, mercury, etc. Illuminating gas poisoning, nicotine
- intoxication.
-
- 7. _Mental Make-up or Type of Personality_:
-
- Very important because certain of the non-organic psychoses appear
- to be a further development of mental traits or tendencies early
- recognized as personal peculiarities or deviations from the normal. In
- addition to the points already covered under the preceding headings,
- the following important types should always be borne in mind and
- appropriate inquiries made:
-
- _Manic make-up_: Lively, active, sociable, pushing, talkative,
- cheerful, optimistic; may be domineering, irritable and inclined to
- cruelty; sometimes not very efficient, may be noted as changeable,
- lacking in persistence, concentration and application. May show
- transient blue spells or lowering of spirits.
-
- _Depressive make-up_: Gloomy, worrisome, blue natures who feel
- continuously inhibited or restrained and unable to make decisions;
- easily discouraged.
-
- _Cyclothymic make-up_: Emotionally unstable, either up or down, have
- blue spells or are unduly cheerful and care-free.
-
- _Shut-in make-up_: Shy, retiring, self-conscious, bashful, quiet,
- secretive, seclusive and unsociable. Lack of interest in opposite
- sex or definite aversion; often prudish and over-particular. Unusual
- religious interest frequent. Inclined to day-dreaming, show fondness
- for the abstract and mystical. Odd habits, hobbies or cranky pursuits
- are common.
-
- _Paranoid make-up_: Mistrustful, suspicious, tend to misunderstand;
- unduly sensitive, feel discriminated against and have feelings of
- self-importance. (These traits may be related to shut-in tendencies.)
-
- Other types of make-up include the psychasthenic, neurasthenic and
- hysterical; also the mentally retarded or undeveloped (feebleminded).
-
- 8. _Previous Attacks of Mental Disorder_:
-
- Obtain dates, places where treated, apparent cause, duration of attacks
- and general character of symptoms.
-
- 9. _Precipitating Cause of Present Psychosis_:
-
- Try to determine what occurrence or situation appeared to bring
- about the mental breakdown. Emotional strains, excitement, quarrels,
- worries, griefs, disappointments, sexual episodes, separation, deaths,
- childbirth, etc., financial loss, overwork, physical disease, etc.
-
- 10. _Onset and Symptoms of the Psychosis_:
-
- Take as far as possible a spontaneous account beginning with date
- when first symptoms were noticed in the patient. In this connection
- particular attention should be given to changes in behavior, in mood,
- in manner of speech, in attitude towards others and towards work.
-
- Appearance of suspicious, unusual interests, peculiar ideas and
- delusions?
-
- Hallucinations in various fields and reaction to them?
-
- Obtain as much as possible regarding trend of patient's ideas, topics
- of conversation and content of hallucinations. What did voices say?
- What was seen in visions?
-
- Forgetfulness, impairment of memory, loss of orientation and clouding
- of sensorium.
-
- Always inquire regarding suicidal inclinations or attempts, threats of
- violence, assaults or homicidal tendencies.
-
- Compare informant's statement with those given in the commitment
- certificate.
-
- What treatment was given at home? Name of physician in attendance?
-
- Date on which patient was taken to hospital.
-
-
- PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
-
- I. _GENERAL TYPE, APPEARANCE AND CONDITION_:
-
- 1. Weight (with or without clothes).
-
- 2. Height and general frame.
-
- 3. Malformations (wherever possible state the origin); asymmetries
- of skull, face, body, spine, thorax; form of palate (low, high,
- asymmetrical, saddle or V-shaped, longitudinal torus).
-
- Ears (adherent lobules, prominent anthelix, satyr-points, large,
- angle, asymmetry, length, etc.).
-
- Abnormalities of hands, feet, sexual organs.
-
- 4. Color of the skin.
-
- Color and quantity of the hair.
-
- Color of the eyes.
-
- General complexion.
-
- 5. General nutrition (panniculus and muscles).
-
- 6. Condition of the skin and mucous membranes; anemia, jaundice,
- dropsy, pallor, flushing and cyanosis; eruptions (describe in detail).
- Trophic disorders.
-
- 7. Scars, bruises and moles (size, location, color and origin).
-
- 8. Evidence of syphilis: scars, including those of the penis, back
- of tongue (patches devoid of villi and fissures) and palate; tibial
- crests; glands of elbow, groins and neck.
-
- 9. Signs of gout and rheumatism, goitre or nodes of the thyroid, etc.
-
- 10. Temperature, general, and various parts of the body (both sides if
- indicated as in hemiplegia).
-
-
- II. _NERVOUS SYSTEM_:
-
- 1. _General and subjective sensations and facial expression_:
-
- General feeling of well-being or exhaustion, general complaints,
- weakness, etc.
-
- Vertigo: (constant, occasional, or occurring when the patient walks,
- or in the dark).
-
- Headache: Whole head or limited space; frontal, vertical, occipital,
- unilateral, bilateral, deep or superficial; constant or periodic,
- aggravated at night or by some special cause, as with heat, with or
- without tenderness of head or spine to touch or pressure. Backache
- (general or localized).
-
- Ovarian, infra-mammary, lumbar and vertex pains (in hysteria).
-
- Neuralgic pains: (fifth nerve, intercostal nerves, sciatic nerve, with
- pain points, etc.) and muscular pains.
-
- General or wandering pains: Pains in bones (legs) afternoon or night.
- Girdle pains. Precordial pains (with or without anxiety).
-
- Zones of hyperesthesia: See below.
-
- 2. _Eyes_:
-
- Expression: lids: obliquity, mongol type, lagophthalmus, protrusion
- of eyeballs (with or without the Graefe symptom), ptosis; spasm of
- palpebral muscles.
-
- Movement of eyes, nystagmus, strabismus (divergent or convergent);
- position and extent of movement of the eyes; double vision (in what
- direction does the second object move and incline?).
-
- Weakness of the internal rectus (in close focussing).
-
- Conjunctiva, lachrymal canal. Scars of cornea. Arcus senilis.
- Reflectory iridoplegia.
-
- Size and form of pupils. Residuals or formation of adhesion of iris.
- Contraction of iris on exposure to strong light; on accommodation (for
- near vision) and after shutting the eye.
-
- Imperfect sight (reading print), improved or not by glasses, dimness
- of sight, limitation of field of vision, scotoma, hemianopsia, loss of
- color sense; anomalies of refraction. Condition of apparatus (cornea,
- lens, vitreous body). Ophthalmoscopy where indicated (for choked disc,
- optic atrophy, lesions of the fundus). Field of vision where indicated
- and possible (reversal of color fields in hysteria; scotomata).
-
- 3. _Ears_:
-
- Discharge, otoscopy. Defect of hearing on one or both sides (use watch
- and tuning fork).
-
- Conduction through skull. Tinnitus aurium (auscultation for actual
- sound, over the head).
-
- 4. _Taste_:
-
- Test separately the anterior two-thirds of tongue and the posterior
- third with weak solution of sugar, quinine, acid, salt.
-
- 5. _Smell_:
-
- Test each nostril with oil of cloves, bergamot, peppermint, wintergreen
- and lemon. Note the actual answers.
-
- Parosmia. Put down the actual extent of discrimination and recognition,
- with explanation of defect (mental, local, or nervous).
-
- 6. _Cutaneous Sensibility_:
-
- 1. Tactile sensibility (use the finger-tip, feather, or pin). Compare
- both sides of face, arms, hands, fingers, breasts, inner and outer
- aspects of thighs and legs. (Never omit the ulnar side and the area
- outside and above the knee). Sole and dorsum of feet.
-
- 2. Localization of touch (time and space) and tickle.
-
- 3. Sensibility to pain (cautious pricks with a pin, localization in
- time and space), with or without the attention of the patient.
-
- 4. Sensations of heat and cold (cold water and warm water in a glass
- tube).
- (a) Sense of position: See below.
- (b) Stereognostic sense.
-
- 5. Subjective sensations (formication, feeling of needles and pins,
- numbness).
-
- 6. Tenderness of nerve trunks and muscles on pressure and percussion.
- The distribution to be noted on the drawings of the body surface.
-
- 7. Biernacki's sign (analgesia of the ulnar nerve); anesthesia of
- eyeball; of testicles.
-
- 7. _Vasomotor and Trophic Conditions_:
-
- Salivation, seborrhea.
-
- Cyanosis or pallor; scaliness or loss of hair; change of nails.
-
- Blushing, dermatographia. General or localized perspiration.
- Temperature of paralyzed or anesthetic parts.
-
- 8. _Motor Functions_:
-
- Mobility of facial muscles (laugh) (wrinkle the forehead and the nose;
- move the ears; show the teeth and shut the eyes); tongue; palate.
-
- Muscles of the neck, trunk and extremities; gait.
-
- Functions of the successive segments: In case of paresis or paralysis
- define the limits of the condition and indicate the results of the
- following tests: For loss of power: for the coordination of movement
- (writing, buttoning coat); for muscular sense (discriminating
- difference in weight; with eyes shut tell the position of the limbs
- and show with one side the position of the other). Balancing power:
- (walking along a straight line, stand upright with heels and toes
- together and eyes closed).
-
- Never forget the test of equality of grip, flexor and extensor strength
- of elbow, knees and toes. For test of weakness of one lower extremity
- have both lower extremities raised and hold to fatigue limit. The
- weaker limb will sink a certain number of seconds before the other.
-
- 9. _Reflexes_:
-
- 1. Deep reflexes.
- Masseteric: elbow, wrist, knee-jerk with or without Jendrassic, with
- clonus, or contralateral adductor reflex, knee-cap reflex; ankle
- clonus and Achilles tendon reflex.
- 2. Superficial reflexes:
- Plantar (with full description as to the Babinski reflex), gluteal,
- cremasteric, abdominal, epigastric, scapular, corneal, palmar,
- sneezing.
-
- 10. _Condition of the Paralyzed Muscles_:
-
- Firm and of good tone, or flaccid or deficient in tone. Rigid and
- contracted. Note attitude of limb and the limitation of the motion,
- active and passive. Atrophy, hypertrophy, electric reaction of nerve
- and muscle (galvanic and faradic irritability when required).
-
- 11. _Fibrillary Twitching_:
-
- Its distribution.
-
- 12. _Tremor_:
-
- Of what parts; rhythm, intensity, rapidity. Condition at rest during
- sleep; when first observed. Condition during motion, how influenced by
- will.
-
- 13. _Organic Reflexes and Their Control_:
-
- Bladder; delay of micturition. Dribbling from empty bladder, from
- distended bladder. Peculiar sensations on micturition.
-
- Sexual reflexes: Frequent involuntary contraction and evacuation.
-
- Defecation: Is the patient conscious of evacuation?
-
- 14. _Convulsions_:
-
- Distribution: Extending over head, trunk, extremities, one side, one
- member.
-
- Character: Which parts first and most attacked, and how do the waves of
- the tonic and clonic spasm spread; what movements predominate?
-
- Average duration, frequency, occurring night or day, or early in the
- morning.
-
- Breathing; pupils; vasomotor condition; froth and bites.
-
- Sphincters: Consciousness totally or partially lost.
-
- Aura.
-
- Equivalents: with or without what automatic movements.
-
- Physical and nervous symptoms before and after attack.
-
- Hysterical attacks.
-
-
- III. _THORACIC ORGANS_:
-
- Respiratory organs: Is there any difficulty of breathing, permanent or
- in attacks? Sleep with mouth open? Any pain on deep inspiration? Any
- cough or expectoration (where from). Nose and larynx. Shape of chest.
- Frequency of respiration. Respiratory movements. (Compare both sides
- in deep inspiration and expiration).
-
- Lungs: Percussion. Auscultation. Expansion.
-
- In case of dullness or other abnormalities: Fremitus.
-
- Contents of pleura.
-
- Circulatory organs: Is there any palpitation? In attacks? Due to what?
- Subjective sensation of arhythmia? Heart: The impulse seen and felt
- in what area? Relative dullness (right, upper and lateral borders).
- Sounds and bruits (localized). Pay special attention to muffling of the
- first sound, to duplication; to change of murmurs in inspiration and by
- position. Rhythm and accentuation.
-
- Radial pulse: Rate, quality, on lying and sitting and standing. Special
- attention to variability through position or motion or exertion. If
- desirable, sphygmogram.
-
- Condition of radial, brachial and temporal arteries.
-
- Arcus senilis.
-
- Sclerosis of veins. Varicosities.
-
- Blood pressure.
-
-
- IV. _DIGESTIVE AND ABDOMINAL ORGANS_:
-
- Appetite, thirst, anorexia, nausea: Relative to quantity and quality
- of food. Vomiting (time and form), eructations and brashes; pain
- (locality, irradiation and time).
-
- Mouth and teeth. Fetor. Fauces and pharynx. Stomach (position, etc.).
- Digestion. Movement of bowels. Any subjective feeling of obstacle? Form
- of stools. Flatulence and distensions. Hemorrhoids and fistulas.
-
- Liver and spleen.
-
- If indicated, examination of stomach contents.
-
-
- V. _URINARY APPARATUS_:
-
- Micturition: Urine, amount in 24 hours, specific gravity, color,
- reaction, odor, albumen, sugar and indican, etc.
-
- Macroscopic and microscopic examinations of sediment, clouds and
- threads; casts, epithelia, erythrocytes, leukocytes, bacteria, threads,
- crystals, amorphous substances.
-
-
- VI. _GENITAL ORGANS_:
-
- Scars of genital organs. Menstruation: regular; profuse; scanty;
- accompanying symptoms.
-
- Discharges at intervals; constant; profuse; color.
-
- Internal examination.
-
- In men: Frequency and character of the sexual functions. Frequency of
- emissions, their occasional exciting causes and correlated symptoms.
-
- Diagnostic summary and indications for further observation and
- treatment.
-
-
- MENTAL EXAMINATION
-
- I. _ATTITUDE AND MANNER_:
-
- General appearance of the patient, adaptation to surroundings,
- patient's general attitude and behavior, attention and cooperation.
- Note any peculiarities of conduct or demeanor (peculiarity of dress,
- mannerisms, grimacing, affectations, etc.). Note the manner, gestures,
- form of intonation, rapidity or slowness of speech, or special
- peculiarities. Facial and general expression (sadness, anxiety, fear,
- restlessness, excitement, etc.). Psychomotor retardation or excitement
- (violence, destructiveness), care of person (whether cleanly or
- untidy, etc.).
-
-
- II. _STREAM OF MENTAL ACTIVITY_:
-
- 1. _Flow of thought_: Give sample of spontaneous expression or
- productivity, if possible. If not, give reaction to questioning.
- Show any disturbance of train of thought (retardation, confusion,
- incoherence, poverty of ideas, volubility, flight of ideas,
- distractibility, rhyming, desultoriness, circumstantiality,
- perseveration, fabrication, coinage of words, verbigeration, echolalia).
-
- 2. _Abnormalities in the motor reactions_: Negativism, catalepsy,
- echopraxia, stereotypy, automatism, mutism, etc. Show loss of
- initiative, lack of spontaneity or slowness in action, etc.
-
-
- III. _EMOTIONAL TONE_:
-
- Moods and affects. Show the presence of cheerfulness, laughter,
- mischievousness, excitement, exaltation, depression, anxiety, fear,
- perplexity, tendency to be startled, irritability, constraint,
- confusion, indifference or apathy. Show sensitiveness, seclusiveness,
- suspicion, emotional instability or suggestibility.
-
-
- IV. _MENTAL CONTENT_:
-
- 1. Hallucinations; hearing, vision, taste, smell, sensation, etc.
-
- 2. Delusions; persecution, suspicion, infidelity, poisoning,
- electricity, hypnotism, mind-reading, self-accusation, grandeur, etc.
- Show whether permanent or transitory, systematized or unsystematized.
-
- 3. Illusions.
-
- 4. Obsessions, phobias, etc.
-
- 5. Nature of sleep, dreams, etc.
-
-
- V. _ORIENTATION_:
-
- Time, place and person.
-
-
- VI. _MEMORY AND MENTAL GRASP_:
-
- 1. Recent past.
-
- 2. Remote past.
-
- 3. Retention of school knowledge.
-
- 4. Fund of general information.
-
- 5. Data of personal identification.
-
- 6. Counting and calculation.
-
- 7. Reading and writing.
-
-
- VII. _INSIGHT AND JUDGMENT_:
-
- The judgment concerning the situation, insight concerning physical
- and mental health and efficiency, financial status, plans in case of
- discharge? In discussion of abstract and complicated topics? To what
- extent is he sensitive to his own errors and to comments?
-
-
- VIII. _SUMMARY_: Physical and mental.
-
-
- IX. _DIFFERENTIAL AND PROVISIONAL DIAGNOSIS_.
-
-
-The question as to what benefit is to be derived by the patient from
-a residence in a hospital for mental diseases is one which is often
-raised by relatives and friends. They are quite inclined to feel
-that if no medicines are being prescribed nothing is being done for
-the patient and that he could be cared for just as well at home.
-In considering this question it should be borne in mind that the
-persons under treatment in a hospital for mental diseases are there,
-either because they appreciate the need of hospital care themselves,
-or because, as a result of mental disorders, they are incapable of
-directing their own affairs, or are, in the eyes of the law, dangerous
-to themselves or others. Their property and other legal interests must
-be protected during their period of incompetence. Such persons are
-liable, if not adequately safeguarded, to enter into improper contracts
-or make legal conveyances that mean financial ruin to themselves as
-well as others. Unfortunate sexual irregularities frequently occur.
-Conduct disorders of various kinds are to be expected and a tendency
-towards criminal acts is common to several of the psychoses. It
-is a well-known fact that every mentally unbalanced individual is
-potentially dangerous, no matter how harmless he may appear. The
-suicide rate of the country as shown in one hundred of the largest
-cities has not fallen below fourteen per hundred thousand of the sane
-population at any time during the last twenty years. The homicide rate
-in thirty-one of our large cities has not dropped below eight per
-hundred thousand of the population since 1909. Many of these crimes
-were undoubtedly committed by persons who should not have been at
-large and who were not responsible for their acts. The most important
-benefit derived by the patient in the hospital is the constant personal
-supervision given him by experts throughout the twenty-four hours
-of the day, whether he is asleep or awake. He gets the benefit of
-regular hours of rest and exercise, a properly regulated diet adapted
-to his needs, a sufficient amount of fresh air, and amusement and
-entertainments suited to his mental condition. He receives competent
-medical, dental and nursing care and is provided with opportunities
-for occupying himself in many different ways. Reading matter is always
-available for those who care for it. Even religious services are held
-for his benefit.
-
-The tendency of late years is to dispense with the use of drugs as
-far as possible and resort to other methods of accomplishing the same
-results. One of the most important therapeutic procedures in common use
-in the modern hospital for mental diseases is hydrotherapy. This should
-be used intelligently if any results are expected. Sending the patient
-to the hydriatic department where identically the same treatment is
-applied to all cases whether of excitement, depression, exhaustion,
-etc., by an attendant who has no knowledge of either medicine,
-psychiatry or nursing may be referred to as the application of water to
-the exterior, but it is not hydrotherapy. Hydriatic treatments should
-be prescribed by a physician who has a thorough familiarity with that
-particular therapeutic procedure and every patient should receive the
-form adapted to his individual needs. The treatment should be given
-by an expert hydrotherapist. The equipment should provide for hot
-air, electric light, vapor and saline baths, Sitz baths, circular,
-rain, fan, jet and Scotch douches, dry, hot and cold packs, etc. Much
-can be accomplished by tonic, stimulating and eliminative therapy.
-Sedative treatments are much used in hospitals for mental diseases.
-The hot air bath[32] is given at from 134 to 170 degrees Fahrenheit for
-from four to ten minutes, preceded by a foot bath at from 104 to 110
-degrees. The patient enters the electric light and vapor bath at the
-room temperature, the baths being continued from four to eight minutes
-usually. The needle spray is given at a temperature ranging from 96
-to 102 degrees, with a pressure of from twenty to thirty pounds, and
-continued from one to two minutes. The fan douche starts at 90 degrees,
-is reduced gradually with a pressure of from twenty to twenty-five
-pounds and is continued for from fifteen to twenty seconds. The jet
-douche is first used at 90 degrees and gradually reduced, with a
-pressure of from fifteen to twenty-five pounds, for from ten to twenty
-seconds. The Scotch douche is used at a temperature of 80 degrees
-alternating with 110, with from fifteen to thirty pounds pressure. It
-should be used with extreme care. The same is true of vapor douches.
-The saline bath contains five pounds of ordinary salt to sixty gallons
-of water at a temperature of 94 degrees and is continued from ten
-to thirty minutes. The dry pack is usually continued from twenty to
-forty-five minutes, although it may be used longer with safety. In the
-use of the hot blanket pack the inner blanket is wrung out of water at
-from 140 to 160 degrees and must be applied with great care. Depending
-on the condition of the patient, etc., the cold wet pack is given
-with sheets wrung out of water at a temperature ranging from 50 to 60
-degrees, although lower temperature may be used. "Neutral" wet sheet
-packs are often used at a temperature of from 100 to 116 degrees for
-approximately three-quarters of an hour, as preparatory treatments.
-These measures should never be attempted by anyone who has not had an
-extended practical experience. Much can be accomplished by hydrotherapy
-in the alcoholic and toxic conditions, infective and exhaustive
-psychoses, manic excitements, involutional melancholia, hysterical and
-neurasthenic conditions, as well as in occasional cases of dementia
-praecox. Occupational therapy has been used to great advantage in
-connection with the hydrotherapeutic treatments.
-
-In the reception service and in the buildings for the noisy and violent
-cases ample facilities should be at hand for the continuous bath
-treatments. Pack rooms are also desirable. There is no means at our
-disposal equal in any way to the efficacy of the continuous bath in
-controlling excitements. The patient is usually kept in the tub from
-five to eight hours at a temperature varying from 92 to 97 degrees and
-averaging 96 degrees. In some hospitals they are kept in the tubs for
-periods of from two to three weeks. The continuous bath is of no value
-unless it means what the name implies—the continuous submersion of the
-body in water. In dealing with very excited cases this necessitates
-the use of a tub cover and a hammock, although sheet coverings are
-often used satisfactorily. Not much is to be gained by the tub bath if
-the patient is to be allowed to get out and in as he pleases and only
-come into partial contact with the water. The continuous bath is not
-without drawbacks. There is danger of chilling, scalding and drowning
-either by accident or with suicidal intent, etc. Too much care cannot
-be exercised in the supervision of the bath rooms. Every tub room
-in the Boston State Hospital has the following rules conspicuously
-displayed:—
-
-
- THE CONTINUOUS BATH ROOM
-
- 1. The nurse on duty in the bath room will be held personally
- responsible for the safety of the patients and must be thoroughly
- familiar with these rules. The nurse must never leave the room unless
- relieved by some other nurse. Eternal vigilance is necessary to
- prevent the chilling, scalding or drowning of the patient.
-
- 2. Patients are to be given continuous baths only on the written order
- of a physician.
-
- 3. Patients going to or from the bath room must wear a nightdress or
- bathrobe and slippers when not fully clothed.
-
- 4. Tubs not in good condition or not properly equipped must not be
- used.
-
- 5. Only patients under treatment are allowed in the room.
-
- 6. Toilet each patient just before the bath. Patients may be removed
- from the tub for toilet purposes when necessary.
-
- 7. In preparing for the bath, warm the tubs with hot water and then
- regulate the temperature so that a small amount of water at 96 degrees
- will be flowing continually.
-
- 8. Adjust the hammock to the tub and place the patient in the bath
- resting on the hammock. Adjust the cover to the tub, with patient's
- head through the neck opening unless sheets or other covers are used.
-
- 9. The temperature of the water must be taken in each tub at least
- every half hour. Feel the water in each tub frequently. If it seems
- too warm or too cold, take the temperature at once. If you find it
- varying from 96 degrees adjust to that temperature by adding a small
- amount of hot or cold water. If the temperature cannot be kept between
- 95 and 97 degrees, let the water out of the tub and remove the patient
- immediately. The physician in charge and the chief engineer should be
- notified at once. The bath tub key must be fastened to a special cord
- worn by the nurse on duty. It must be delivered to the nurse in charge
- of the ward when the bathroom is closed.
-
- 10. If the patient is very noisy, restless or flushed, fasten an ice
- poultice to the tub cover so that as the patient lies in the water the
- back of the head or neck will rest upon it. Replace with a fresh one
- before the ice is entirely melted.
-
- Intensely excited patients may have cold compresses to the neck,
- changed often, for periods of 20 minutes.
-
- Sponge all faces with cold water once an hour.
-
- 11. Patients are to be permitted to drink as much cool water (not
- iced) as they desire, and must be offered a drink at least once an
- hour.
-
- 12. The nurse must record the following: 1. The water temperature and
- the patient's pulse rate (temporal or facial) every half hour. 2. The
- amount of sleep in the bath. 3. Bowel movements. 4. Nourishment. 5.
- Medicine administered. 6. Hours of each patient in the tub. 7. The
- name of each nurse and the exact time of going on or off duty.
-
- 13. In case the patient shows symptoms of fainting or convulsions,
- makes any attempt at drowning, shows suicidal tendencies or becomes
- too violent to remain in the tub with safety, let the water out and
- remove the patient at once.
-
- 14. In the event of any serious accident or injury or sudden illness
- the patient should be removed from the tub at once and the physician
- notified.
-
- 15. Patients are not to be allowed to feed themselves but must always
- be fed by the nurse. The inlets to the bath may be closed for twenty
- minutes while patients are being fed.
-
- 16. During the day the warming closet must always contain one sheet
- and one towel for each patient in preparation for drying. It must also
- contain washable rugs for patients coming out of the tubs to step
- upon; also two blankets for emergencies.
-
- At least one hour before the patients are to be removed from the baths
- the garments they are to wear after the bath must be placed in the
- closet.
-
- 17. The temperature of the room should be kept as nearly as possible at
- 76 degrees Fahrenheit. If the temperature of the room cannot be kept
- above 68 degrees discontinue the bathing.
-
-
-When the care and treatment of mental diseases was first undertaken in
-our state institutions it was soon found necessary to take advantage
-in every way of such material assistance as could be offered by the
-more intelligent class of ablebodied patients in carrying on the
-routine work of the hospital. There were never employees enough to
-dispense with their services. In this way it came about that they
-were employed in the farms and gardens, assisted with the kitchen and
-housework, shared the tasks of the nurses and attendants in the wards
-and were busily engaged in almost every department of the hospital
-activities. It became apparent that occupation, undertaken originally
-for purely economical purposes, constituted one of the most important
-therapeutic agents at the disposal of the institution. The next step
-was the development of industries. Patients were taught by instructors
-to make clothing, underwear, stockings, shoes, brooms, mats, brushes,
-mattresses, furniture and many other useful products needed by the
-hospital. The end products were in every instance utilitarian. These
-accomplishments led to a still further development—purely occupational
-in character. Women were encouraged to take up such activities as rug
-making of all varieties, basketry, weaving, crocheting, embroidery,
-and needlework of every description. Men usually make towelling on
-looms, weave rugs, renovate mattresses, do repairing of all sorts and
-manufacture small articles which interest the masculine mind. Brass
-work, clay modelling and making jewelry of various kinds have been
-extensively employed.
-
-All of these forms of employment mean, of course, that the patient
-must leave the ward and go to some place designed for the purpose. The
-others, however, have not been overlooked and occupational therapists,
-who devote their entire time to stimulating the interest of the
-patients who cannot leave the wards, on account of their mental or
-physical condition, in some absorbing and diverting occupation, are
-an important part of the personnel of every institution. No other
-form of treatment employed in hospitals for mental diseases has been
-so productive of results. It is interesting to note that the medical
-officers of all of the forces engaged in the recent war found that
-occupational therapy was of great value in cases of shell shock and war
-neuroses.
-
-The highest development perhaps of occupational therapy has been in
-its application to strictly reeducational work in dementia praecox.
-This consists in a graduated and systematized reeducation of interests
-in apparently deteriorated individuals. The success of these efforts
-depends largely on the fact that very simple lines are followed at
-first. The patients are interested in marching to music, simple drills,
-calisthenics, games, basketball and purely physical exercises. Some
-can be induced to sort out raffia and ultimately take part in basket
-making. Others cut out pictures or put puzzles together. The women
-sometimes are willing to do plain sewing or make paper flowers. They
-progress by easy stages to more advanced and elaborate undertakings
-leading eventually to occupational work in the wards or possibly in
-the industrial rooms. Some of the apparently most hopeless cases have,
-as a result of these reeducational efforts, been able to return to
-their homes greatly improved. The mental improvement goes hand in hand
-with a resumption of their interests in their former work or some new
-occupational venture which may have proved attractive.
-
-Every effort should be made to avoid the possibility of long hours
-of idleness in the wards. When not actively employed in occupational
-work, ward games, reading, etc., the patients should be taken out
-of doors for fresh air and exercise. This, of course, suggests the
-necessity and importance of attractive surroundings. Nothing can be
-more depressive or detrimental to the welfare of the patient than a
-prisonlike appearance either inside of the buildings or on the grounds.
-The successful operation of a hospital is dependent in no small measure
-on the amount of attention devoted to the preparation of food. There
-must be a general dietary for the active ablebodied class, one for the
-working patients, an entirely different one for the tuberculous and
-epileptic cases and a special diet for the strictly hospital wards. In
-an institution of any size this requires the constant supervision of
-several dietitians.
-
-The advances of recent years in our knowledge as to the etiology and
-nature of general paresis have led to the introduction of highly
-specialized therapeutic methods in the treatment of that disease and of
-cerebro-spinal syphilis. This is an important feature of the work of
-our hospitals at the present time. The interest recently shown in the
-study of the endocrine system has already brought about a new line of
-therapy which is destined to receive much attention in the future.
-
-Even the amusements necessary for the individual are given special
-attention in the treatment of mental diseases. This refers not only
-to methods of recreation and diversion in the wards day by day but
-includes moving picture shows, dances and various other special
-entertainments. Not the least important consideration is the patient's
-bodily health. This is often a determining factor in bringing about a
-restoration of mental integrity. It very often happens that there are
-diseases of the eye, ear, nose, throat, skin, nervous system, etc.,
-which may require attention. Dental, surgical, gynecological and other
-special treatments sometimes prevent ordinarily acute and recoverable
-psychoses from terminating unfavorably.
-
-In a word, the modern hospital treatment of mental diseases may be said
-to consist of a direct personal supervision of the mental and physical
-hygiene of the patient, supplemented by such specialized therapeutic
-procedures as may be indicated in the individual case.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PSYCHOPATHIC HOSPITAL
-
-
-As has already been shown, the modern hospital treatment of mental
-diseases in this country is a development which represents the
-progress of nearly two centuries. Satisfactory as this has been
-in many respects, it nevertheless leaves much to be desired. All
-indications point to much greater accomplishments in the future. We are
-emerging from an era of custodial care and entering one of prevention,
-scientific investigation, and highly specialized treatment along
-entirely different lines. The interest of the public has been aroused
-in a subject which has heretofore been one to be avoided by common
-consent. Mental hygiene societies are no longer viewed with suspicion
-and curiosity. We are approaching a time when mental diseases can
-be dealt with, as other conditions are, without prejudice or unjust
-discrimination. Psychiatric wards promise to become integral parts of
-a completed medical organization. Psychopathic hospitals will soon
-be found in all of our great centers of population. The outlook for
-specialized institutes for purely research purposes, unfortunately, is
-not so encouraging at this time.
-
-At last there is some evidence of progress in the teaching of
-psychiatry in medical schools, hospitals and clinics, although only
-a beginning has been made as yet. More noteworthy advances have been
-made in other countries. The appointment of Heinroth as a professor
-of psychiatry at Leipsic in 1811 promised developments which did
-not materialize to any great extent for many years. According to
-Sibbald,[33] psychiatric wards or clinics were established at Würzburg
-in 1833, Jena in 1848, Vienna in 1853, Berlin in 1865 and at Göttingen
-in 1866. Scholz made provision for observation wards in a general
-hospital in Bremen in 1875. Fürstner opened a psychiatric clinic at
-Heidelberg in 1878. Hitzig accomplished the same thing at Halle in 1891
-and Siemerling at Kiel in 1901. The inception of the modern psychiatric
-clinic has generally been attributed to Griesinger.[34] In his preface
-to volume one of the "Archiv für Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten"
-in 1868 he advocated the establishment of small hospitals in cities
-for the intensive treatment of acute and recoverable mental cases. He
-recommended a large staff of physicians and accommodation for from
-sixty to eighty patients, according to the needs of the community, but
-not to exceed one hundred and fifty under any circumstances. "In close
-connection with the organization of such institutions there is a crying
-need and a new, most important interest—the question of psychiatrical
-instruction. This is absolutely indispensable." This he proposed to
-accomplish by establishing a highly specialized clinic to be maintained
-largely by the teaching staff of a university. Griesinger's ideas
-were eventually carried out in full by Ziehen in Berlin, Sommer in
-Giessen and Bleuler in Zurich. Perhaps nothing has had more to do with
-the development of psychopathic hospitals in the United States than
-the well-known clinic established by Kraepelin at Munich in 1905. It
-occupies a three-story building accommodating one hundred patients and
-cares for between fifteen hundred and two thousand cases annually.
-Hydrotherapeutic and electrical treatments are used extensively.
-A certain number of beds are reserved for research purposes.
-Psychological studies receive a great deal of attention. The
-out-patient department is a prominent feature. The teaching of
-psychiatry is one of the important purposes of the clinic. Kraepelin's
-methods have been followed rather closely here. The remarks made by
-Pliny Earle[35] in 1867 were almost prophetic in character. "Carbon
-agglomerated is charcoal, carbon crystallized is diamond. What charcoal
-is to the diamond, such, I believe, is the psychopathic hospital of
-the present compared with the psychopathic hospital of the future....
-When the defects which I have mentioned shall have been thoroughly
-remedied by a comprehensive curriculum, a complete organization, a
-perfect systematization, an efficient administration, the charcoal now
-just ready to begin the process of crystallization will have become the
-diamond and the world will possess the psychopathic hospital of the
-future."
-
-Psychiatric research was inaugurated in this country by the
-establishment of the Pathological Institute of the New York State
-Hospitals in New York City in 1896. Its original field of investigation
-was limited to the laboratory. The name was changed to "Psychiatric
-Institute" on the appointment of Dr. Adolf Meyer as director in 1902
-and the establishment was removed to Wards Island, where it was
-provided with clinical facilities by the Manhattan State Hospital.
-It thus became the precursor of the psychiatric clinic movement in
-America. The observation wards for the examination and commitment of
-mental cases, at the Philadelphia Hospital (1890) and at Bellevue in
-New York City were probably the first of the kind in this country. In
-1902 the first psychopathic wards connected with a general hospital
-were opened by the Albany Hospital. Pavilion F, as it was designated,
-admitted 3,132 patients during its first twelve and one-half years.
-These included persons awaiting examination and commitment, voluntary
-patients and cases of delirium, stupor, etc., transferred from other
-wards of the hospital. Of 1,038 cases admitted during a period of six
-years, only 17.6 per cent were committed to state hospitals. In a total
-of 1,855 cases, twenty-five per cent were found to be suffering from
-some form of alcoholism and twenty-six per cent from chronic mental
-conditions, while thirty-five per cent were cases of the acute and
-recoverable class. About fourteen per cent were psychoses associated
-with renal conditions, neurasthenia, hysteria, tuberculosis or
-traumatism.
-
-The Psychopathic Hospital at the University of Michigan, the first
-of its kind on this continent, was established at Ann Arbor in 1906
-as a direct result of the activities of Dr. William J. Herdman. The
-objects and purposes of the hospital were shown by the provision of
-the legislature for the appointment of "an experienced investigator in
-clinical psychiatry, who shall be placed in charge of the psychopathic
-ward, whose duty it shall be to conduct the clinical and pathological
-investigations therein; to direct the treatment of such patients as
-are inmates of the psychopathic ward; to guide and direct the work
-of clinical and pathological research in the several asylums of
-the state, and to instruct the students of the State University in
-diseases of the mind." It was thus an integral part of the hospital
-of the University of Michigan but fully coordinated with the state
-institutions. A subsequent act of the legislature changed its status
-to that of a "State hospital, specially equipped and administered for
-the care, observation and treatment of insanity and for persons who
-are afflicted mentally but are not insane." It also provided that a
-clinical pathological laboratory should be maintained for the benefit
-of the state hospitals. During a period of eleven years it admitted
-an average of 168.82 patients per year. Twenty-four per cent of these
-were voluntary cases. The psychoses represented were: manic-depressive
-insanity, twenty-four per cent; dementia praecox, seventeen per
-cent; paranoid conditions, two per cent; hysteria, seven per cent;
-psychopathic personality, two per cent; alcoholic psychoses, four per
-cent; morphine intoxication, one per cent; imbecility, two per cent;
-general paralysis, eight per cent; cerebral syphilis, one per cent;
-epilepsy, two per cent; senile psychoses, one per cent; cerebral
-arteriosclerosis, three per cent; unclassified conditions, five per
-cent; and not insane, two per cent. Seventy-four per cent of all the
-cases admitted were discharged after a residence of three months or
-less and eighty-two per cent after a residence of four months or less.
-Fourteen and eight-tenths per cent of all cases were discharged as
-recovered and 32.7 per cent as improved. Owing to the fact that it
-has only sixty-two beds at its disposal, the number of admissions is
-necessarily limited and cases are carefully selected.
-
-The Psychopathic Hospital in Boston, the first institution of the kind
-established in this country as a department of a state hospital (The
-Psychopathic Department of the Boston State Hospital), was opened for
-the reception of patients in 1912. The purposes of the institution were
-very clearly shown by the Twelfth Annual Report of the Massachusetts
-State Board of Insanity (1910):—"The psychopathic hospital should
-receive all classes of mental patients for first care, examination and
-observation, and provide short, intensive treatment of incipient, acute
-and curable insanity. Its capacity should be small, not exceeding such
-requirement. An adequate staff of physicians, investigators and trained
-workers in every department should provide as high a standard of
-efficiency as that of the best general and special hospitals, or that
-in any field of medical science. Ample facilities should be available
-for the treatment of mental and nervous conditions, the clinical study
-of patients on the wards, and scientific investigation in well-equipped
-laboratories, with a view to prevention and cure of mental disease and
-addition to the knowledge of insanity and associated problems. Clinical
-instruction should be given to medical students, the future family
-physicians, who would thus be taught to recognize and treat mental
-disease in its earliest stages, when curative measures avail most. Such
-a hospital, therefore, should be accessible to medical schools, other
-hospitals, clinics and laboratories. It should be a center of education
-and training of physicians, nurses, investigators, and special workers
-in this and allied fields of work. Its out-patient department should
-afford free consultation to the poor, and such advice and medical
-treatment as would, with the aid of district nursing, promote the home
-care of mental patients. Its social workers should facilitate early
-discharge and after care of patients, and investigate their previous
-history, habits, home and working conditions and environment, heredity
-and other causes of insanity, and endeavor to apply corrective and
-preventive measures."
-
-The building has a capacity of one hundred and ten beds. The
-institution may be said to differ from other psychopathic hospitals
-in being an establishment essentially of the temporary care type,
-not designed primarily either for the reception or for the care and
-custody of obviously committable cases, but rather for the observation
-and treatment of incipient mental disorders as well as psychopathic
-conditions not properly coming within the scope of the state hospitals.
-It has been as a rule the policy of the court to commit directly to
-other institutions for the insane all cases showing clearly the
-necessity of an extended hospital residence. The fact that only forty
-per cent of the temporary care cases have been committed shows that a
-preliminary period of observation before these cases are definitely
-disposed of is unquestionably warranted. The legal status of cases
-admitted may be described as follows:—1. Temporary care (not to exceed
-ten days); 2. Boston Police cases (Persons suffering from delirium,
-mania, mental confusion, delusions or hallucinations, or who come
-under the care or protection of the police); 3. Observation cases (for
-a period of thirty-five days, pending commitment); 4. Cases pending
-examination and hearing; 5. Emergency commitments (not more than five
-days); 6. Voluntary admissions; 7. Cases held under complaint or
-indictment.
-
-An analysis of the work done by the Psychopathic Department from 1912
-to 1920 shows a total of 14,922 admissions to the wards,—an average of
-1,865 per year. Of these, 59.77 per cent were temporary care (10 day)
-cases, 18.56 per cent "Boston Police" cases, 1.38 per cent observation
-cases (thirty-five days), .50 per cent emergency cases, .61 per cent
-committed "pending examination and hearing," 1.02 per cent under
-complaint or indictment and 16.96 per cent were voluntary cases. The
-entire temporary care group, including all of the above classes except
-the voluntary and criminal cases, constituted 81.34 per cent of the
-admissions. It is interesting to note that the principal psychoses
-represented by the cases coming into the hands of the Boston Police
-are dementia praecox, alcoholic psychoses and mental deficiency. The
-number of emergency cases is very small, as is the number committed by
-courts for observation. The number of voluntary admissions, an average
-of 316 per year, constituting 16.96 per cent of the total, is very
-significant as showing the response to be expected from the public to
-an opportunity for hospital treatment without the formality of any
-legal procedure. Of the 14,922 cases admitted between 1912 and 1920,
-38.45 per cent were subsequently committed as insane and 3,797, or
-25.44 per cent, were returned to the community as not requiring further
-hospital care or treatment.
-
-It has been shown that the special field covered by the Boston
-Psychopathic Hospital consists of temporary care cases. The principal
-psychoses represented by 12,252 admissions of that class were as
-follows: alcoholic psychoses, 9.25 per cent; dementia praecox, 25.0 per
-cent; senile psychoses, 3.16 per cent; general paresis, 6.06 per cent;
-manic-depressive psychoses, 10.14 per cent; arteriosclerosis, 3.23 per
-cent; epilepsy, 1.85 per cent; and without psychoses, 20.63 per cent.
-
-This latter class (without psychosis) is looked upon by some as
-constituting the most important field of a psychopathic hospital. It
-is exceedingly interesting to note the conditions which bring such
-individuals to the institution. An analysis of 1,430 cases shows
-the principal mental types represented to be as follows:—mental
-deficiency, thirty-four per cent; psychopathic personality, 15.17 per
-cent; hysteria, neurasthenia and other psychoneuroses, 11.2 per cent;
-epilepsy, 8.04 per cent; alcoholism, 6.08 per cent; conduct disorders,
-4.2 per cent; syphilis, 2.03 per cent; organic brain diseases, 1.68
-per cent; neurosyphilis, 1.26 per cent; drug addictions, 1.4 per cent;
-somatic conditions, 1.19 per cent, etc.
-
-No less interesting and instructive is a study of the voluntary cases.
-An analysis of 1,807 admissions of this type shows the following
-distribution of psychoses: alcoholic psychoses, 5.64 per cent; dementia
-praecox, 18.43 per cent; manic-depressive, 6.81 per cent; involution
-melancholia, .99 per cent; senile psychoses, 1.11 per cent; general
-paresis, 7.9 per cent; epilepsy, 1.05 per cent; psychoneuroses, 3.59
-per cent; and without psychosis, 34.64 per cent.
-
-The work of the out-patient service includes in a general way the study
-of cases referred to that department from the wards of the hospital or
-by its social service staff; cases referred by courts, schools, social
-agencies, and other institutions, as well as those sent by practicing
-physicians and individuals coming on their own initiative. The response
-on the part of the public to the facilities offered by the out-patient
-department is shown by the fact that 9,273 new cases were reported
-during a seven-year period, an average of 1,324.7 per year. Fifty-seven
-and six hundredths per cent of these cases were adults, 17.8 per cent
-were classified as adolescents, 24.25 per cent as children and .89 per
-cent as infants. The source of origin of these cases is exceedingly
-interesting. Four and eighty-seven hundredths per cent were referred
-to the out-patient service by courts; 4.65 per cent, by schools; 11.77
-per cent, by hospitals; 9.77 per cent, by physicians; and 3.55 per
-cent, by individuals. Fifteen and five tenths per cent came from the
-wards of the Psychopathic Hospital; 9.96 per cent, from the social
-service department and 13.3 per cent came on their own initiative.
-The question as to why these cases are sent to an institution of the
-psychopathic hospital type can now be answered. Fourteen and fifty-two
-hundredths per cent were examined solely for the purpose of determining
-the existence of probable mental diseases and 21.88 per cent on account
-of suspected mental defects. Four and fifty-two hundredths per cent
-were sex offenders. In 8.64 per cent the only question at issue was
-the possibility of a psychoneurosis and in 7.97 per cent the purpose
-of the examination was to ascertain whether or not syphilis was
-present. The diagnoses show the nature of the cases encountered in an
-out-patient mental clinic. Four and eighteen hundredths per cent were
-cases of dementia praecox; 1.7 per cent of alcoholism; 2.26 per cent
-of alcoholic psychoses; 2.39 per cent of epilepsy; 15.72 per cent of
-mental deficiency; 9.0 per cent of psychoneuroses; 2.14 per cent of
-manic-depressive insanity; 2.09 per cent of psychopathic personality;
-1.21 per cent of general paresis; and 2.94 per cent were unclassified.
-Two and thirty-two hundredths per cent were diagnosed as suffering
-from syphilis in some form and 6.27 per cent were either delinquent,
-defective, subnormal, retarded or distinctly feebleminded. In 3.76 per
-cent no disease was found, either mental or physical. The great bulk of
-these cases were diagnosed either as mental deficiency, psychopathic
-personality or epilepsy. The ultimate disposition of 2,741 cases,
-covering a period of two years, serves as an index of the practical
-operation of such a department. In 42.03 per cent of these cases no
-care or observation other than that of the out-patient department was
-required. In 1.69 per cent of the cases commitment was recommended to
-hospitals for mental diseases, in 7.15 per cent, to schools for the
-feebleminded and in .11 per cent, to penal institutions. General or
-psychopathic hospital care was recommended in 11.31 per cent. In 2.74
-per cent of the cases a report was made to courts; in 1.61 per cent, to
-schools; in 18.75 per cent, to social agencies; and in 1.13 per cent,
-to physicians.
-
-The functions of the social service department in a general way may be
-summarized as follows:—1. The after care and supervision of patients
-at home; 2. Advice to families of patients in regard to their cases;
-3. Advice given other members of the family; 4. Financial relief; 5.
-Reference to other social agencies or institutions; 6. Information
-obtained for case histories; 7. Inquiries relative to home conditions
-when discharge of a patient is under consideration, etc. The routine
-operation of the department is well illustrated by the annual report
-of the Boston State Hospital for 1920. The number under social service
-supervision during the year was 428. Of these, 278 were new cases.
-Thirty-two and thirty-seven hundredths per cent were referred by the
-out-patient physicians; 59.71 per cent by the ward service; 7.19
-per cent by other social agencies; and .73 per cent were brought by
-relatives or friends. The principal reasons for their reference to the
-social service workers were shown as follows:—For medical history,
-50.36 per cent; assistance in securing employment, 9.35 per cent;
-financial aid, 3.6 per cent; supervision, 7.2 per cent; advice, 19.42
-per cent; convalescent care, 2.87 per cent; home care, 2.87 per cent,
-etc. An analysis of the cases under supervision shows the principal
-psychoses represented to be as follows:—Arteriosclerosis, 1.8 per
-cent; general paresis, 4.68 per cent; alcoholic psychoses, 1.8 per
-cent; manic-depressive psychoses, 4.68 per cent; dementia praecox,
-16.55 per cent; paranoid conditions, 4.31 per cent; psychoneuroses,
-9.35 per cent; undiagnosed psychoses, 6.84 per cent; and without
-psychoses, 44.24 per cent. This latter group was made up mostly of
-psychopathic personalities (28.45 per cent) and mental deficiency
-(26.29 per cent). The purely social problems presenting themselves
-in connection with these cases were reported as follows:—Mental
-disease, 75.54 per cent; physical disease, 2.16 per cent; poverty,
-2.88 per cent; criminality, 3.24 per cent; juvenile delinquency, 2.52
-per cent; sex offenses, 2.16 per cent; alcoholism, 2.16 per cent;
-family dissension, 6.12 per cent; ignorance, 2.52 per cent; and bad
-environment, .36 per cent. In addition to this, 299 discharged soldiers
-and 543 out-patient cases were reported as being under the supervision
-of the department, as well as 532 special cases studied in connection
-with the investigation of syphilis.
-
-The Psychopathic Hospital in Boston started on a new chapter in its
-history on December 1, 1920, at which time it was formally separated
-from the Boston State Hospital and became a separate institution under
-the direction of Dr. C. Macfie Campbell.
-
-The Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in
-Baltimore was established in 1913. An integral part of a large
-general hospital and intimately associated with a medical school, it
-conforms rather closely to the plan of the German psychiatric clinics.
-A study of its activities shows that during a period of five years
-(ending January 31, 1918) the admission rate averaged 403.8 per year.
-Fourteen and three-tenths per cent of the cases were diagnosed as
-dementia praecox or schizophrenic reaction and 13.7 per cent conform
-apparently to the classification of manic-depressive psychoses. Ten
-and five-tenths per cent were diagnosed as neuroses or psychoneuroses;
-6.1 per cent as general paresis; fifteen per cent as agitated
-depressions; 2.3 per cent as alcoholic psychoses; and 6.1 per cent
-as constitutional inferiority or constitutional psychopathic states.
-Seven and nine-tenths per cent were cases of anxiety neuroses, agitated
-depressions or anxiety psychoses; 2.3 per cent were paranoic states or
-reactions; 3.5 per cent were cases of alcoholism, and 3.7 per cent of
-drug habits. The dispensary service of the Phipps Clinic has reported
-an average of 565 cases per year, representing a total of 2,260.5
-visits annually.
-
-The work of Drs. Meyer, Hoch and Kirby at the Psychiatric Institute,
-of Dr. Barrett at the Psychopathic Hospital at the University of
-Michigan, of Dr. Southard at the Psychopathic Department of the
-Boston State Hospital, and that of Drs. Meyer and Campbell at the
-Phipps Psychiatric Clinic in Baltimore has brought the subject of
-psychopathic hospitals very prominently before the public. Various
-other establishments of a similar nature have been planned and some
-are in process of construction, or already in operation. The State
-Psychopathic Institute at Chicago and the Psychopathic Hospital of the
-University of Iowa should be mentioned in this connection. Psychopathic
-hospitals have been planned for New York City and one is to be built by
-the State of California. The legislature of Colorado has already made
-an appropriation of $350,000 for the establishment of an institution of
-this type in the city of Denver.
-
-The work already done in this field shows quite conclusively that
-general hospital methods are not inconsistent with the developments
-of modern psychiatric progress. The large percentage of voluntary
-cases received and the number of persons consulting the physicians in
-the out-patient departments shows an unexpected demand on the part of
-the public for institutions of a new type. As Dr. Adolf Meyer[36] has
-pointed out, "Our organized system for the care of mental disorder is
-in many respects forbidding. It throws together all kinds of diseases,
-and shocks in that way the already sensitive patient who fears the
-worst for himself or herself. It comes at once with an outspoken
-declaration of insanity in the very commitment to a hospital, an
-expression which carries a humiliation to the patient and adds insult
-to injury. It often means carrying the patient off to a remote asylum
-which is too widely supposed to have the inscription, 'Leave hope
-behind all ye that enter here.' Helpfulness rather than coercion
-must take the place of all this." What the psychiatric clinic may be
-expected to accomplish in remedying this difficulty was summarized by
-Dr. Meyer[37] in the following words:—"It is eminently necessary to
-get model institutions in which medical students and physicians can
-learn how to deal with the many problems of the disorders of the organ
-of behaviour from their inceptions into all their ramifications. The
-clinic must do the work for at least one limited district, with its
-out-patient and social service and consultation department, and with
-its hospital wards. Everything must be done to make help in mental
-disorders more acceptable and convincingly helpful. More patients must
-learn to look to it for help and the organization must be so as to give
-the patient and the physician and the public at large a conception very
-different from that to-day associated with insanity. It is not so much
-the issue of more help to the curable, but the issue of more work near
-where the troubles begin, and work against that which breeds trouble.
-For this we must learn to put the chief weight on hospitals and
-organizations for natural districts for intensive work rather than upon
-the mere economy of large hospitals far away from where the troubles
-develop."
-
-Southard has raised the question as to the correct designation of
-institutions of the psychopathic hospital type:—"A word is again
-necessary as to the meaning of the term 'psychopathic hospital.'
-For various reasons the term has become so attractive in propaganda
-that a comparatively large number of institutions of whatever scope
-have been founded or recommended to receive the term 'psychopathic
-hospital,' 'institute,' 'department' or 'ward.' Thus there is
-developing a tendency in state hospitals to denominate the receiving
-ward 'psychopathic.' There can be no advantage in this designation
-other than that of calling old ideas by new names. The idea of the
-receiving ward for committed cases destined to receive the ordinary
-probate court group of cases is not altered or improved in any manner
-by the designation 'psychopathic.' The best opinion seems to be that
-a psychopathic hospital or institute shall be an institution in which
-all types of mental cases, from the probate court group on the one hand
-up to the most dubious and difficult cases of mental disorder on the
-other, may be examined; but if an institution is primarily or chiefly
-concerned with patients of the medicolegal, committable or custodial
-group, to serve merely as a vestibule through which committed cases
-pass, such an institution has by no means the broad scope which the
-very general term 'psychopathic' implies. The institution is not a
-modified or sublimated form of receiving ward for a great district
-hospital."
-
-There is, of course, no reason why the reception service of an ordinary
-state hospital should be spoken of as constituting a psychopathic ward.
-This accomplishes nothing more, perhaps, than to raise some question
-as to what the functions of the rest of the institution may be. The
-designation psychopathic hospital has been rather loosely used and
-is, as Southard has definitely shown, of American origin. It has been
-applied somewhat indiscriminately from time to time to practically
-every form of activity related to the care and treatment of mental
-diseases outside of the generally recognized state hospital field.
-These may be summarized as follows:—
-
-1. Detention wards, pavilions, etc. Intended for no purpose other than
-the custody of the "insane" pending commitment.
-
-2. Psychiatric wards of general hospitals—such as Pavilion F in
-Albany. There would appear to be no reason for the use of the word
-psychopathic in such cases, the term psychiatric being much more
-clearly applicable.
-
-3. Institutes designed primarily for research only or for research and
-instruction, with or without clinical facilities.
-
-4. Psychopathic hospitals. Independent units or integral parts of
-a general hospital—with or without facilities for research and
-instruction. Designed exclusively for mental cases, without regard
-to legal status, whether committed or voluntary, their detailed
-examination and careful observation with intensive treatment in the
-wards for limited periods when indicated, or their supervision and
-direction in out-patient departments, serving also in some instances as
-receiving and distributing centers supplying other institutions.
-
-Owing to their limited size, the necessity of treating large numbers in
-a short space of time, and the fact that institutional care is already
-amply provided for in the existing state hospitals, the obvious field
-of the psychopathic hospital is primarily the acute and recoverable
-psychoses and the milder forms of mental disorder which may or may
-not require a residence in the wards. Only a thorough examination
-and a brief period of observation can determine whether or not that
-is needed. The question at issue is largely that of determining the
-necessity of a more or less indefinite committed status. These problems
-arise particularly in dealing with the so-called psychogenic disorders
-and the psychopathic states—hysteria, neurasthenia, psychasthenia,
-the psychoneuroses in general and the episodes which characterize
-the psychopathic personalities. Traumatic psychoses often come into
-consideration, as well as cases of cerebrospinal syphilis, toxic
-conditions, drug addictions, the psychoses of infection and exhaustion,
-and above all, of course, manic-depressive insanity and incipient forms
-of dementia praecox. Many of these cases require only a brief hospital
-treatment and are able in a short time to return to home surroundings
-and resume their former occupations. Often a contact with the chronic
-and custodial classes is not only without advantage but actually
-detrimental. The psychopathic hospitals thus exercise a sort of
-clearing house function and return to the community many patients who
-otherwise would be subjected to the stigma, if there is one, of a legal
-commitment. While questions relating to the public health cannot be
-analyzed in terms of dollars and cents, the saving to the state which
-is made by substituting a short period of supervision and treatment,
-for a protracted residence in an institution of the custodial class
-amounts to millions. In view of the difficulties encountered in
-obtaining adequate appropriations for the proper maintenance of the
-enormous population now housed in our state hospitals, this is a factor
-which cannot be disregarded.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE MENTAL HYGIENE MOVEMENT
-
-
-As the result of an intimate personal knowledge of the subject,
-acquired during an extended hospital residence as a patient in both
-public and private institutions, Clifford W. Beers, having recovered
-his health, resumed his place in the world profoundly impressed with
-the feeling that the question of mental diseases as a public health
-problem was one which demanded immediate consideration. In no position
-financially to institute a campaign for the purpose of interesting
-the public in the importance of topics which had not been made the
-subject of general discussion in the past, he was confronted with the
-necessity of securing the cooperation and support of persons who had
-the means to launch such an undertaking. With this object in view
-he wrote his book—"A Mind That Found Itself,"[38] now in its fourth
-edition and destined, to use the words of the "American Journal
-of Insanity,"[39] "to become one of the classics of psychological
-literature." There is some question as to the accuracy with which Mr.
-Beers analyzed the experiences through which he had passed. Although
-there is no reason for questioning his mental condition when the book
-was written, his conclusions were apparently formulated when he had not
-as yet had sufficient time in which to readjust himself and recover
-his perspective. Some of his viewpoints certainly reflect a morbid
-coloring of which he was probably unconscious, although at the time
-he recognized in himself "symptoms hardly distinguishable from those
-which had obtained eight months earlier when it had been deemed
-expedient temporarily to restrict my freedom." His work was referred
-to as an "autopathography" by Farrar,[40] who made a detailed study
-of the various psychological trends manifested. These are more or
-less immaterial. The interesting feature of his book is the elaborate
-description of a common but exceedingly important psychosis written
-by a well educated observer with a collegiate training. Its greatest
-value, however, lies in the fact that he brings home to us so
-graphically the overwhelming importance of the personal element so
-often overlooked by those who are accustomed to dealing with mental
-cases in large numbers. "It carries the reader away from the technical
-dissertations, and brings him face to face with the feelings and
-reactions of a distorted mind, showing him the patient as a human being
-with a sentient soul and not as a case."[41]
-
-That the plan which Mr. Beers had formulated for an organized mental
-hygiene movement had a practical application was recognized at once by
-Dr. Adolf Meyer,[42] who expressed the following views on the subject
-as early as 1907:—"It will be a difficult task to find the not very
-common level-headed and well-informed persons in various parts of the
-country capable of organizing the public conscience of the people.
-Neglected by physicians and dreaded by the fiscal authorities, the
-facts are not available today, except in fragments, mixed up with
-innumerable extraneous considerations; the hospitals are closed
-corporations, the press injudicious in inquiry and reform, and those
-capable of judgment unable to get the facts. The crying needs persist
-in the meantime. Instead of a land fund (the 12,225,000 acres bill
-and ideal of Dorothea Dix) we must have a permanent survey of the
-facts and efficient handling of what is not prevented. The experience
-with what remains as inevitable experiments of nature, as well as with
-people who should know better, must be put into practical form for
-communication and teaching, and brought home where it will tell; in
-opportunities of work and education for physicians, and cooperation
-between our educational forces and those who labor for physical
-hygiene and prophylaxis. Most of us are already under too definite
-obligations to meet the call for devoted work for the maintenance of
-an organization as well as can Mr. Beers. In my judgment, he deserves
-the assistance which will make it possible for others to join in the
-work which will be one of the greatest achievements of this country
-and of this century,—less sensational than the breaking of chains but
-more far-reaching and also more exacting in labor. A Society for Mental
-Hygiene with a capable and devoted and judicious agent of organization
-will put an end to the work of makeshift and short-sighted opportunism,
-and initiate work of prevention and of helping the existing hospitals
-to attain what they should attain, and further of adding those
-links which are needed to put an end to conditions almost unfit for
-publication. What officialism will never do alone must be helped along
-by an organized body of persons who have set their hearts on serious
-devotion to the cause. If Mr. Beers gets the means to pursue his aim he
-will secure the body which will guarantee proper judgment in a cause
-which has been a mere foster-child in the field of charitable donations
-merely because it seemed too difficult. Here is a man who is not afraid
-of the task. May he get the help to enable him to surround himself with
-the best wisdom of our nation!"
-
-Encouraged by this and many other such expressions of opinion, Mr.
-Beers proceeded to the organization of the first state mental hygiene
-society, that of Connecticut, which began its activities in 1908.
-The National Committee for Mental Hygiene was formally organized on
-February 19, 1909. The first few years were devoted to raising funds
-and making comprehensive preparations for further activities which
-did not start until 1912. In the meanwhile the cooperation of many
-prominent philanthropists, educators, physicians, etc., was assured.
-The importance of this movement is illustrated by the prominence of the
-persons who were willing to associate themselves with an undertaking of
-this nature. The membership of the committee has included, in addition
-to many others, Professor William James, Dr. Lewellys F. Barker,
-Dr. Rupert Blue, Dr. George Blumer, Dr. G. Alder Blumer, Professor
-Russell H. Chittenden, Ex-President Charles W. Eliot, President W.
-H. P. Faunce, President John H. Finley, Professor Irving Fisher, Dr.
-Charles H. Frazier, Cardinal Gibbons, President Arthur T. Hadley,
-Chancellor David Starr Jordan, President Cyrus Northrop, Dr. Stewart
-Paton, Dr. Frederick Peterson, Professor Gifford Pinchot, President
-Jacob G. Sherman, Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes, Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt,
-Professor Henry VanDyke, Dr. William H. Welch and Ex-President Benjamin
-Ide Wheeler. Important financial contributions were made by Professor
-William James, Mr. Jacob A. Riis, Mr. Henry Phipps, Mrs. Elizabeth M.
-Anderson, Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, Mrs. E. H. Harriman, Mrs. Willard
-Straight, the Rockefeller Foundation, etc. With the appointment of Dr.
-Thomas W. Salmon as Medical Director in 1912 the committee commenced
-active operations with its future success assured in every way.
-
-The objects and purposes of the National Committee have been very
-adequately summarized in the following language used in one of its
-publications:—"The National Committee for Mental Hygiene and its
-affiliated state societies and committees are organized to work
-for the conservation of mental health; to help prevent nervous and
-mental disorders and mental defect; to help raise the standards of
-care and treatment for those suffering from any of these disorders
-or mental defect; to secure and disseminate reliable information
-on these subjects and also on mental factors involved in problems
-related to industry, education, delinquency, dependency, and the like;
-to aid ex-service men disabled in the war; to cooperate with the
-federal, state, and local agencies and with officials and with public
-and private agencies whose work is in any way related to that of a
-society or committee for mental hygiene. Though methods vary, these
-organizations seek to accomplish their purposes by means of education,
-encouraging psychiatric social service, conducting surveys, promoting
-legislation, and through cooperation with the many agencies whose work
-touches at one point or another the field of mental hygiene. When one
-considers the large groups of people who may be benefited by organized
-work in mental hygiene, the importance of the movement at once becomes
-apparent. Such work is not only for the mentally disordered and those
-suffering from mental defect, but for all those who, through mental
-causes, are unable so to adjust themselves to their environment as to
-live happy and efficient lives." The first few years of the committee's
-existence have demonstrated conclusively that it is the most powerful
-factor in promoting the welfare and interests of the insane in this
-country since the time of Dorothea Dix. The elaborate surveys which
-it has made of conditions existing in various states have resulted in
-beneficial legislation which had been needed for years. Surveys have
-been completed in California, Tennessee, Louisiana, Pennsylvania,
-Texas, Connecticut, Georgia, Wisconsin and South Carolina, and
-others are under way. It has brought about an interest in mental
-diseases and mental defects such as has never been manifested before
-in this country. Its activities during the early part of the war
-were responsible largely, if not entirely, for the attention given
-by the Army and Navy to matters relating to psychiatry. The National
-Committee has taken a very active part in encouraging the establishment
-of psychiatric clinics in connection with the state hospitals. It
-has been largely responsible for the psychological and psychiatric
-examination of defectives in penal institutions and reformatories now
-generally recognized as being of vital importance. Its activities
-have emphasized the importance of a preliminary mental examination of
-obviously defective individuals brought before the courts. One of its
-accomplishments has been the publication of a very successful quarterly
-magazine, "Mental Hygiene," which was undertaken in 1917 and has long
-since passed the experimental stage. A summary of its activities would
-not be complete without a reference to the valuable work which the
-committee has done in standardizing the reports made of institutions
-and compiling accurate statistics relating to mental diseases and
-defects which will be of inestimable value to all who are interested in
-the progress of psychiatry in this country.
-
-State mental hygiene societies now exist in Alabama, California,
-Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana,
-Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Maine, Mississippi,
-Missouri, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee
-and Virginia. The committee on mental hygiene in New York is a
-department of the State Charities Aid Association, which has been
-actively interested in matters relating to the care and treatment
-of the insane for many years. The chief purposes of the state
-organizations have been officially described as follows:—[43] "To work
-for the conservation of mental health; for the prevention of mental
-diseases and mental deficiency and for improvement in the care and
-treatment of those suffering from nervous or mental diseases or mental
-deficiency." The interest of the public is stimulated by pamphlets,
-reports and publications of various kinds, mental hygiene exhibits of
-an educational nature, public lectures, mental hygiene conferences,
-etc. The local societies have as a definite object, moreover, the
-encouragement of[44] "(a) Out-patient departments for mental cases in
-connection with hospitals for mental diseases and general hospitals,
-and independent of either of these agencies, such, for instance, as
-dispensaries and mental hygiene clinics, (b) Systematic psychiatric as
-well as psychological examination of school children, (e) Provision
-for incipient and emergency cases in psychopathic wards of general
-hospitals, (d) Psychopathic hospitals in which cases of mental disorder
-may be treated in their earliest and most curable stages and where
-practical work in prevention and social service may be done, (e)
-Increased institutional provision for the feebleminded and epileptic."
-One of their most important objects is the enactment of laws in the
-various states which will take care of the insane pending commitment
-out of the hands of the poor authorities and delegate it to health
-officers or physicians. As Dr. William L. Russell[45] has pointed out,
-the mere provision of institutional care for the mental diseases of a
-community is not the only thing to be considered, "Unless the vital
-issues occasioned by mental disorders in the homes, the schools, the
-industries, and in social relations are intelligently grasped and dealt
-with by means of the state system, state institutions are liable to be
-looked upon as a resource which is only to be appealed to when complete
-separation of the patient from his usual environment has become
-imperative. They will still be regarded as asylums. In such case,
-their development is likely to be in the direction of great custodial
-centers, and economic and so-called business consideration in their
-management are likely to prevail over those dictated by science and
-humanity. This has happened in more than one state in which state care
-has been adopted under conditions of great promise. A system of state
-care must, to be effective, not only be adopted, but it must be planned
-and developed with reference to the known needs of the sufferers from
-mental disorder."
-
-The Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene, the second national
-organization of this type, was established at Ottawa on April 26, 1918,
-largely as a result of the activities of Dr. Clarence M. Hincks of
-Toronto University. Arrangements were at once effected for an active
-participation in war work, a comprehensive study of immigration,
-elaborate statistical institutional studies, the establishment of a
-library, special investigation of delinquency and a series of lectures
-to be given in various parts of the Dominion. This organization has
-been an exceedingly active one from the beginning. The first number
-of the "Canadian Journal of Mental Hygiene" appeared early in 1919. A
-survey was made of Manitoba and its needs during the first year. The
-University of Toronto announced an extension course beginning April,
-1919, for the special training of social workers desiring to enter
-the mental hygiene field. Instruction was given in psychiatry, social
-and economic problems, neurology, mental tests, case work, social
-institutions, occupational therapy, child welfare, home economics
-and recreation. In 1919 a mental hygiene survey was made of British
-Columbia. Alberta, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have already requested
-similar surveys with the intention of improving the methods of caring
-for mental diseases and defects in those provinces. Psychiatric clinics
-have been established in connection with the Toronto University and
-the Royal Victoria Hospital in Quebec. New institutions have been
-planned in British Columbia and a psychopathic hospital is to be built
-in Toronto. In 1920 a mental hygiene committee was instituted in
-France[46] by the Minister of Hygiene, Assistance and Social Providence.
-The committee is made up of about forty members, psychiatrists,
-pathologists, physiologists, managers and magistrates. Dr. Dron,
-Senator and Mayor of Tourcoing, was elected chairman. The committee
-is to make a study of all questions relating to mental hygiene and
-psychiatry. It will consider particularly methods of coordinating the
-activities of various organizations already at work, the creation of
-new interests and spreading broadcast information on mental hygiene
-topics. A representative of this society has already made a visit
-to this country to study methods employed here. The mental hygiene
-movement has even reached South Africa. "Mental Hygiene"[47] has called
-attention to the fact that the Cape Province Society for Mental Hygiene
-has actively interested itself in the provisions discussed by the
-government for the care, education and training of the feebleminded.
-Two institutions are to be opened for this purpose. The Cape Province
-Society has already instituted a campaign for the purpose of organizing
-other local societies as well as a national council.
-
-When Mr. Beers wrote his well-known book he evidently had in mind
-more particularly the amelioration of material conditions existing
-in institutions. He was looking forward to provision for the more
-humane and scientific care of mental diseases. This is unquestionably
-a consideration of vital importance and these objects have not
-been neglected in the practical operation of the mental hygiene
-organizations. Mental hygiene in its broadest sense, however, has
-come to mean much more than that. The foundation of the present-day
-conception of mental hygiene may be said to have been laid by Adolf
-Meyer in 1906, when he described the fundamental principles which he
-believed to be concerned in the development of dementia praecox. He saw
-in this disease a disorder of the personality due to a deterioration
-of mental habits, in other words, to faulty mental hygiene. While his
-views as to the etiology of dementia praecox have not been generally
-accepted, they suggested an entirely new avenue of approach to the
-problem of mental diseases in general. Hoch's "shut in" personality
-and Bleuler's "autismus" were more or less comparable hypotheses
-which do warrant to a certain extent the tenability of such theories
-as were advanced by Meyer. The same may be said of some of the
-mental mechanisms advocated by Freud and others of the more purely
-psychological school of psychiatrists. This viewpoint is reflected
-somewhat by White[48] in his conception of childhood as the golden
-period for mental hygiene. "The outstanding fact that present-day
-psychiatry emphasizes is that mental illness is a type of reaction of
-the individual to his problems of adjustment which is conditioned by
-two factors—the nature of those problems and the character equipment
-with which they are met.... Mental illnesses, defects of adjustment at
-the psychological level, are therefore dependent upon defects in the
-personality make-up, and as this personality make-up is what it is as
-a result of its development from infancy onward, it follows that the
-foundation of those defects which later issue in mental illness are to
-be found in the past history of that development." He protests very
-properly against accepting the theory that the characteristics of the
-personality are entirely the products of germ-plasm determiners moulded
-in strict accordance with the laws of heredity and therefore immutable.
-
-Copp[49] has called attention to the fact that the dominant figure in
-mental hygiene activities must eventually be the family physician,
-who has an opportunity to see the beginnings of mental disorders when
-they first manifest themselves. He must, therefore, be qualified to
-intelligently understand such conditions and be prepared to suggest a
-remedy. His is inevitably the first point of contact. Mental hygienists
-have found a fertile and almost untouched field in our public school
-system. As Professor Burnham[50] suggests, "It is a grave reflection
-upon the schools that so many of their graduates have to be reeducated
-in the sanitarium or the hospital." The hygiene movement in the school
-population, as suggested by Professor Gesell,[51] means something more
-than psychological examinations and mental tests, important as they
-are. It means a study of the individual. He would have a new type of
-school nurse or social worker, one interested particularly in "the
-child with the night terrors, the nail biter, the over-tearful child,
-the over-silent child, the stammering child, the extremely indifferent
-child, the pervert, the infantile child, the unstable choreic, and a
-whole host of suffering, frustrated and unhealthily constituted growing
-minds, that we are barely aware of in a quantitative sense, because we
-do not have the agencies to bring them to our attention as problems
-of public hygiene and prophylaxis." They require highly specialized
-supervision and training if they are not to become future residents
-of our hospitals for mental diseases or possibly of institutions of a
-reformatory type. If such reforms as these are to be brought about in
-our public school system it is hardly necessary to suggest that the
-teacher herself must have very clear conceptions as to the significance
-and importance of mental training in youth.
-
-If these matters are important in the public schools they must be even
-more serious factors in higher education. Campbell[52] has raised the
-question as to how far the universities "fulfill their responsibilities
-with regard to the mental hygiene of the community? It is doubtful
-whether they have attained a clear recognition of the fact that a
-man's mind may be richly supplied with a great variety of special
-information, that he may have attained a high intellectual level, and
-yet the man's life may be rendered inefficient because it rests upon
-insecure foundations. An education may enable a man to solve abstruse
-intellectual problems, and yet leave him so hopelessly unable to cope
-with a bereavement, an unsuccessful love affair, difficult marriage
-relations, or even simple instructive impulses that he may lose
-control of the direction of his life and for a period be dominated by
-factors which have been almost entirely repressed in his conscious
-life; the disorder may be so marked as to be included under the wide
-term "insanity." To rear a superb intellectual structure on such a
-foundation is surely not an ideal education; it is like building
-a house on the sand, or, to speak more hygienically, it is like
-building a superb mansion without paying any attention to the
-plumbing." Deplorable as it may seem that such important elements in
-the education of the individual have been overlooked, it is not nearly
-so surprising as the fact that no instruction of any consequence is
-given in psychiatry in the great majority of our medical schools.
-This is a matter which is well worthy of attention and is fortunately
-beginning to receive some consideration. A rather systematic campaign
-has been instituted by the mental hygiene organizations to bring about
-some instruction in these topics in our schools and universities,—a
-campaign which promises to be productive of results sooner or later.
-
-An interesting phase of the mental hygiene movement is the relation
-which it has been shown to hold to the field of industry. It must be
-admitted that this is an intensely practical question. We even have a
-Journal of Industrial Hygiene, which has been published successfully
-now for some time. The mere taking of intelligence tests for industrial
-purposes is only an incident. The important thing, as shown by
-Cobb,[53] is the prevention of mental disorder by bringing about a
-proper relation of the worker to his environment and the elimination
-of causes of discontent. Beyond this there is, of course, the early
-treatment of individuals before the opportunity of bringing about a
-proper adjustment has been lost for all time. Cobb[54] suggests that,
-above all, the physician must "forget orthodox psychiatry (as the
-economist seems to be forgetting cut-and-dried political economy) and
-interest himself in a dynamic, individual psychology which recognizes
-the essentials of human nature and at last begins to analyze for us
-the elements of which human nature really consists, looking on each
-case as a human experiment in reaction to environment."
-
-There would appear to be no limit to the possibilities of the mental
-hygiene movement. Perhaps no more comprehensive summary of its objects
-and purposes can be given at this time than that contained in a
-definition recently formulated by Southard:[55] "To stem the tide
-of syphilis, to wage war on alcohol, to counsel against marriage of
-defectives, to generalize the insane hospitals, to specialize the
-general hospitals, to weed defects out of general school classes,
-to open out the shut-in personality, to ventilate sex questions, to
-perturb and at the same time reassure the interested public—these
-are infinitives that belong perhaps in a rational movement for mental
-hygiene. They are things the past has taught us more or less clearly to
-do and in that sense the movement for mental hygiene is surely not much
-more than the elaboration of the obvious."
-
-It may be suggested that these are functions which properly belong to
-the medical profession exclusively. A little reflection will, however,
-be sufficient to show that this is not the case. Efforts have been
-made for years to prevent the spread of venereal disease. Attempts
-were made to accomplish this by legislative enactment. That these
-methods of control have been ineffectual is now well known to everyone.
-Continental governments have for a long while been trying to regulate
-prostitution by police supervision and frequent medical inspections.
-The percentage of venereal disease has, however, not been appreciably
-reduced by this plan and it has been repeatedly condemned by vice
-commissions as a result of official investigations. It may be stated
-now, I think, without fear of contradiction that this is a matter
-which must be regulated by educating the public and which can be
-handled in no other way. It is a well known fact that no law can
-be enforced unless it meets with public approval. The will of the
-majority rules. When the effects of venereal disease are generally
-recognized there will no longer be a necessity for much legislation on
-the subject. This is a question of far-reaching importance. When it is
-recalled that twelve per cent of the cases admitted to our hospitals
-for mental diseases are suffering from general paresis or cerebral
-syphilis, the necessity of a more general understanding of these
-conditions is readily apparent. The percentage is much higher in the
-densely populated metropolitan districts.
-
-Legislative restrictions in the past were never very successful
-in limiting the use of alcoholic beverages. It is true that the
-Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States and the
-Volstead Act have had a very material effect on the number of cases of
-alcoholism admitted to our institutions. The influences which resulted
-in alcoholism, however, will find an outlet in some other direction
-unless they are modified in some way. This again is largely a matter of
-education. There never was a time in the history of the country when a
-knowledge of the effect of drugs of various kinds on the nervous system
-was as important as it is today.
-
-The history of the movement to prevent the marriage of mental
-defectives is more or less familiar to all. The sentiment of the
-community is apparently not such at this time as to encourage the
-regulation of the marriage of the mentally or physically unfit by
-legislative restrictions. Attempts to do so have been almost a
-flat failure. Various states have passed laws providing for the
-sterilization of defective delinquents. These laws, generally speaking,
-have accomplished nothing because public sentiment was not behind
-them. All of these matters have been brought to the attention of the
-public by prominent speakers on numerous occasions. Frequent articles
-have been printed in medical journals, well-known periodicals, and even
-in the daily papers. Attention has been called to the mental clinics
-established here and there and repeated reference has been made to the
-fact that physicians at our state hospitals may be consulted at any
-time on questions pertaining to mental diseases or mental defects.
-
-Something has been accomplished along these lines. It is unfortunate
-that, as a rule, people look with more or less suspicion upon
-institutions which are even now generally referred to as asylums. There
-are many who still believe that every hospital for mental diseases
-has its padded cells and underground dungeons. There is a rather
-widespread idea that the most common causes of insanity are cigarette
-smoking, religion and self abuse. Even in our most progressive
-communities it has been difficult, if not impossible, to entirely
-prevent the temporary detention, at least, of mental cases in jails
-and police stations. Very few general hospitals have psychopathic
-wards or any realization as to the necessity of establishing them.
-It is not to be denied that in many states the care of the mentally
-ill in our public institutions is far from being what it should be in
-this enlightened day. These are conditions that cannot be remedied by
-the medical profession without the active assistance of leaders of
-public sentiment. The fact that the importance of these questions is
-recognized by prominent educators, business men, lawyers, and other
-persons active in the affairs of the community, and well known to the
-public, will accomplish more than articles in the medical journals by
-physicians. This constitutes the great field of the mental hygiene
-organizations. They will mould public sentiment as nothing else ever
-has, in matters which relate to the mental health of the country. They
-will influence legislation where it is needed in a way that no medical
-society can hope to do. Above all, they can in time bring the public
-face to face with the fact that mental diseases should be discussed,
-generally understood and prevented, instead of being merely concealed
-and misrepresented. Possibly it would not be looking too far into the
-future to express the hope that an organization composed largely of
-laymen may be able eventually to accomplish something that the medical
-profession has never been able to do,—induce those who frame our laws
-to provide medical treatment for defective delinquents instead of
-merely locking them up for the protection of society. It would seem,
-moreover, that the time has come when the public should insist that the
-mental condition of persons accused of crime be made a medical rather
-than a legal question exclusively.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE ETIOLOGY OF MENTAL DISEASES
-
-
-In reviewing the history of medicine there is nothing more discouraging
-than the references found in literature to the views entertained
-from time to time relative to the cause of mental diseases. To a
-certain extent this may be looked upon as an index of the progress
-of civilization. It must be admitted that it is at the same time,
-nevertheless, a reflection upon the medical profession which has never
-shown the interest in psychiatry that the importance of the subject
-warrants. It has been suggested that mental diseases did not play a
-prominent part in ancient history, owing to the fact that the law of
-the survival of the fittest automatically eliminated the insane and
-defective. As Tuke[56] says, "They perished in the course of nature, or
-were stamped out of existence; many of the perverse and morally insane
-were stoned to death; war destroyed a large number of feeble persons;
-while the Romans deliberately, and in the interests of the race, threw
-down from the Tarpeian Rock the children who were unfit to live." The
-papyri of the fifteenth century before Christ show clearly that the
-doctrine of demoniacal possession was generally entertained at that
-time.
-
-One of the earliest attempts to explain the origin of mental diseases
-perhaps was that of Plato. "There are two kinds of madness, one
-arising from human diseases, the other from an inspired deviation from
-established custom." Hippocrates[56] had some very clearly defined
-views on this subject: "As long as the brain is at rest a man enjoys
-his reason; but the depravement of the brain arises from phlegm and
-bile, either of which you may recognise in this manner: Those who are
-mad from phlegm are quiet, and do not cry out or make a noise, but
-those from bile are vociferous, malignant, and will not be quiet, but
-are always doing something improper. If the madness be constant, these
-are the causes thereof; but if terrors and fears assail, they are
-connected with derangement of the brain, and derangement is owing to
-its being heated. And it is heated by bile when it is determined to
-the brain along the blood-vessels running from the trunk, and fear is
-present until it return again to the veins and trunk, when it ceases.
-He is grieved and troubled when the brain is unreasonably cooled and
-contracted beyond its wont. It suffers this from phlegm, and from
-the same affection the patient becomes oblivious." An interesting
-theory which he evolved was that the appearance of varicose veins
-or hemorrhoids tended to relieve the patient's mental suffering.
-Celsus subscribed to the black bile doctrine. Galen's teaching was
-that fatuity was due to moisture, while dryness produced sagacity. In
-cases where the whole body contained melancholy blood he recommended
-venesection. Thick and black wine was to be avoided, "as from it the
-melancholy humour is made."[57] This he described as a condition of
-the blood "thickened, and more like black bile, which exhaling to the
-brain, causes melancholy symptoms to affect the mind." The Roman custom
-of appealing to the household gods, sons of the Goddess of Madness,
-was quite significant. Horace, in speaking of Orestes, says: "Was he
-not driven into frenzy by those wicked Furies, before he pierced his
-mother's throat with the reeking point of his sword? Nay, from the time
-that Orestes passed for being unsound of mind he did nothing in any
-way to be condemned; he never dared wound with his sword either his
-friend Pylades or his sister Electra; he merely abused both, calling
-one a Fury, the other some other name suggested by his active or bright
-bile." In the story of Argive, Horace says that "his relations cured
-him with much labour and care, by expelling the disease and the bile by
-doses of pure hellebore."
-
-Little progress was made, if any, by the time of the Christian era. In
-fact, as Clouston[58] says, "The mental pathology of the New Testament
-and of the early ages of Christianity was founded on the idea that the
-disease was a possession of the devil, and the feeling towards this
-afflicted class of human beings was naturally that of repulsion and
-hatred, their treatment following on those lines. Neglect, the whip,
-chains, confinement in stone cells, starvation, unsuitable medical
-treatment, speedy death were the natural results."
-
-Passing to the seventeenth century we find that Sennert, a professor
-in Wittenberg, believed that maniacs evacuated stones, iron, living
-animals, etc., things not produced in the natural body and therefore
-caused by demons. He also believed firmly in witchcraft. Thomas Willis
-(1682) is said by some to have been one of the first to suggest a
-relation between insanity and pathological changes in the brain.
-Prochaska in 1784 went so far as to say, "We think, with Haller, that
-no light can be thrown upon it in any other way than by a careful
-dissection of the brains of fatuous persons, apoplectics, and such as
-have other disorders of the understanding." It would appear to have
-been the belief of Pinel that the primary seat of disease in mental
-conditions was in the stomach and intestinal tract. Spreading from
-these centers it caused a derangement of the mind when the brain became
-involved. The influence of the moon, as well as the stars, was spoken
-of by Hippocrates and admitted by Galen. To these ideas we owe the
-word lunacy which appeared in the laws of England in 1320 and may be
-found there today.
-
-The influence of the moon on the mind was taken quite seriously. Rush
-seems to have been somewhat in doubt on this subject and suggested the
-probability of there being a kind of sixth sense involved—a perception
-of the state of the air, and of light and darkness, as Pritchard
-expressed it, to which we are insensible in health. It was thought that
-the full moon, by rarefying the air, increased the amount of light,
-thus affecting the mind. Dr. Rush noted that during an eclipse of the
-sun in 1806 "there was a sudden and total silence in all the cells of
-the hospital." He expressed the opinion in his "Medical Inquiries and
-Observations" in 1812 that there are few cases in which the insane feel
-the influence of the moon and that the excitement resulting in such
-cases is to be attributed to the resulting increase of light. It is
-interesting to note that von Feuchtersleben, an eminent German writer,
-in 1845 was unwilling to go on record as stating positively that the
-moon was not a factor in the causation of insanity. Esquirol, in his
-"Maladies Mentales," in 1838, branded this belief as a superstition,
-but admitted that there were certain facts which could not be
-overlooked. "It is true that the insane are more agitated at the full
-moon as they are also at the dawn of day; but is it not the bright
-light of the moon that excites them, as that of the day every morning?
-Nevertheless, an opinion which has existed for ages—which has spread
-over all lands, and which is consecrated by popular language—demands
-the most careful attention of observers." Dr. Allen of the York Lunatic
-Asylum was very firmly of the opinion that the moon had a decided
-influence on the time of death in mental diseases. This question was
-given very serious consideration by various writers as late as 1856.
-
-In the meanwhile efforts were being made to ascertain the cause of
-mental disease by means of pathological researches. Morgagni,[59] one of
-the earlier investigators, came to the conclusion that the more common
-lesions were in the pineal gland, although he found some induration
-of the brain and various other well-defined changes. Arnold (1782)
-thought that insanity was due to an increased density of the cerebral
-substance, particularly, according to Tuke, "of those parts of the
-brain by means of which the soul is connected with the body." Pinel
-finally concluded that pathology had practically nothing to do with the
-problem and Esquirol in 1838 wrote very discouragingly on the subject.
-Early contributions of considerable importance were made, however,
-by Foville, Bayle, Greding, Calmeil, Guislain, Parchappe and others.
-These were confined almost entirely to a study of gross or macroscopic
-lesions of the brain. Griesinger in 1845 reviewed the pathological
-changes in the nervous system quite thoroughly as far as they were
-known at that time. It must be admitted that the greater part of our
-knowledge of the pathology of mental diseases was acquired at a much
-later date.
-
-A very definite indication of the progress, or lack of progress, made
-in determining the etiology of the psychoses is the list of causes
-agreed upon at the International Congress of Alienists[60] in 1867:—1.
-Physical causes: Artificial deformities of cranium; convulsions of
-infancy and dentition; cerebral congestion (primary, not that which
-arises in the course of certain forms of insanity); organic affections
-of the brain; senility; pellagra; anemia; constitutional syphilis;
-intermittent fever; typhoid fever; acute rheumatism; gout and chronic
-rheumatism; organic affections of the heart; pulmonary phthisis;
-intestinal worms; other acute diseases; other chronic diseases;
-suppression of the hemorrhoidal flux; menstrual disorders; metastasis;
-alcoholic drinks; abuse of tobacco; other vegetable poisons; mineral
-poisons (lead, mercury, coffee, etc.); insolation; intense heat;
-intense cold; blows and falls upon the head; other traumatic causes. 2.
-Moral causes: Appertain to religion; education; love (love thwarted,
-jealousy); family affections; fluctuations of fortune; domestic
-troubles; pride; disappointed ambition; fright; irritation; anger;
-wounded modesty; political events; nostalgia; ennui; misanthropy;
-sudden joy; simple imprisonment; solitary confinement.
-
-In 1897 the New York State Commission in Lunacy in its eighth annual
-report published an analysis of the assigned causes of insanity
-given in 39,369 cases admitted from 1888 to 1896. Of these 11,999
-were reported as unascertained. In the remaining 27,370 cases the
-important "assigned causes" in the order of their frequency were as
-follows: Moral causes (including domestic trouble, loss of friends,
-business anxieties, pecuniary difficulties, grief, fright, disappointed
-affections, disappointed ambition, political excitement, religious
-excitement, etc.) 6,608, intemperance in drink 4,763, hereditary
-predisposition 2,095, old age 1,723, general ill health 1,681,
-epilepsy 1,605, ill health following overwork 1,092, masturbation
-1,063, puerperal (including childbirth and abortion) 773, traumatic
-608, climacteric 502, la grippe 442, sunstroke 402, physical diseases
-375, syphilis 368, cerebral diseases 312, intemperance in drink and
-narcotics 277, congenital defects 223, shock from injury 167, fever
-147, uterine and ovarian disease 132, pregnancy 109, privation and
-overwork 110, etc. These are given in detail not that they throw any
-light on the question of etiology but that they are quite significant
-as to the ideas prevalent on this subject only a few years ago. In
-justice to the Commission in Lunacy attention should be called to
-the fact that this tabulation does not purport to give actual causes
-but those officially "assigned" by the examining authorities or
-others interested. Clouston[61] in 1911, in making a statistical study
-of 11,346 cases admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Mental Hospital in
-the course of thirty-five years, enumerated a long list of causes
-shown in the hospital reports. It is interesting to note that they
-include nursing, disordered menstruation, self abuse, sexual excess,
-surgical operations, bronchitis, prostatic disease, lupus, commencing
-menstruation, transference of morbid action from other organs to the
-brain, excessive tobacco smoking, chloroform inhalation, excessive
-number of children, religious excitement, marriage, changes of
-residence, sedentary habits, political excitement, bad temper, the
-Queen's Jubilee, etc. As he says, "No other disease has anything like
-this list of 107 causes. A black and terrible roll it is. Poor humanity
-has much to contend with to keep sound in mind." Analyzing these
-statistical findings, Clouston concludes that "bad heredity, congenital
-defects, and previous attacks are the great predisposing causes, and
-that alcohol, the crises of life, epilepsy, the various forms of brain
-poisons and the gross brain and nervous diseases constitute the mass of
-exciting causes. Together they account for over seventy per cent of the
-defects and diseases of the mind that come under my observation."
-
-A reference to the statistical reports of the past as published by
-the hospitals of this and other countries will show nothing radically
-different until within the last few years. It will readily be observed
-that fundamentals were almost entirely lost sight of and nonessentials
-overemphasized. Masturbation, for instance, is often a symptom of
-dementia praecox and other forms of mental disease, but is not now
-looked upon as an important etiological factor. The immediate
-cause, so-called, is usually a mere incident, often not without some
-significance, but bearing little if any definite relation to the
-fundamental underlying condition responsible for a mental breakdown.
-The studies of Meyer, Hoch, Kraepelin, Freud, Jung, Bleuler and
-many others have shown that in manic-depressive insanity, dementia
-praecox and various other psychoses we are dealing with very definite
-constitutional conditions, morbid temperaments, personality defects,
-etc., which are responsible for the maladjustments leading to the
-development of psychoses. Financial reverses, domestic difficulties,
-the death of near relatives, the ordinary hardships and disappointments
-of life, even ill health, do not as a rule mean the development
-of a psychosis in the normal, properly balanced individual. In
-the constitutionally predisposed, the love affair, the loss of a
-position, the upsetting factor, whatever it may be, is merely the
-"straw that breaks the camel's back" and is nothing more than an
-accident of fate, a pure coincidence. Any other comparatively trifling
-occurrence out of the ordinary, any difficult situation which the
-makeup of the individual could not adequately meet and react to, would
-have accomplished the same result. There are, however, of course,
-certain psychic traumas to which these inadequate personalities are
-particularly susceptible.
-
-Experience has shown that without any doubt there are conditions for
-which defective heredity is largely responsible. It is often difficult
-to determine the actual rôle which this plays in a given case. Efforts
-have been made to reduce the study of these factors to a definite
-scientific basis. In 1865 Gregor Mendel,[62] Abbot of Brünn, published
-an account of a series of experiments made by him with the common pea
-(pisum sativum) which was destined to revolutionize our views on the
- subject of heredity. On crossing a tall with a dwarf plant,
-tall hybrids resulted with no intermediate forms. This inheritance is
-said to be due to the presence of a definite "determiner" in the germ
-plasm. All of his hybrids being of the tall variety, he designated
-that character as the "dominant," the dwarf being spoken of as the
-"recessive." On the fertilization of these hybrids he obtained another
-generation, which averages three tall plants to one dwarf. Further
-investigation showed that the dwarfs always bred true, as did about one
-out of three of the tall varieties, the remaining two behaving as did
-the original hybrids and giving three talls to one dwarf. He therefore
-observed that he was dealing with three varieties of inheritance, the
-dwarfs which bred true, the talls which bred true and the talls with a
-fixed proportion of talls and dwarfs. The phenomenon as noted by Mendel
-is not, however, universal in its application. Curiously enough no
-attention was given to Mendel's experiments until eighteen years after
-his death, when his work was rediscovered by de Vries, Correns and
-Tschermak in 1900.
-
-Davenport[63] has shown that there are six possible matings of germ
-cells as illustrated by the pigment of the eye:—1. Both parents,
-pigmented iris (brown eyes) and duplex—all offspring with pigmented
-iris and duplex; 2. Both parents brown-eyed, one duplex, one
-simplex—all children brown-eyed, but half simplex; 3. One parent
-brown-eyed and duplex, the other blue-eyed—all children brown-eyed
-and simplex; 4. Both parents brown-eyed and simplex—one-fourth of
-the children brown-eyed and duplex, one-half brown-eyed and simplex,
-and one-fourth blue-eyed; 5. One parent brown-eyed and simplex, and
-the other blue-eyed—one-half the children brown-eyed and simplex,
-the other half blue-eyed; 6. Both parents blue-eyed—all children
-blue-eyed. It should be explained that a duplex origin means the
-inheritance of a character from both parents and simplex from only one.
-The principles of the Mendelian laws of heredity have been applied
-to a study of the color of the eyes and skin, the color and form of
-the hair, the stature, body weight and many other family traits such
-as musical knowledge, ability along artistic and literary lines,
-mechanical skill, etc. They have also been applied to the study of
-various diseases, such as Huntington's chorea, hereditary ataxia,
-deaf-mutism, feeblemindedness, epilepsy and insanity, etc.
-
-Rosanoff[64] and Orr have suggested the following hypothesis relative
-to the transmission of the neuropathic constitution as based on the
-Mendelian theory:—1. Both parents being neuropathic, all children will
-be neuropathic; 2. One parent being normal but with the neuropathic
-taint from one grandparent, and the other parent being neuropathic,
-half the children will be normal but capable of transmitting the
-neuropathic constitution to their progeny, and half will themselves be
-neuropathic; 3. One parent being normal and of pure normal ancestry,
-and the other parent being neuropathic, all the children will be normal
-but capable of transmitting the neuropathic makeup to their progeny; 4.
-Both parents being normal, but each with the neuropathic taint from one
-grandparent, one-fourth of the children will be normal and not capable
-of transmitting the neuropathic makeup to their progeny, one-half will
-be normal but capable of transmitting the neuropathic makeup, and the
-remaining one-fourth will be neuropathic; 5. Both parents being normal,
-one of pure normal ancestry and the other with the neuropathic taint
-from one grandparent, all the children will be normal; half of them
-will be capable and half not capable of transmitting the neuropathic
-makeup to their progeny; 6. Both parents being normal and of pure
-normal ancestry, all the children will be normal and not capable of
-transmitting the neuropathic makeup to their progeny.
-
-Just how much importance is to be attached to these theories is a
-difficult matter to determine. A study of a considerable number of
-families by Rosanoff[65] would appear to be very suggestive, although
-his conclusions must be looked upon as fairly conservative:—"On the
-whole, taking into consideration the limited amount of material as well
-as the various sources of possible error, the correspondence between
-the actual findings and theoretical expectation, as shown in the table,
-must be regarded as strikingly close." On the other hand, as White[66]
-says, "In dealing with the subject of heredity, however, it must not
-be forgotten that our ideas are of necessity largely founded upon
-hypotheses, as biological science has not yet unfolded a sufficient
-number of facts to make it possible to tell just how much, in any
-individual case, must be attributed to the inherent qualities of the
-"germ plasm" and just how much to the influences of environment. The
-view which is pretty generally admitted among biologists at present
-is that there is little warrant for the belief in the Lamarckian
-hypothesis of the inheritance of acquired characters."
-
-The New York statistical tables on heredity were discontinued in
-1907, at which time a total of 104,013 cases had been reported. In
-31,290 of these no information was available, leaving a total of
-72,622, excluding the not insane. A history of insanity was shown in
-the paternal branch of the family in 8.6 per cent of the ascertained
-cases, in the maternal branch in 10.1 per cent, in both paternal
-and maternal in 1.7 per cent, and in collateral branches in eleven
-per cent,—a total of 31.4 per cent in which some form of heredity
-was reported. These statistics relate only to insanity in the family
-history. There were so many sources of inaccuracy that it was not
-thought worth while to continue these studies after 1907. Comparisons
-between the heredity of mental cases and that of normal individuals
-have been rather surprising. Koller, for instance, as quoted by
-Kraepelin,[67] in a comparison of 370 healthy with a similar number
-of insane individuals found a history of psychopathic defects in the
-immediate families of fifty-nine per cent of the former and 76.8 per
-cent of the latter. Diem[68] in 1905 made an analysis of the family
-history of 1193 healthy individuals. This was compared with 1850 mental
-cases. Neuropathic heredity of some kind was found in 78.2 per cent of
-the mental cases and 66.9 per cent of the healthy individuals. There
-was, however, a history of mental diseases in the families of 38.3 per
-cent of the insane patients as compared with 7.1 per cent of the normal
-individuals. Somewhat different results were noted in a study of the
-parents. There was a paternal or maternal history of insanity in 18.1
-per cent of the families of the mental cases as compared with 2.2 per
-cent in the cases of the normal individuals. In the direct parentage,
-Koller found mental diseases in 57.3 per cent of the families of the
-insane as compared with 28 per cent in the case of normal individuals.
-Kraepelin states that the influence of the father is greater in
-heredity than is that of the mother. The father, furthermore, usually
-transmits to the son while the mother influences the daughter more.
-
-Heredity varies with the psychoses, having its greatest influence in
-the transmission of manic-depressive attacks, epileptic and hysterical
-conditions, nervousness, compulsive and impulsive insanity, sexual
-perversions and morbid personalities (Kraepelin). As the result of a
-study of two thousand cases, Pilcz[69] (1907) found that in alcoholism
-heredity was most likely to manifest itself in the form of alcoholism,
-epilepsy and imbecility or manic-depressive psychoses. In the
-progenitors of epileptics he found epilepsy and migraine. Apoplectics
-showed a family history of paralysis, arteriosclerosis, senile dementia
-or melancholia. Senile dementia preceded paralysis, arteriosclerosis,
-feeblemindedness and dementia praecox. Tabes and paralysis apparently
-frequently precede paralysis and dementia praecox. The various forms of
-alcoholic psychoses furthermore show a tendency to repeat themselves
-in the offspring of alcoholics. Similar heredity is said to be the
-general rule in manic-depressive psychoses, epilepsy and alcoholism,
-and to a less extent in arteriosclerosis. Heredity, in so far as it
-is related to mental diseases, may be said to be largely a question
-of the transmission of a neuropathic or psychopathic constitution or
-predisposition. Various psychoses are now held to be the direct result
-of constitutional causes or hereditary influences. This is probably
-true of manic-depressive insanity, Huntington's chorea, involution
-melancholia, dementia praecox, paranoia and paranoid conditions,
-epileptic psychoses, the psychoneuroses and neuroses, psychopathic
-personality and mental deficiency. It is true that some of these
-conditions develop as the immediate results of certain predisposing
-factors and that in frequent instances no evidences of heredity can
-be found. It is also true that various authorities maintain that
-a predisposition to the development of certain psychoses may be
-acquired. If, however, we assume that the above mentioned psychoses are
-constitutional in their nature and due primarily to heredity, it may
-be definitely stated that, based on recent statistical studies,
-hereditary influences account for from fifty-five to sixty per cent of
-the mental cases admitted to our institutions. It may be pointed out,
-as an objection to this suggestion, that although manic-depressive
-psychoses often develop in an emotionally unstable or cyclothymic
-personality and dementia praecox is associated with certain
-peculiarities of makeup, not all of these cases show clear evidences
-of constitutional origins. This is unquestionably true. It is equally
-true, on the other hand, that heredity is also probably very often a
-factor in the production of the senile and arteriosclerotic conditions,
-various nervous diseases, alcoholism and drug habits.
-
-When we leave the subject of heredity we are on much more certain
-ground. There is no question whatever as to the rôle played by
-traumatism, senility, arteriosclerosis, syphilis, brain and nervous
-diseases, alcoholism, exogenous toxins, epilepsy, pellagra and somatic
-diseases in the causation of mental disorders. In an analysis of
-4,079 cases examined at the Munich Clinic, Kraepelin[70] found the
-following factors involved:—1. Physical diseases, infections and gross
-brain lesions, 1.3 per cent; 2. Syphilis and metasyphilis, 10.3 per
-cent (general paresis 9.4 per cent); 3. Toxins—alcohol, morphine,
-cocaine, etc., 22.8 per cent (alcoholic psychoses 22.4 per cent);
-4. Traumatic neuroses and prison psychoses, 2.5 per cent; 5. The
-presenile and senile psychoses, arteriosclerosis, etc., 5.6 per cent;
-6. Dementia praecox, epilepsy, idiocy and imbecility, 27.2 per cent; 7.
-Psychopathic and hysterical states, and manic-depressive insanity, 30.3
-per cent. Conditions existing in our hospitals and clinics are somewhat
-different. As the result of a study of over seventy thousand first
-admissions to forty-eight hospitals in sixteen different states we are
-now in a position to speak quite definitely as to the frequency of the
-conditions above referred to as etiological factors. Traumatic psychoses
-quite uniformly represent a little less than one-half of one per cent
-of the admissions to our institutions. The senile psychoses constitute
-approximately ten per cent and arteriosclerosis five per cent of the
-total. General paresis averages about twelve per cent in the New York
-hospitals and from seven to ten per cent in the other states. Cerebral
-syphilis amounts to a little less than one per cent of the cases. It
-should be said that in the large cities the rate for syphilis is, in
-some instances at least, twice as high as that given. Brain tumor,
-with all other brain and nervous diseases, only constitutes about one
-and one-half per cent of our admissions. Alcoholism, which has been
-responsible for as high as ten per cent of all admissions, from time
-to time, has been decreasing gradually during the last five years and
-in New York in 1920 constituted less than two per cent. Epileptic
-psychoses in our state hospitals amount to from one to two and one-half
-per cent of the total. As a general rule pellagra is not a factor of
-any consequence, amounting to less than one-half of one per cent of
-the admissions. In a few of the southern hospitals large numbers of
-pellagra are encountered. The psychoses accompanying somatic diseases
-are represented by from three to four per cent of the whole number.
-In addition to this, there is still a considerable number of cases
-reported from the hospitals as being caused by psychic trauma of
-various kinds. These represent the acute psychoses usually resulting
-from mental and emotional upsets but with nothing which definitely
-points to constitutional disorders or hereditary influences.
-
-If we speak of predisposing causes, some reference should be made
-to the influence of the physiological landmarks which are of so
-much significance in the life of the individual in more ways than
-one—puberty, adolescence, the climacterium and the senium. A no
-less noteworthy factor in the female sex is the puerperium. These
-periods of life are of tremendous importance in the development of
-the psychoses. It is customary to speak of age, sex, race, civil
-condition, degree of education, climate, civilization, etc., as factors
-in the production of mental diseases. Not much is to be said on these
-questions, nor are they closely related to the subject. On January
-1, 1920, there were 232,680 patients in the hospitals for mental
-diseases in the United States. Fifty-two per cent of these were men and
-forty-eight per cent women. This represents about the difference that
-has been shown for many years. The reduction in alcoholic psychoses
-may affect this ultimately. The striking exceptions to this ratio are
-Massachusetts and New York, where the number of women has slightly
-exceeded the men for a number of years. The admission rate for men
-is, however, slightly higher than that for women in both of those
-states. Less than one-half of one per cent of the patients admitted to
-the New York hospitals are under fifteen years of age. In that state
-approximately five per cent have been between fifteen and nineteen
-years old. In Massachusetts the percentage of persons admitted who
-were under twenty years of age has averaged 8.5 quite consistently for
-some time. The admission rate, for twenty to twenty-five, twenty-five
-to thirty, thirty to thirty-five and thirty-five to forty years of age
-in Massachusetts and New York has averaged from ten to eleven per cent
-for each of those periods for several years. From the age of forty
-to fifty the admission rate is about 8.5 per cent, and from fifty to
-sixty between five and six per cent. Nine per cent of the admissions in
-Massachusetts and eight per cent in New York are seventy years of age
-or over. The statistics on race, birthplace and the psychoses of the
-various races are shown in detail in the chapter on Immigration. The
-admission rate in New York is almost exactly the same for the married
-and the unmarried, the former constituting about thirty-nine per cent
-and the latter forty. In Massachusetts the single first admissions
-amount to about forty-three per cent and the married approximately
-forty per cent. Throughout the country generally the unmarried slightly
-predominate. The percentage of widowed in Massachusetts and New York
-varies from thirteen to fourteen per cent. The divorced constitute
-only about one per cent of all admissions. As to education, it may be
-said that about nine per cent of all first admissions are illiterate,
-from fifteen to twenty per cent can read and write only, about sixty
-per cent have had a high school and two per cent a college education.
-A study of economic conditions shows that from fifteen to seventeen
-per cent are dependent, from sixty to seventy per cent are rated as
-marginal, and from eleven to thirteen per cent as being in comfortable
-circumstances. In Massachusetts and New York about eighty-five per
-cent of the admissions come from a city environment and from twelve
-to fifteen per cent from rural communities. It is interesting to note
-that in 1919 eighteen per cent of the admissions in Massachusetts and
-New York were reported as being intemperate in their habits, with over
-fifty per cent abstinent.
-
-In conclusion, it may be said that the important etiological factors
-in the production of mental disease are heredity, senility, syphilis,
-arteriosclerosis, somatic diseases, mental deficiency, epilepsy,
-diseases of the brain and nervous system, alcoholism, drugs, traumatism
-and mental stress and shocks of various kinds. It is hardly necessary
-to add that our information on this subject is far from complete.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-IMMIGRATION AND MENTAL DISEASES
-
-
-A history of the development of our western civilization is very
-largely a study of the process of assimilation of the various racial
-elements representing a new population. While it must be conceded
-that we are indebted to European countries for much that has been
-contributory to the welfare and success of American institutions, it
-is equally true that the tremendous increase in mental diseases and
-defects here is to be attributed in no small degree to immigration.
-This constitutes a problem of social and economic importance which is
-worthy of serious consideration. Perhaps no better evidence of this
-fact can be offered than a study of such statistics as are available
-relating to the thirty-three millions of people coming to the United
-States from other countries during the last century. This would seem
-to be particularly indicated at this time, in view of the fact that
-the conclusion of the war has brought about the necessity of a new
-adjustment of our relations with other countries.
-
-Immigration to the United States has varied greatly from time to time.
-It is a well known fact that the founders of our government were
-practically all of English, Dutch, German or Scotch-Irish extraction.
-Unfortunately no information of any consequence is available regarding
-the aliens entering the country prior to 1820, when their study
-was first undertaken by the federal authorities. As far as can be
-determined, during the ensuing ten years about 128,000 were admitted
-at the various ports of entry. The history of immigration since that
-time has been determined very largely by existing conditions in other
-countries. The famines and political disturbances in Ireland between
-1840 and 1850 were the occasion of a large influx, concededly of a
-highly desirable type. The nature of the tide of incoming immigrants
-was changed by the revolutionary troubles in Germany during the decade
-following 1848. There was a decrease for a time during the civil war.
-This was soon followed by a considerable increase which continued
-quite consistently until the outbreak of the world war. There would at
-this time seem to be every reason for thinking that an unprecedented
-invasion can be expected during the next twenty-five years as a result
-of conditions prevailing abroad unless some restrictions are imposed.
-In 1850 and 1860 the number of Irish people in the United States
-exceeded the German born. The 1890 census showed a predominance of the
-latter race and they have exceeded the Irish element in the population
-for some time. Nearly a million Germans were admitted between 1880 and
-1885. Since 1890, however, the number of Irish and Germans entering
-have both decreased markedly. After the Spanish-American war a great
-increase in immigration was noted and the rate of admission per year
-reached a million in 1905, but the source of supply had entirely
-changed.
-
-Salmon[71] has shown that in spite of the fact that in 1882 only 12.9
-per cent of all incoming aliens admitted were from those countries,
-eighty-one per cent of all immigration from Europe in 1907 came from
-Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Montenegro, Poland, Portugal,
-Roumania, Russia, Servia, Syria and Turkey. In 1882, 87.1 per cent of
-those admitted came from England, Germany, Holland, Norway, Sweden,
-Switzerland and Belgium. The races represented by the new tide of
-immigration, according to Salmon, were Slavic, thirty per cent,
-Italian, twenty-six per cent, and Hebrew, fifteen per cent, the
-remainder being made up of various other miscellaneous elements. This
-change is shown by the fact that the immigration from Austria-Hungary,
-which amounted to only 711,926 from 1820 to 1896, increased to
-2,303,323 during the first decade of the present century. Five hundred
-and thirty-four thousand three hundred and thirty-six were admitted
-from Russia between 1820 and 1896 and 1,756,027 between 1900 and 1911.
-The Italian immigration, which amounted to 676,826 between 1820 and
-1896, increased to 2,228,759 between 1901 and 1911 (Salmon[72]). The
-numerical status of immigration by decades is shown in the following
-table:
-
- From 1831 to 1840 528,721
- 1841 to 1850 1,604,805
- 1851 to 1860 2,648,912
- 1861 to 1870 2,369,878
- 1871 to 1880 2,812,191
- 1881 to 1890 5,246,613
- 1891 to 1900 3,687,564
- 1901 to 1910 8,795,386
- 1911 to 1920 6,747,381
-
-A study made by the United States Immigration Commission some years ago
-showed that of 68,942 foreign born males employed in various mining
-and manufacturing industries, and who had been in the United States
-for five years or more, only 33.3 per cent had obtained naturalization
-papers. Of 246,673 of this same class representing non-English speaking
-races, only 53.2 per cent had learned the language of this country to
-any extent. A report made by the Commissioner General of Immigration
-showed that of 719,906 immigrants over fourteen years of age and
-admitted from 1899 to 1909, 26.6 per cent could neither read nor write
-and 29.8 per cent had no occupation. The following table shows the
-percentage of foreign born in the population of the United States from
-time to time as stated in official reports:—
-
- 1850 9.7 per cent
- 1860 13.3 " "
- 1870 14.4 " "
- 1880 13.3 " "
- 1890 14.7 " "
- 1900 13.6 " "
- 1910 14.7 " "
- 1920 12.96 " " (white only)
-
-The foreign born population naturally varies more or less in different
-parts of the country. In New York state it was twenty-six per cent in
-1870, 23.8 in 1880, 26.2 in 1890, 26.1 in 1900, 29.9 in 1910, and 26.8
-per cent in 1920. In Massachusetts it was 30.6 per cent in 1895, 30.2
-in 1900, 30.3 in 1905, 31.5 in 1910, 31.2 in 1915, and 28 per cent in
-1920.
-
-We have little authentic information relative to the institution
-population prior to 1903. The United States Census Bureau in its
-report of 1904 on the insane in hospitals shows that in 1903 there
-were 140,312 patients, of which number 47,078, or 34.3 per cent, were
-of foreign birth. The percentage of foreign born in state hospitals in
-various parts of the country at that time were as follows:—
-
- New York 46.9 per cent
- Massachusetts 42.0 " "
- New Jersey 39.5 " "
- Pennsylvania 30.9 " "
- District of Columbia 36.7 " "
- Connecticut 35.4 " "
- Michigan 43.5 " "
- Illinois 41.6 " "
- Wisconsin 50.9 " "
- Minnesota 63.5 " "
- North Dakota 68.4 " "
- South Dakota 49.9 " "
- Montana 57.8 " "
- Nevada 63.1 " "
-
-In 1912 an investigation was made of the foreign born in the New York
-state hospitals. As a result of the census taken, it was found that
-of 31,624 patients, 13,728, or 43.4 per cent, were foreign born. Of
-this number 4,487 had been naturalized and 9,241, or 29.2 per cent
-of the total hospital population were aliens. At the Manhattan State
-Hospital in New York City, out of a total of 4,570 patients 2,526 were
-foreign born and only 708 had been naturalized. The Central Islip State
-Hospital at the same time had 4,438 patients. Of this number 2,803
-were foreign born and only 891 were naturalized citizens. Thus, at the
-Manhattan State Hospital 39.8 per cent and at the Central Islip State
-Hospital 43.1 per cent of the patients were aliens. It was shown that
-the average hospital residence of the insane in the state was 9.85
-years. Based on the maintenance expenditures for 1912 it was estimated
-that the cost to New York for caring for its 9,241 aliens in the state
-hospitals was $2,579,902.78 per year, and for their entire hospital
-residence, over twenty-five million dollars.[73] Of the first admissions
-to the New York hospitals for the eight years beginning October 1,
-1904, and ending September 30, 1910, 46.2 per cent were foreign born.
-The citizenship of the first admissions for this same period is shown
-by the following table:—
-
- _Year_ _Aliens_
-
- 1905 28.4 per cent
- 1906 31.4 " "
- 1907 32.6 " "
- 1908 33.9 " "
- 1909 33.4 " "
- 1910 33.0 " "
- 1911 32.9 " "
- 1912 29.3 " "
-
-It was also shown that 14.7 per cent of the aliens admitted in 1905
-had been in the United States less than three years, in 1906, 18.7, in
-1907, 21.8, in 1908, 20.1, in 1909, 18.1, in 1910, 15.5, in 1911, 14.9
-and in 1912, 18.1 per cent. The birthplace and citizenship of first
-admissions to the New York state hospitals since 1912 is shown in the
-following table:—
-
- _Year_ _Foreign born_ _Aliens_
-
- 1913 47.0 per cent 22.5 per cent
- 1914 46.7 " " 25.2 " "
- 1915 47.0 " " 26.4 " "
- 1916 48.5 " " 27.8 " "
- 1917 47.8 " " 27.1 " "
- 1918 46.4 " " 27.5 " "
- 1919 46.8 " " 26.4 " "
- 1920 45.3 " " 24.8 " "
-
-The percentage of the foreign born as shown by the first admissions to
-the Massachusetts state hospitals during the last eleven years was as
-follows:—
-
- 1910 44.88 per cent
- 1911 44.65 " "
- 1912 44.40 " "
- 1913 45.30 " "
- 1914 45.75 " "
- 1915 45.59 " "
- 1916 43.87 " "
- 1917 43.40 " "
- 1918 43.07 " "
- 1919 43.38 " "
- 1920 42.18 " "
-
-The percentage of aliens as shown by the first admissions to
-Massachusetts hospitals was 26.40 per cent in 1918, 27.54 in 1919 and
-22.73 per cent in 1920.
-
-Studies of the population of the New York state hospitals show that the
-aliens have for a period of several years constituted nearly thirty per
-cent of the entire number. The influence which immigration may have
-had in determining the relative frequency of various psychoses in our
-institutions is an exceedingly interesting question. In speaking of the
-susceptibility of certain races to special types of disease, Salmon[74]
-says, "This is particularly true of mental diseases, for if racial
-characteristics profoundly affect political, social and religious
-ideals we must look for a similar influence upon the individual makeup
-which so largely determines trends in mental disease. All those who are
-familiar with mental diseases among the Japanese in California testify
-to the remarkable tendency to suicide in that race, not only in
-depressed conditions but in conditions in which suicidal tendencies, in
-other races, are not frequent. This is in accordance with the general
-attitude of the Japanese toward self-destruction. The strong tendency
-to delusional trends of a persecutory nature in West Indian negroes,
-the frequency with which we find hidden sexual complexes among the
-Hebrews and the remarkable prevalence of mutism among Poles, even
-in psychoses in which mutism is not a common symptom, are familiar
-examples of the influence of racial traits upon mental diseases."
-As the result of a special study of this subject Salmon has reached
-the following conclusions: "1. The psychoses more prevalent among
-Hebrews than in the native stock are manic depressive psychosis,
-dementia praecox, the psychoneuroses, and psychoses associated with
-constitutional inferiority. 2. The absence of alcoholic psychoses
-among Hebrews is the most striking clinical fact in connection with
-immigration. In 1909 there were but 3 patients with alcoholic psychoses
-in 448 Hebrews admitted to all the New York state hospitals. 3. The
-very high prevalence of general paresis among Italians bears a direct
-relation to the high prevalence of venereal diseases among Italians in
-New York.... 4. Italians show a freedom from alcoholic psychoses second
-only to Hebrews. 5. Italians exceed the native born in the prevalence
-of epileptic psychoses, infective exhaustive psychoses and dementia
-praecox.... 7. From the data available, alcoholic psychoses are found
-to be more prevalent among Slavs than among any other races of the new
-immigration, but not as prevalent as among the native-born. 8. General
-paresis is nearly twice as prevalent among Slavs as in the native-born,
-but not so prevalent as among the Italians. Dementia praecox is more
-prevalent among the Slavs than among the native-born."
-
-The racial representation as shown by statistics of first admissions
-is fairly constant in New York state, at least, as is shown by the
-following table of percentages:—
-
- _Race_ _1916_ _1917_ _1918_ _1919_ _1920_
-
- African 3.1 3.3 3.9 3.7 3.8
- English 7.6 5.7 5.1 4.9 5.1
- German 14.3 13.5 12.5 11.7 11.7
- Hebrew 12.2 11.6 12.2 11.7 10.5
- Irish 19.8 19.5 17.3 16.7 16.5
- Italian 6.3 6.9 7.1 8.1 8.5
- Magyar .8 .9 1.0 .7 .8
- Scandinavian 1.9 2.2 2.2 2.1 2.0
- Slavonic 5.7 5.8 5.7 5.4 6.0
- Mixed 12.4 16.0 23.6 23.3 24.1
- Others 5.7 5.6 4.4 4.9 6.2
- Unascertained 10.2 9.0 5.0 6.9 4.8
-
-The 1916 report of the Commission on Mental Diseases shows the
-following analysis of the nativity of the 34,300 first admissions to
-the Massachusetts state hospitals covering a period of thirteen years
-(1904-1916):—
-
- _Birthplace_ _Number_
-
- United States 18,757
- Africa 7
- Armenia 68
- Austria 319
- Azores 187
- Canada 3,315
- England 1,359
- Finland 250
- Germany 486
- Greece 129
- Ireland 5,033
- Italy 719
- Nova Scotia 136
- Poland 190
- Russia 1,139
- Scotland 381
- Sweden 539
- Turkey 100
-
-It should be borne in mind that these statistics represent birthplace
-and not race. An analysis of the above figures shows that 54.68 per
-cent were born in the United States and 44.42 per cent in other
-countries. Of the other countries represented, 3.96 per cent were born
-in England, 3.32 per cent in Russia, 9.63 in Canada and 14.67 per cent
-in Ireland.
-
-A comparison of the more important psychoses represented by the various
-races, as reported by the New York State Hospital Commission in 1918,
-is shown in the following table[75]:—
-
- Per Cent of Total First Admissions of Each Race
- African German Hebrew Irish Italian Slavonic Mixed
- Psychoses
-
- Senile 5.2 11.6 5.8 13.2 6.2 1.6 10.2
- General paralysis 21.3 17.3 13.3 9.9 19.1 6.7 13.1
- Alcoholic 5.2 4.5 0.2 10.6 2.3 10.3 4.5
- Manic-depressive 12.4 12.2 24.0 9.8 22.0 14.0 12.4
- Dementia praecox 29.6 25.5 35.2 26.7 26.6 47.3 24.0
-
-Some variation is shown by a similar analysis of the New York
-admissions for the year 1919, as is illustrated by the following
-table[76]:—
-
- Per Cent of Total First Admissions of Each Race
- African German Hebrew Irish Italian Slavonic Mixed
- Psychoses
-
- Senile 8.0 12.7 6.9 14.9 4.9 1.6 11.5
- General paralysis 15.7 15.1 11.5 12.0 16.2 9.2 12.3
- Alcoholic 4.0 4.0 0.4 7.9 2.4 7.0 3.0
- Manic-depressive 10.4 13.7 21.6 11.1 20.6 17.6 13.1
- Dementia praecox 31.3 24.2 32.0 25.5 29.7 42.3 23.8
-
-For purposes of comparison an analysis of the psychoses shown by
-various races in the admissions of the Massachusetts state hospitals
-for a period of three years is added (1917-1918-1919):—
-
- Senile Arterio- General Alco- Manic- Dementia
- Race No. Psychoses sclerosis Paresis holic Depressive Praecox
-
- African 211 5.68% 4.73% 6.16% 7.10% 4.26% 27.96%
- English 3281 10.75 9.87 7.46 5.76 9.99 18.65
- French 647 6.64 6.95 12.05 8.19 6.80 24.88
- German 283 6.00 7.77 10.60 9.92 12.01 21.20
- Hebrew 353 .56 2.26 5.66 1.41 10.19 37.11
- Irish 2994 9.01 7.11 7.11 16.13 7.11 23.31
- Italian 522 3.44 2.66 7.66 5.34 10.34 35.44
- Mixed 1244 8.76 12.62 7.70 8.11 7.55 24.35
- Slavonic 635 6.77 7.08 12.28 8.35 6.93 25.20
-
-This shows some very interesting results. It will be noted that the
-Hebrews and Italians have the highest rate for dementia praecox, the
-percentage shown by these races being much higher than any of the
-others. The Germans, Italians and Hebrews, in the order mentioned,
-have the highest rates for manic-depressive psychoses. The frequency
-of alcoholic psychoses as shown by the Irish is nearly double that of
-any of the others. The Slavonic race has the highest rate for general
-paresis, followed in close succession by the French and Germans. The
-highest rate for senile and arteriosclerotic psychoses combined is
-shown by the races of mixed origin, the next highest by the English,
-closely followed by the Irish. The most common psychosis in every
-instance is dementia praecox. In the admissions to the institutions for
-the criminal insane in New York the highest percentages are represented
-by the Irish, Italian and Hebrew races, as shown in another chapter.
-During a period of six years (1912 to 1918) a study of first admissions
-to the New York state hospitals shows an incidence of dementia praecox
-in the native-born of 75.2 per hundred thousand of the population and
-in the foreign born of 161.4. The importance of this is shown by the
-fact that over fifty per cent of the entire hospital population is made
-up of cases of dementia praecox.
-
-The necessity of some supervision of immigration for the purpose of
-preventing the entrance of undesirable aliens has long been recognized.
-As early as 1824 the state of New York tried by legislation to prevent
-the admission of the insane and mental defectives. This effort was
-a failure, probably owing to the fact that the proposed enactments
-would have compelled the companies responsible for the entrance of
-undesirable aliens to remove them if they became a public charge. The
-introduction of discordant racial elements from abroad at one time
-disturbed the equilibrium of the entire country. The agitation for the
-restriction of immigration before the civil war led to the formation
-of a political organization known as the "Native American" or "Know
-Nothing" party, as it was usually called. It at one time had forty
-representatives in Congress and nominated a candidate for President
-in 1856. These disturbed conditions led to the consideration of this
-subject by Congress as early as 1838 and the Judiciary Committee
-recommended legislation prohibiting the entrance of idiots, lunatics
-and those suffering from incurable diseases or convicted of crime.
-The action of several foreign countries in pardoning murderers with
-the provision that they should emigrate to the United States led to
-a resolution of protest by Congress in 1860 and shortly thereafter
-a statute intended to encourage immigration was repealed. An
-investigation made by the United States Immigration Commission brought
-to light the fact that the great influx of foreigners was largely
-caused by the agents of the steamboat companies abroad and that they
-had "five or six thousand ticket agents in Galicia alone."[77]
-
-The activities of those opposed to the indiscriminate entrance of
-objectionable aliens led to the federal enactment of August 3, 1882.
-The Secretary of the Treasury was charged with the duty of prohibiting
-the landing of lunatics, idiots and persons liable to become a
-public charge. The provisions for the execution of this law were not
-satisfactory and it was amended by an act of 1891. This made it a
-misdemeanor to bring in any of the above proscribed classes and imposed
-a fine of over one thousand dollars upon anyone guilty of so doing.
-Section 11 provided that aliens entering in violation of this law could
-be returned at any time within one year thereafter at the expense of
-the person or persons, vessel, transportation company or corporation
-responsible for their entry, and further, that those becoming public
-charges within one year from causes existing prior to landing should
-be considered as having entered in violation of law. The provisions
-of this statute were unchanged until the act of March 3, 1903. This
-excluded persons insane within five years previous to landing, those
-having had two or more previous attacks at any time, paupers and all
-others liable to become a public charge. Section 17 delegated to
-the officers of the United States Public Health Service the duty of
-determining the condition of all immigrants. Section 20 provided that
-aliens coming to the United States in violation of law, or who were
-found to be public charges from causes existing prior to landing, could
-be deported at any time within two years. Section 21 authorized the
-Secretary of Commerce and Labor to deport any alien within three years
-of entering in violation of the act.
-
-An important step in the legislative restriction of immigration was
-the amendment of Feb. 20, 1907. This made mandatory the exclusion
-of idiots, imbeciles, the feebleminded, epileptics, insane, all who
-had been insane within five years and persons having had two or more
-attacks of insanity at any time, or who were likely to become a public
-charge, as well as individuals not comprehended in the foregoing
-excluded classes but found to be suffering from mental or physical
-defects of such a nature as to affect their ability to earn a living.
-Section 20 provided that an alien entering in violation of law or
-becoming a public charge from causes existing prior to landing should,
-upon the warrant of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, be taken into
-custody and deported to the country from whence he came at any time
-within three years after the date of his entry into the United States.
-The cost of this removal was to be a charge upon the owners of the
-vessel or transportation line immediately responsible. When the mental
-or physical condition of the alien was such as to require personal
-care or attention, the Secretary of Commerce and Labor was authorized
-to employ a suitable person for that purpose. This was a great step
-in advance. There were, however, some very great difficulties to be
-overcome. The force placed at the disposal of the Public Health Service
-for the inspection and examination of incoming immigrants was entirely
-inadequate and one or two men were sometimes responsible for the
-examination of several thousands aliens in a day. This was, of course,
-impossible. The burden of proof in showing that the mental condition
-was due to causes existing prior to landing, furthermore, devolved upon
-the persons requesting deportation. It was impossible in many instances
-to submit actual proof even where there could be no reasonable doubt as
-to the facts. This led to great difficulties and much dissatisfaction.
-Another serious objection to the provisions of this law was the
-requirement that only such persons could be deported as were likely to
-become a public charge. In many instances such persons were supported
-by private funds until they were no longer deportable, after which they
-became a burden upon the state in which they resided.
-
-These conditions were much improved by the action of the Sixty-fourth
-Congress in 1917. This definitely excluded "all idiots, imbeciles,
-feebleminded persons, epileptics, insane persons; persons who have
-had one or more attacks of insanity at any time previously; persons
-of constitutional psychopathic inferiority," etc., or "persons not
-comprehended within any of the foregoing excluded classes who are found
-to be and are certified by the examining surgeons as being mentally
-or physically defective" or persons likely to become a public charge.
-Section 9 provided that it shall be unlawful for any person, "including
-any transportation company," to bring either from a foreign country
-or any insular possession of the United States any alien afflicted
-with idiocy, insanity, imbecility, feeblemindedness, epilepsy,
-constitutional psychopathic inferiority, etc., and subjected to a
-fine any person or persons so doing. The Secretary of Labor was also
-authorized to detail inspectors and matrons to duty on vessels carrying
-immigrants, who shall "report to the immigration authorities in charge
-at the port of landing any information of value in determining the
-admissibility of such passengers that may have become known to them
-during the voyage." It also provided that a mental examination of
-all arriving aliens should be made by medical officers of the United
-States Public Health Service who shall certify all mental defects or
-diseases observed. "Medical officers of the United States Public Health
-Service who have had special training in the diagnosis of insanity and
-mental defects shall be detailed for duty or employed at all ports
-of entry designated by the Secretary of Labor." Section 19 provided,
-that any alien "who within five years after entry becomes a public
-charge from causes not affirmatively shown to have arisen subsequent to
-landing" shall, upon warrant of the Secretary of Labor, be taken into
-custody and deported. The act also made provision for the first time
-for a literacy test which has been a subject of discussion for years.
-These amendments are of far-reaching importance and will eventually
-undoubtedly afford the hospitals considerable relief. The fact still
-remains, however, that the individual states are expending millions of
-dollars annually for the care and maintenance of an alien population
-which should have been excluded by the federal government. Under these
-circumstances it would seem nothing more than fair that the states
-should be reimbursed for the cost of carrying a burden for which they
-are in no way responsible.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-MENTAL DISEASES AND CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY
-
-
-The question of responsibility for criminal acts, once a legal
-problem pure and simple, is now recognized as involving sociological,
-psychological and psychiatric considerations of far-reaching
-importance. This viewpoint, none too thoroughly established even
-now, represents the progress of several centuries, and still lacks
-adequate recognition in law. The eloquent protest against the legal
-conception of mental diseases written by Isaac Ray[78] in 1838 sounds
-like a quotation from a recent medical journal. "In all civilized
-communities, ancient or modern, insanity has been regarded as exempting
-from the punishment of crime, and vitiating the civil acts of those who
-are affected with it. The only difficulty, or diversity of opinion,
-consists in determining who are really insane, in the meaning of the
-law, which has been content with merely laying down some general
-principles, and leaving their application to the discretion of the
-judicial authorities.... It is to be feared, that the principles, laid
-down on this subject by legal authorities, have received too much of
-that reverence which is naturally felt for the opinions and practices
-of our ancestors; and that innovations have been too much regarded,
-rather as the offspring of new-fangled theories, than of the steady
-development of medical science. In their zeal to uphold the wisdom of
-the past, from the fancied desecrations of reformers and theorists,
-the ministers of the law seem to have forgotten, that, in respect to
-this subject, the real dignity and respectability of their profession
-is better upheld, by yielding to the improvements of the times, and
-thankfully receiving the truth from whatever quarter it may come, than
-by turning away with blind obstinacy from everything that conflicts
-with long established maxims and decisions."
-
-A brief reference to the history of the development of the present
-legal conceptions of criminal responsibility will justify the comments
-made by Ray. The terms idiocy, lunacy and non compos mentis were all
-used by Coke in his "Institutes of the Laws of England" written, as
-nearly as can be determined, in 1625. A differentiation between the
-significance of the word idiot and non compos mentis appeared as
-early as 1325 in the English statute "De Praerogativa Regis," which
-delegated various responsibilities to the crown that are recognized
-to this day. Sir Matthew Hale, about 1670, described a partial and a
-total insanity, the former not being accepted as relieving the accused
-of responsibility for the commitment of a crime. It is an interesting
-fact that we still hear the question of partial insanity seriously
-discussed. In 1723 Justice Tracy in a murder trial ruled that "a
-prisoner in order to be acquitted on the ground of insanity must be
-a man that is totally deprived of his understanding and memory, and
-doth not know what he is doing no more than an infant, than a brute
-or a wild beast." As a result of this ruling a man was found guilty
-of attempting to murder a neighbor who sent devils and imps into his
-house at night for the purpose of disturbing his sleep. Fortunately
-the sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. In 1812 the Attorney
-General of England[79] ruled that "a man may be deranged in his
-mind—his intellect may be insufficient for enabling him to conduct
-the common affairs of life, such as disposing of his property, or
-judging of the claims which his respective relations have upon him; and
-if he be so, the administration of the country will take his affairs
-into their management, and appoint to him trustees; but, at the same
-time, such a man is not discharged from his responsibility for criminal
-acts."
-
-The legal procedure of the present day is based very largely on the
-decisions made at the time of the McNaughton trial in 1843. In this
-case the Chief Justice, as quoted by Lord Lyndhurst, addressed the
-following words to the jury: "The point which at last will be submitted
-to you will be whether or not on the whole of the evidence you have
-heard you are satisfied that at the time the act was committed, for
-the commission of which the prisoner stands charged, he had not that
-competent use of his understanding as not to know what he was doing
-with respect to the act itself—a wicked and wrong thing—whether he
-knew it was a wicked and a wrong thing he had done, or that he was not
-sensible at the time he committed this act that it was contrary to the
-laws of God and man." This case led to a very serious consideration
-of the subject in the House of Lords. As the result of an official
-request for an opinion, the majority of the judges of the court, all
-concurring but one, expressed the view that "to establish a defense on
-the ground of insanity, it must be clearly proved that at the time of
-the committing of the act the accused party was labouring under such a
-defect of reason, from disease of the mind, as not to know the nature
-and quality of the act he was doing; or if he did know it (sic) that he
-did not know he was doing what was wrong."[80]
-
-The importance and significance of these decisions, which one might
-very readily assume to be obsolete and too ancient to be worthy of
-consideration, will be made clear by a quotation from the penal code in
-effect in New York today. "Sec. 1120 (Penal Law). Incompetency of idiot
-or lunatic. An act done by a person who is an idiot, imbecile, lunatic
-or insane is not a crime. A person cannot be tried, sentenced to any
-punishment or punished for a crime while he is in a state of idiocy,
-imbecility, lunacy or insanity so as to be incapable of understanding
-the proceeding or making his defense. A person is not excused from
-criminal liability as an idiot, imbecile, lunatic or insane person
-except upon proof that, at the time of committing the alleged insane
-act, he was laboring under such a defect of reason as 1, not to know
-the nature and quality of the act he was doing; or 2, not to know that
-the act was wrong." It will, I think, be conceded that we have, at
-least, not lost ground in any way since 1843.
-
-No less interesting is the legal definition of insanity in
-Massachusetts: "The words 'insane person' and 'lunatic' shall include
-every idiot, non compos, lunatic and insane and distracted person."
-(Chapter 4, Sec. 7, General Laws of Massachusetts.) In New York the
-terms lunatic and lunacy include every kind of unsoundness of mind
-except idiocy. (Chapter 22, Sec. 28, Consolidated Laws.) This would
-presumably include psychopathic personality and imbecility.
-
-Numerous court decisions have had a material bearing on the subject of
-responsibility. It has been held in New York that partial or incipient
-insanity is not a sufficient defense if there is still an ability to
-form a correct perception of the legal quality of the act and to know
-that it was wrong. (People vs. Taylor, 138 N. Y. 398, 407 (1893)).
-A weak or disordered mind is not excused from the consequences of
-crime. (People vs. Burgess, 153 N. Y. 561, 569 (1897)), etc. Generally
-speaking, the legal methods of determining criminal responsibility
-do not vary to any material extent with the different states. It is
-obvious that the responsibility for crime as defined by the courts is
-far from harmonizing with the conception of competency entertained by
-the medical profession. To the psychiatrist, if the criminal act is the
-result of the mental condition it constitutes a symptom of the disease
-process. It is readily apparent from even a very brief reference to
-the statutes that a person concededly suffering from paranoia, general
-paresis, dementia praecox or any other well-defined psychosis is still
-criminally liable for his insane acts within certain limitations. From
-a medical point of view the existence of a psychosis, if associated
-with a consequent judgment defect, emotional instability, disturbance
-of volition, intellectual deterioration, delusional and particularly
-persecutory control, hallucinatory trends, ideas of reference, etc.,
-is of itself quite sufficient to explain criminal acts in the insane.
-This, however, as has been shown, is not the legal point of view.
-The accused is fully responsible unless it can be shown that he is
-suffering from such a defect of reason as not to appreciate the quality
-or nature of his act or that the act is wrong. There is no other legal
-standard. It is a well-known fact that many persons adjudged insane by
-the courts and committed to our institutions are fully competent to
-discriminate between right and wrong from an ethical point of view,
-although legally held to be incompetent and unsafe to be at large.
-These divergent viewpoints presumably are due to the fact that the law
-moves only with a degree of dignity which theoretically guarantees
-absolute security in avoiding any possible sources of error. It
-nevertheless is responsible for many miscarriages of justice.
-
-Efforts to remedy this state of affairs have been made repeatedly
-by the medical profession. The American Psychiatric Association
-has devoted a great deal of time and attention to this subject,
-unfortunately without any very concrete results. The last
-official action taken was the unanimous approval of the following
-resolutions:—[81]
-
-"Resolved: 1. That the proved rarity of wrong acquittals on the ground
-of insanity is the strongest evidence that the abuse of the insanity
-plea in criminal cases has been unwarrantably exaggerated.
-
-"2. That the insanity plea is not by any means raised as often as it
-should be, to prevent the frequent miscarriage of justice arising from
-the conviction and imprisonment of insane persons whose true mental
-condition has not been recognized.
-
-"3. That the abuses which have crept into the method of presenting
-medical expert testimony have been largely the result of established
-legal tests and procedures, although their correction does not require
-radical change in the laws.
-
-"4. That inaccessibility of the evidence on both sides of the case is
-the chief cause of defective medical testimony.
-
-"5. That whenever possible the medical witness should not testify
-unless he has had an opportunity to make both a mental and a physical
-examination of the person in whose behalf the plea of insanity is
-raised.
-
-"6. That we consider the hypothetical question as ordinarily presented
-to be unscientific, misleading and dangerous to medical repute and
-that the evidence on both sides should always be included in its
-presentation to medical witnesses.
-
-"7. That in all criminal cases absolutely equal rights should be
-accorded the medical witnesses for both the prosecution and the defence
-for the examination of the person alleged to be insane.
-
-"8. That in our judgment the judiciary should by legal enactment be
-allowed more latitude in enlightening the jury and enabling it to
-comprehend the nature and meaning of the medical testimony laid before
-it.
-
-"9. That we recommend as advisable the adoption wherever possible of
-the so-called Leed's method of preliminary consultation by medical
-witnesses on both sides of the case as to its status.
-
-"10. That we advocate a freer use of appointments of commissions by the
-court.
-
-"11. That a period of hospital observation of all persons committing
-crimes in whose defence the plea of insanity has been raised is by
-far the best method yet devised for securing impartial and accurate
-opinions, silencing popular clamor, avoiding prolonged and sensational
-trials and saving expense to the State; also that we advocate the
-enactment in every State of laws similar to those of Maine, New
-Hampshire, Vermont and Massachusetts, providing that such persons may
-be committed by the court to a State hospital for the insane there to
-remain for such time as the court may direct pending the determination
-of their insanity.
-
-"12. That it is the sense of the Association that it is subversive of
-the dignity of the medical profession for any of its members to occupy
-the position of medical advisory counsel in open court and at the same
-time to act as expert witness in a medico-legal case.
-
-"13. That we regard the acceptance by a physician of a fee that
-is contingent upon the result of a medico-legal case as not in
-accordance with medical ethics and derogatory to the good repute of the
-profession, and advocate the regulation of the practice by legislation.
-
-"14. That we are in favor of any legislation that will secure a
-definite standard of qualification for medical men giving expert
-testimony."
-
-An equal amount of consideration has been given to this important
-question from time to time by the American Institute of Criminal Law
-and Criminology. At a recent meeting of that organization the following
-recommendations were submitted by a committee:
-
-"1. That in all cases of felony or misdemeanor punishable by a prison
-sentence the question of responsibility be not submitted to the jury,
-which will thus be called upon to determine only that the offense was
-committed by the defendant.
-
-"2. That the disposition and treatment (including punishment) of all
-such misdemeanants and felons, i.e., the sentence imposed, be based
-upon a study of the individual offender by properly qualified and
-impartial experts cooperating with the courts.
-
-"3. That provisions be made permitting the transfer of such
-misdemeanants and felons at any time after conviction from one
-institution to another affording a different kind of treatment upon the
-presentation of evidence of the needs for such action satisfactory to
-the court which passed sentence.
-
-"4. That no maximum term be set to any sentence.
-
-"5. That no parole or probation be granted without suitable psychiatric
-examination.
-
-"6. That in considering applications for pardons and commutation
-careful attention be given to reports of qualified experts showing
-the applicant's mental age and mental stability and that in drafting
-statutes determining or defining juvenile delinquency, mental age
-and mental stability, within reasonable limits, be regarded as of
-importance with the calendar age of the delinquent.
-
-"In view of the foregoing and as an initial step towards the ends
-stated, the committee submits the following resolution and urges its
-immediate adoption:
-
-"Resolved, That the several states be urged to make provision for
-the psychiatric examination, under conditions permitting prolonged
-observation when necessary, of all persons convicted of a felony,
-misdemeanor or other offense by properly qualified experts appointed
-to assist the court in reaching a decision as to the proper disposition
-and treatment of the offender."
-
-The courts, the medical profession and the public have shown
-indications of a decided dissatisfaction with existing methods of
-determining criminal responsibility. This will certainly continue
-as long as the sole test of competency is the power of the accused
-to discriminate between a knowledge of right and wrong at the time
-when the act is committed. The conditions which lead to crime have
-been made the subject of scientific study by many. One of the early
-investigators in this field was Morel, who saw in the criminal a
-personification "of the various degenerations of the species." Much has
-been said of "moral insanity," a condition referred to by Abercromby
-as one "in which all the upright sentiments are eliminated while the
-intelligence presents no disorders." Lombroso advanced the theory
-that criminality is a form of atavism—a reversion of man to the
-primitive and savage type represented by his early ancestors. This
-theory was based on a careful study of the anatomical, physiological
-and psychological characteristics of primitive man. His classification
-included the occasional, the emotional, the born criminal, the moral
-insane, and the masked epileptic. Marro offered an anatomical basis
-for the degenerative theory in the form of nutritional defects in the
-central nervous system. Ferri distinguished between criminal lunatics
-and emotional criminals and held crime to be "a phenomenon of complex
-origin and the result of biological, physical and social conditions."
-"Habitual criminals," he says, "are the victims of a clear, evident
-and common mental alienation which causes the criminal activity,"
-while the occasional offenders are to be explained by "the impulse
-of opportunities more than the innate tendency that determines the
-crime." The emotional criminal, according to Ferri, is a sane and
-moral individual overcome by momentary emotional paroxysms referred
-to as a "psychologic storm." Garofalo, on the other hand, looked upon
-crime as "an offense against the fundamental altruistic sentiments
-of pity and probity." From his point of view a criminal act was an
-indication of the loss of a proper sense of appreciation of the
-life or property of another—a moral anomaly. The Italian school of
-criminology was responsible also for the theory that criminal acts are
-only the expression of epileptic symptoms. Sociological workers have
-attributed crime to influences which overcome the natural resistance
-of the individual, a variation from which is merely an inability of
-the person to conform to the laws of environment. Max Nordau sees
-in human failings only an abnormality which he describes as "human
-parasitism." Others look upon crime as the natural product of a modern
-social and economic system. Colajanni ascribes alcoholism, vagrancy
-and prostitution to poverty, but crime, he says, is "due to necessity
-and to the degree and kind of education received." In the light of our
-present knowledge the conclusion would appear to be warranted that
-crime is the result of constitutional defects in the form of hereditary
-tendencies and arrested mental development, educational defects, a
-deterioration of habits as shown by alcoholism, etc., accidental
-influences such as environment and poverty, pathological conditions,
-including epilepsy and insanity, and precipitating factors in the form
-of emotional disturbances.
-
-Criminality, alcoholism, poverty, prostitution and mental deficiency
-are closely correlated. A special committee appointed by the New York
-State Prison Commission has made an exceedingly interesting report[82]
-on the relation existing between mental disease and crime. Their
-investigation shows that 21.8 per cent of 608 cases at Sing Sing,
-thirty-five per cent of 459 men at Auburn, twenty-two per cent of three
-hundred men at the Massachusetts State Prison, twenty-eight per cent of
-forty-nine women at Joliet, twenty-five per cent of seventy-six women
-at Auburn, twenty-three per cent of one hundred cases at the Indiana
-State Prison and thirty per cent of 150 examined at San Quentin were
-found to be mentally defective. An average of 27.5 per cent has been
-found in the prison population as a whole. Thirty-one and four-tenths
-per cent of the inmates of reformatories, training schools, workhouses
-and penitentiaries were found to be feebleminded. From twenty-seven
-to twenty-nine per cent of the inmates of penal and correctional
-institutions of the country were said to be defective. About thirty
-per cent of the population of the penal institutions for women in New
-York were found to be feebleminded. A study of 502 selected cases at
-the Psychopathic Laboratory of the Police Department of New York City
-in 1917 showed that fifty-eight per cent were suffering from either
-nervous or mental abnormalities. Of one thousand offenders examined
-by the medical service of the Boston Municipal Court twenty-three per
-cent were feebleminded, 10.4 per cent, psychopathic, 3.17 per cent,
-epileptic and nine per cent, mentally diseased and deteriorated;
-45.6 per cent in all showed abnormal mental conditions. It has been
-shown that one of the most important causes of recidivism is mental
-deficiency. The importance of this observation may be illustrated by
-the fact that of 133,047 persons admitted to the penal and correctional
-institutions of New York state sixty per cent had served previous
-terms. Of 25,820 persons received at institutions in Massachusetts
-during one year, 57.4 per cent were recidivits. Justice Roads is
-responsible for the statement that of 180,000 convictions in England in
-one year more than ten thousand represented persons convicted upwards
-of twenty times previously.
-
-The mental condition of the cases committed to the Matteawan State
-Hospital is of great importance in a consideration of the relation
-of crime to the psychoses. Of 2,595 cases admitted between 1875
-and 1907 heredity or congenital defects were shown as etiological
-factors in eight per cent of the total number. Of 793 admissions
-in which more definite and reliable information was available,
-hereditary factors were noted in either the paternal or maternal
-branches of the family or both in thirty-five per cent of the cases.
-In addition to this, heredity was found in collateral branches in
-sixteen per cent. Heredity of some kind was thus shown in 51.3 per
-cent of the whole number studied. Of 3,247 admissions, 46.9 per
-cent were noted as being intemperate in their habits. An analysis
-of 576 unconvicted cases in 1912[83] showed that 41.4 per cent were
-diagnosed as dementia praecox, 21.1 per cent as alcoholic psychoses,
-6.9 per cent as paranoid conditions, 4.1 per cent as epileptic
-psychoses, 7.1 per cent as imbecility with excitements, 2.9 per cent
-as manic-depressive psychoses, 2.4 per cent as general paresis,
-3.1 per cent as undifferentiated depressions, 6.7 per cent as
-constitutional inferiority and 2.2 per cent as not insane. An analysis
-of 925 cases committed as insane and charged with criminal offenses
-attributable to their mental condition shows the more common crimes
-as follows:—assault (all forms), 26.2 per cent, burglary, 7.8, grand
-larceny, 8.2, petit larceny, 1, manslaughter, 1.4, murder, 18.9,
-homicide (total), 22.4, rape, 3.2, and vagrancy, 4.2 per cent.
-
-Nolan[84] has made an analysis of 646 first admissions to Matteawan
-during a period of six years (1912 to 1918). Forty-eight per cent of
-these were found to have been born in foreign countries. A striking
-observation was the large proportion of male cases born in Italy (10.8
-per cent) and the female cases born in Ireland (11.7 per cent). Of
-the various races represented it was noted that the African, which
-was only responsible for 3.9 per cent of the admissions to civil
-hospitals, constituted 7.4 per cent of the Matteawan admissions. The
-races having the largest representation were the Irish (18.7 per cent),
-the Italian (12.4 per cent) and the Hebrew (10.8 per cent). The mixed
-races constituted 11.3 per cent of the admissions as compared with
-twenty-three per cent of the cases reported from civil institutions.
-Among the male cases 11.4 per cent were charged with disorderly conduct
-and 26.47 per cent with vagrancy. Of the women, eighteen per cent were
-charged with disorderly conduct, 16.4 with public intoxication and 39.8
-per cent with vagrancy and prostitution. These three groups represent
-74.2 per cent of all of the female cases admitted. Of the 646 criminal
-acts causing commitment, 34.1 per cent were classified from a legal
-point of view as felonies and 65.9 per cent as misdemeanors. Only 5.3
-per cent were charged with murder, manslaughter, etc. Of the various
-psychoses represented by these cases 26.9 per cent were diagnosed as
-dementia praecox, seventeen per cent as alcoholic psychoses, 14.7
-per cent as constitutional psychopathic inferiority, 7.3 as mental
-deficiency, 8.3 as manic-depressive psychoses, 11.3 as general paresis,
-3.6 as senile psychoses, 2.0 as paranoia or paranoid conditions, 2.2
-as epileptic psychoses, and 1.4 per cent as not insane. The alcoholic,
-constitutionally inferior and mentally defective group constituted
-thirty-eight per cent of the total. Of the 165 cases diagnosed as
-dementia praecox it is interesting to note that eleven were charged
-with homicide, ten with assault in the first degree, fifteen with
-burglary, thirteen with petit larceny, fourteen with disorderly
-conduct, and sixty-six with vagrancy or prostitution. Of the
-seventy-four cases of general paresis thirteen were charged with petit
-larceny, eleven with disorderly conduct, and twenty-nine with vagrancy
-or prostitution. The homicides and assaults were committed principally
-by the alcoholic, dementia praecox, constitutionally inferior and the
-defective cases. The burglaries and larcenies were committed largely by
-patients diagnosed as suffering from general paresis, dementia praecox
-and constitutional psychopathic inferiority.
-
-The type of cases received at an institution exclusively for insane
-convicts is naturally quite different, as shown by the admissions to
-the Dannemora State Hospital in New York. Of 185 admissions covering a
-period of three years the principal psychoses represented were dementia
-praecox, forty-one per cent, constitutional psychopathic inferiority,
-nineteen per cent, manic-depressive psychoses, eight, mental
-deficiency, nine, alcoholic psychoses, five, paranoid conditions, four
-per cent, etc.
-
-Experience has shown that the defective criminal classes are not
-suitable cases for either penal institutions or hospitals for the
-insane. They are unable to adapt themselves to prison discipline
-or hospital routine and prefer to associate only with persons of
-their own kind who are given to foolish boasting of their crimes as
-their least harmful diversion. They are entirely unappreciative of
-any efforts made on their behalf to improve their condition or fit
-them in any way for the requirements of society. They are strongly
-inclined to unprovoked cruelty to others. Often they manifest an
-apparent interest in religious services, thinking it may lead to
-some preferment, but not for any moral reason. They are notoriously
-untruthful, unreliable and exhibit a low cunning which often deceives
-those not familiar with handling individuals of that type. Curiously
-enough they are exceedingly critical of others and quick to notice
-their shortcomings. Sexual perversions and immoral conduct are only
-too common. Prostitution, as has already been shown, is one of the
-most common failings of the female delinquent. An interesting but
-superficial knowledge of legal matters is noted very frequently and
-paraded with a remarkable degree of egotism which is difficult to
-understand. It is comparatively an infrequent occurrence for a prisoner
-to admit that he is guilty of the crime of which he has already been
-convicted by a court. Only a few years since, a prisoner at Sing
-Sing wrote the Governor of New York suggesting that his release was
-indicated as a moral procedure for the good of the institution, as
-he was convinced from information obtained from others that he was
-the only guilty man in the establishment. The habitual criminal takes
-little, if any, interest in his own relatives or family except when
-he is in confinement, and feels no home ties. There is a curious lack
-of appreciation for the gravity of his own offense and he always
-complains of a "frame up" and asserts that he has not had a square
-deal. Homicides even are always explained in an attempt to show that
-they were justifiable or unavoidable. The most vicious of assaults
-are often committed on their fellow prisoners without any provocation
-of consequence. Experience shows that as a rule they are incapable of
-any sustained effort and accomplish little or nothing when left to
-themselves. Tendencies to crime show not only a marked suggestibility
-but a degree of impulsiveness and a lack of self control which is
-highly significant.
-
-Another type of institution for this special group of cases is strongly
-indicated. They should be held under an indeterminate sentence and in
-some instances committed for life. As a result of hereditary defects,
-arrested mental development, ignorance and vicious tendencies this
-class furnishes the prisons with our most dangerous criminals. They
-should receive separate care, with an opportunity for a special
-education adapted to their individual needs. The defective classes
-have for centuries been held criminally responsible and have filled our
-prisons with incorrigibles and recidivists. Modern civilization should
-place at our disposal some means for remedying this situation other
-than mere punishment for the possession of an intellectual endowment
-for which these individuals are in no way responsible. The ends of
-justice can be served and the protection of the public assured at the
-same time by a form of medical treatment for the defective delinquent
-which will look forward to his ultimate restoration to society rather
-than a form of punishment which accomplishes nothing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE PSYCHIATRY OF THE WAR
-
-
-The psychiatry of the late war is of unusual interest from various
-points of view. Never before have mental diseases or defects been
-looked upon as military problems worthy of any special attention either
-in times of war or peace. It is true that the United States government
-has maintained a hospital for the treatment of such conditions at
-Washington for many years, and medical officers from the army and navy
-have been sent to that institution for instruction, from time to time.
-No adequate provision has been made, however, in previous wars for
-the special care or observation of the psychoses or neuroses, nor has
-any great consideration been given to a determination of the mental
-status of recruits. It is, of course, equally true that modern military
-methods have brought about different conditions and given rise to new
-problems. In 1917 and 1918 definite psychiatric organizations were
-established by the United States army for the first time. The services
-of specialists in mental diseases were utilized extensively and they
-were ultimately assigned to practically all of the large hospitals.
-Division consultants were soon found necessary and the active
-cooperation of practically every psychiatrist available in the country
-was required before the armistice was declared.
-
-This was directly due to the fact that for the first time in history
-one of the most important problems, with which the military authorities
-had to deal, was the question of mental diseases and defects. For
-purposes of comparison and the intelligent consideration of this
-important subject, the incidence of mental diseases in the army in
-the past is of considerable interest. The rate in enlisted men, as
-shown by the Surgeon General's reports, varied from 1.08 per thousand
-in 1898 to 1.73 in 1911, and was 2.72 in 1900, the only year in which
-it went above two. In 1912, 1913, 1914 and 1915, when defective mental
-development, constitutional psychopathic states, hypochondriasis and
-nostalgia were included in the reports the rates per thousand were
-respectively 3.45, 3.44, 4.18 and 3.82. The frequency of psychoses was
-higher in the men serving in the Philippines—2.07 in 1898, 2.79 in
-1900, 1.45 in 1905 and 2.01 in 1911.
-
-The ratio of mental diseases in the American and English armies has
-been higher for many years than in the French, Italian, Russian and
-German forces. Universal military service is supposed to have been the
-factor producing this difference, the larger establishments naturally
-more nearly representing the normal insanity rate of the country.
-From May 1, 1861, to June 30, 1866, in other words, during the civil
-war period, there were 198,849 discharges for disability from the
-United States army.[85] Of this number 819 men were discharged on
-account of insanity, 3,872 for epilepsy and 2,838 for various forms
-of "paralysis." Based on the mean annual strength of the army, this
-represented a rate of .34 per thousand for insanity, 1.6 for epilepsy
-and 1.17 for paralysis. Based on the total number of discharges alone,
-it represented a rate of 6.0 per thousand for insanity, 20.8 for
-paralysis, and 28.3 for epilepsy or a rate for the three combined of
-55.1 per thousand. These statistics are for white soldiers only. The
-rate for colored troops, based on the total discharges, was seven per
-thousand for insanity, 14.3 for paralysis and thirty-six for epilepsy.
-No information whatever is available as to what the term paralysis
-includes in these reports. The rate per thousand in the United States
-army, as has been shown, increased from approximately one in 1898 to
-three in 1901, during the Spanish war, Philippine insurrection, etc.,
-and dropped back to one again in 1903. Weygandt,[86] who made a study
-of war neuroses and psychoses in 1904, gives the insanity rate per
-thousand of the German army during the Franco-Prussian war as .54, the
-American troops during the Spanish war as 2.7, the British army during
-the Boer war as 2.6, the Russian army during the Japanese war as 2.0,
-and the Bulgarian troops during the Balkan campaign .33. The German
-expeditionary corps engaged in Southwestern Africa reported 4.95 per
-thousand and a rate of 8.28 including epilepsy and hysteria.
-
-The first attempt ever made to provide special care for mental diseases
-in the field was during the Russo-Japanese war. A hospital set aside
-for this purpose by the Russian army at Harbin treated between fifteen
-hundred and two thousand men in 1905 and 1906. It has, however, never
-been claimed that all of the mental cases reached that place. Of 1,310
-admissions the following conditions were represented[87]:—epileptic
-psychoses, 22.5 per cent; alcoholic forms, 19.5 per cent; dementia
-praecox, ten per cent; confused states, nine per cent; hysterical
-psychoses, 7.7 per cent; general paresis, 5.6 per cent; toxic
-conditions, 4.8 per cent; manic-depressive psychoses, four per cent;
-degenerative types, 3.5 per cent; traumatic psychoses, 3.2 per cent;
-and organic brain diseases, 2.9 per cent. It is interesting to note
-that Steida, who analyzed the statistics of the Russo-Japanese war in
-1906, reached the conclusion that a psychic trauma alone was not a
-sufficient cause for the development of a neurosis. He attached an
-equal importance to prolonged physical exertion, deprivation, loss of
-sleep, hunger and thirst, etc. The most common disturbances following
-battles were found to be hysterical excitements and confused states.
-
-As soon as the examination of men for military service was undertaken
-in this country in 1917 it became apparent that one of the most
-frequent causes of rejection was either mental disease or deficiency.
-The second report of the Provost Marshal General to the Secretary of
-War in 1919[88] showed that of all rejections during the first year of
-mobilization, twenty-two per cent were due to physical defects which
-would interfere with duty (defects in bones, and joints, flat foot,
-hernia, etc.), fifteen per cent were on account of imperfections of the
-sense organs, thirteen per cent were for defects in the cardiovascular
-system and about twelve per cent were due to nervous or mental
-diseases. The inspection at camps following the physical examination
-of the first million men mobilized resulted in a rejection of nine
-per cent on account of nervous or mental diseases. Of all causes
-for rejections from the army up to February 1, 1919, according to
-Bailey,[89] mental and nervous diseases ranked fourth numerically. The
-"neuropsychiatric" causes were:—psychoses, eleven per cent; neuroses,
-fifteen per cent; epilepsy, nine per cent; organic nervous diseases or
-injuries, eighteen per cent; mental defects, thirty-two per cent, and
-constitutional psychopathic states, nine per cent; a total of 67,417
-cases.
-
-In the organization of our military forces in 1917, when this country
-entered the war, every effort was made to take advantage of the
-experience of others. Of the men returned to Canada from European
-battlefields on account of disability, the nervous and mental cases
-contributed ten per cent of the total at that time, as was shown by
-Farrar.[90] These were distributed as follows:—neurotic reactions,
-fifty-eight per cent; mental disease and defect, sixteen per cent; head
-injuries, fourteen per cent; epilepsy and epileptoid conditions, eight
-per cent; and organic diseases of the central nervous system, four per
-cent. The first group mentioned consisted of neuroses in general and
-included the so-called cases of "shell shock," which brings us to one
-of the most interesting problems of the war. Dean A. Worcester, in a
-recent letter to the editor of _Science_, has raised the question as
-to whether this is a new disease. He calls attention to the following
-reference by Herodotus to the Battle of Marathon which occurred in the
-year 490 B.C.:—"The following prodigy occurred there: An Athenian,
-Epizelius, son of Capliagoras, while fighting in the medley, and
-behaving valiantly, was deprived of sight, though wounded in no part of
-his body, nor struck from a distance; and he continued to be blind from
-that time for the remainder of his life. I have heard that he used to
-give the following account of his loss. He thought that a large, heavy
-armed man stood before him, whose beard shaded the whole of his shield;
-that this specter passed by him, and killed the man that stood by his
-side. Such is the account I have been informed Epizelius used to give."
-
-The nature and cause of shell shock has been the subject of much
-controversy. In 1875 Ericksen called attention to the effect of intense
-emotional shock on the nervous system. This he explained as "dependent
-on molecular changes in the cord itself." Oppenheim's monograph in 1899
-was responsible for the general use of the term "traumatic neurosis."
-His conception of these conditions was not accepted by Charcot, who
-at the time insisted that they belonged to the domain of hysteria,
-and were due solely to psychic traumas. Oppenheim's[91] observation
-of cases during the first year of the war confirmed his previous
-views. He expressed the opinion in 1915 that "in absolutely healthy
-and mentally normal individuals, without any trace of hereditary
-taint, war trauma may cause psychoses or neuroses. The causal injury
-may be of an objective, psychic or mixed nature. Violent detonations
-illustrate the mixed type. Their effect upon the nerve of hearing
-is certainly physical, but the psychic effect—terror—is also an
-important element in the resulting condition. The enormous air
-pressure exerted by the close passage of these missiles is another
-influential factor. An element that tends to complicate etiology is
-the frequent long duration of the exciting causes (prolonged and
-continuous artillery fire, a series of injuries received at brief
-intervals, exhaustion from various causes, lack of sleep, insufficient
-nourishment, extreme heat or cold, etc.)." He admits that the symptoms
-indicate a combination of neurasthenic and hysterical complexes which
-may be explained on a psychogenic basis, but maintains that the war
-has demonstrated them to be of a different nature. An external shock
-causes "a functional disturbance of the delicate mechanism of the
-psychic centers shown in 1, faulty distribution of motor impulses, 2,
-hypo-innervation, 3, hyper-innervation, causing tremors, tonic and
-clonic spasms, etc., instead of single muscle actions." He admits that
-a hysterical temperament may be an important factor. Max Nonne[92] in
-1915 called attention to the fact that conditions combining symptoms
-of hysteria, neurasthenia and hypochondriasis plus vasomotor changes
-may occur without any history of injury and should not be called
-traumatic neuroses for that reason. He felt that the sudden recoveries
-occurring so frequently strongly discredited any theories suggesting
-an anatomical basis. He expressed the opinion that the most common
-cause was the explosion of hand grenades and that the main factor
-involved was an emotional disturbance. Binswanger[93] was of the
-opinion that mechanical injuries to the nervous system were responsible
-for the clinical pictures in war hysterias. He found that in a few
-cases only was there a history of predisposition, and maintained
-that in pre-war conditions hysteria was the result of a combination
-of psychic traumas with physical disturbances. Exciting causes were
-"over-exertion, irregular and insufficient nutrition, loss of sleep
-and high mental tension." He concludes that "The theory of a psychic
-mechanism as the origin of these motor and sensory symptoms is not
-demonstrable." "War neurology has demonstrated that emotional shock, in
-conjunction with other injuries, may cause a symptom complex identical
-in all its details with the well known clinical picture of hysteria."
-Wolfsohn,[94] from a study of one hundred psychoneuroses and one
-hundred cases of physical injury received on the firing line, reached
-the conclusion that war neuroses are very rarely associated with
-external wounds. The vast majority of cases studied had a neuropathic
-or psychopathic taint, as shown in the family history in fourteen
-per cent of the total. A previous neuropathic constitution in the
-patient was found in seventy-two per cent. "A gradual psychic shock
-from long-continued fear, together with the sudden change from quiet,
-peaceful environment to the extraordinary stress and strain of trench
-fighting, is the chief predisposing cause of war psychoneurosis in
-soldiers with neuropathic predisposition.... Wounded soldiers do not
-suffer from war neuroses except in rare instances."
-
-When the United States entered the war, Major, afterwards Colonel,
-Thomas W. Salmon[95] of the United States army made an exhaustive
-study of "The Care and Treatment of Mental Diseases and War Neuroses
-("Shell Shock") in the British Army." At that time one-seventh of
-all discharges for disability from the British forces were due to
-mental and nervous disorders. As a matter of fact, they accounted for
-one-third of all discharges for actual diseases (eliminating wounds).
-England with the advantage of three years of experience had presumably
-completed her organization to its highest efficiency. One and one-tenth
-per cent of the cases in the military hospitals were suffering from
-mental diseases. The percentage represented by the expeditionary forces
-was 1.3. About six thousand "shell shock" cases were being admitted
-annually to the English hospitals. Col. Salmon estimated the admission
-rate at two per thousand in the troops at home and four per thousand
-in the expeditionary forces. The civilian rate during the same period
-was about one to one thousand of the population. The confusion which
-existed early in the war was shown by the fact that ten per cent
-of the cases sent to the Red Cross Military Hospital at Maghull as
-war neuroses turned out to be insane and twenty per cent of those
-admitted as mental cases at the Royal Victoria Hospital at Netley were
-subsequently found to be suffering from neuroses. The first conclusion
-reached by Col. Salmon was that "contrary to popular belief and to some
-medical reports published early in the war, no new clinical types of
-mental disease have been seen in soldiers. There are no war psychoses."
-He found that of the cases being admitted to the hospitals for mental
-diseases about eighteen per cent were mental defectives, two per cent
-syphilitic psychoses, twenty per cent manic-depressive insanity,
-fourteen per cent dementia praecox, and seven per cent epilepsy.
-Statistics at that time were not available on purely psychopathic
-conditions, owing to the classification used.
-
-In discussing the etiology of shell shock Col. Salmon divides those
-conditions into four groups—1. Cases in which death is caused by
-exploding shells or mines without external signs of injury; 2. Those
-in which severe neurological symptoms follow burial or concussion by
-explosions, with characteristic syndromes suggesting the operation
-of mechanical factors; 3. Cases in which there may or may not be
-damage to the central nervous system, but showing neuroses similar
-to those of civil life—"In this group of cases, in which there is
-possibility but no proof of damage to the central nervous system, the
-symptoms present which might be attributable to such damage are quite
-overshadowed by those characteristic of the neuroses;" and 4. Cases in
-which even the slightest damage to the central nervous system from the
-direct effect of explosions is exceedingly improbable. He also found
-that hundreds of men who have not been exposed to battle conditions
-at all develop symptoms almost identical with those described as
-"shell shock," many occurring in the non-expeditionary forces. The
-psychogenic factors involved are very well summarized by Col. Salmon
-in the following words:—"The psychological basis of the war neuroses
-(like that of the neuroses in civil life) is an elaboration, with
-endless variations, of one central theme: escape from an intolerable
-situation in real life to one made tolerable by the neurosis. The
-conditions which may make intolerable the situation in which a soldier
-finds himself hardly need stating. Not only fear, which exists at some
-time in nearly all soldiers and in many is constantly present, but
-horror, revulsion against the ghastly duties which must be sometimes
-performed, intense longing for home, particularly in married men,
-emotional situations resulting from the interplay of personal conflicts
-and military conditions, all play their part in making an escape of
-some sort mandatory. Death provides a means which cannot be sought
-consciously. Flight or desertion is rendered impossible by ideals of
-duty, patriotism and honor, by the reactions acquired by training or
-imposed by discipline and by herd reactions. Malingering is a military
-crime and is not at the disposal of those governed by higher ethical
-conceptions. Nevertheless, the conflict between a simple and direct
-expression in flight of the instinct of self-preservation and such
-factors demands some sort of compromise. Wounds solve the problem most
-happily for many men and the mild exhilaration so often seen among
-the wounded has a sound psychological basis. Others with a sufficient
-adaptability find a means of adjustment. The neurosis provides a means
-of escape so convenient that the real source of wonder is not that it
-should play such an important part in military life but that so many
-men should find a satisfactory adjustment without its intervention. The
-constitutionally neurotic, having most readily at their disposal the
-mechanism of functional nervous diseases, employ it most frequently.
-They constitute, therefore, a large proportion of all cases but
-a very striking fact in the present war is the number of men of
-apparently normal make-up who develop war neuroses in the face of the
-unprecedentedly terrible conditions to which they are exposed."
-
-The symptomatology has been briefly summarized by Col. Salmon in a way
-which cannot be improved upon:—"Most of them can be summed up in the
-statement that the soldier loses a function that either is necessary
-to continued military service or prevents his successful adaptation to
-war. The symptoms are found in widely separated fields. Disturbances of
-psychic functions include delirium, confusion, amnesia, hallucinations,
-terrifying battle dreams, anxiety states. The disturbances of
-involuntary functions include functional heart disorders, low blood
-pressure, vomiting and diarrhea, enuresis, retention or polyuria,
-dyspnoea, sweating. Disturbances of voluntary muscular functions
-include paralyses, tics, tremors, gait disturbances, contractures and
-convulsive movements. Special senses may be affected producing pains
-and anesthesias, mutism, deafness, hyperacusis, blindness and disorders
-of speech. It is highly significant that, in this unprecedented
-prevalence of functional nervous diseases among soldiers, no symptoms
-unfamiliar to those who see the neuroses in civil life present
-themselves."
-
-An analysis of the 170,000 cases discharged for disability in England
-showed that twenty per cent were due to war neuroses. In his second
-Lettsomian lecture Mott[96] called attention to the interesting
-similarity between shell shock following concussion and burial, and
-the symptoms resulting from an acute carbon monoxide poisoning. This
-was, of course, a very possible complication in trench warfare.
-The headache, ringing in the ears, blurred and indistinct vision,
-hallucinations of sight, or actual blindness, giddiness, yawning,
-weariness, vomiting, cold sensations, palpitation, sense of oppression
-on the chest, etc., so common in gas poisoning are often followed,
-when consciousness is regained, by confusion and loss of memory, with
-retrograde amnesia. Tremors and loss of speech are also frequently
-noted. Mott reached the conclusion that shell shock, in some cases
-at least, was due to gas poisoning. In his third Lettsomian lecture
-he discusses the symptomatology of shell shock. In some instances
-there was a partial loss of consciousness, characterized by dazed
-states somewhat similar to those of epilepsy. Under speech defects he
-includes mutism, aphonia, stammering, stuttering and verbal repetition.
-Headache in the occipital region was found to be a very common symptom.
-Vasomotor conditions were palpitation, breathlessness, pericardial
-pain, rapid weak pulse, low blood pressure, cold extremities, low
-temperature, etc. Anesthesia and hyperesthesia or loss of pain
-sense also occurred, and deafness was often observed. Smoky vision,
-photophobia and functional blindness were frequent eye symptoms.
-Tremors, tics, choreiform movements, functional paralysis and gait
-disturbances are also mentioned by Mott. In the Chadwick lecture he
-later called attention to the presence of insomnia and terrifying
-dreams in practically all cases of true shell shock.
-
-In 1917 Mott[97] reported the examination of the brains from two
-cases of pure shell shock. They showed a congestion of the meninges,
-scattered subpial hemorrhages, and congested vessels in the internal
-capsule, pons and medulla. In one case there was an extravasation of
-blood into the substance of the lower surface of the orbital lobe. He
-spoke also of a general chromatolysis in the ganglion cells. Eder[98]
-in 1917 advanced the theory that the symptoms of neuroses are the
-result of mental conflicts and that the mechanisms involved are those
-attributed by Freud to hysteria. As a result of an analysis of one
-hundred cases he reached the conclusion that mechanical shock, gas
-poisoning and other physical traumas were not factors in the production
-of these conditions. His cases occurred in persons free from hereditary
-or personal psychoneurotic predisposition. Chavigny in a discussion
-of the mental diseases in the French army asserted that psychoses and
-neuroses were practically unknown until trench warfare began and the
-use of heavy artillery became common. From this moment psychiatric
-units became necessities. Ballet and de Fursac[99] were very firmly
-of the opinion that shell shock was due to purely emotional reactions
-in predisposed individuals. "If disturbances from explosion and
-from emotional shock, existing with or without traumatism, produce
-identical results, it is evident that they have a common factor and
-this common factor can be only the emotion itself. Disturbance from
-explosion without external injury presupposes an emotional state, and
-it is from this state that it derives its causal efficacy; whatever
-the etiological complex found as the cause of a condition of shock,
-whether the explosion of a shell, bomb or mine, the sight of the dead,
-burial in a trench, wound from an explosion or a missile, there is only
-one factor of importance, the emotional factor, which is essentially
-responsible for all the neuropsychic disorders that together make up
-the shock syndrome."
-
-In 1915 Birnbaum summarized seventy-two articles written on war
-psychoneuroses in the German army up to the middle of March of that
-year. On analyzing this study Hoch reached the conclusion that the rate
-of psychoses was only about two in ten thousand, which would appear to
-be entirely too low. Birnbaum compared the statistics of various
-observers showing the frequency of psychoses during the first year of
-the war as follows:—"Psychopathic constitution, hysteria, traumatic
-neuroses, etc., Bonhöffer, fifty-four per cent; Meyer, 37.5 per
-cent; and Hahn forty-three per cent. Alcoholism, acute and chronic,
-Bonhöffer, ten per cent; Meyer, 21.5 per cent; and Hahn, twenty-one
-per cent. Dementia praecox, Bonhöffer, seven per cent; Meyer, 7.5 per
-cent; and Hahn, thirteen per cent. Epilepsy, Bonhöffer, fourteen per
-cent; Meyer, 11.5 per cent; and Hahn, eight per cent. Manic-depressive
-insanity, Bonhöffer, three per cent; Meyer, four per cent; and Hahn,
-two per cent. General paralysis, Bonhöffer, six per cent; Meyer, 3.5
-per cent; and Hahn, three per cent." In discussing these findings Hoch
-says:—"It is clear from this table that psychopathic constitutions,
-various psychogenic reactions, hysterical and anxiety states, also
-exhaustive conditions—all of which are included in the first
-group—are strikingly frequent; whereas the more serious constitutional
-disorders, such as manic-depressive insanity, dementia praecox and
-epilepsy are much rarer." Both Birnbaum and Bonhöffer expressed
-surprise at the infrequency of manic-depressive conditions. Wollenberg
-found that the individuals who broke down during mobilization, and who
-had the least resistance, developed manic-depressive insanity, paranoid
-schizophrenias, episodic psychopathic excitements and occasional
-clouded states. The cases appearing at the front, on the other hand,
-were largely hysterias, anxiety states and exhaustive conditions.
-Birnbaum described psychoses similar to those reported by Awtokratow
-in the Russo-Japanese war and characterized by great weariness with
-a tendency to weeping, disturbed sleep and hallucinations related
-directly to unpleasant war experiences to which the patients had been
-subjected. He attributed these to exhaustion. Lust[100] quotes Mörchen
-as finding only five cases of war neuroses in forty thousand prisoners
-at Darmstadt and found very few cases in an additional twenty thousand
-which he investigated himself.
-
-Westphal in 1915 expressed the opinion that there were neither war
-psychoses nor neuroses and that these conditions did not differ in any
-way from those described in times of peace. MacCurdy,[101] who made
-an elaborate study of war neuroses in 1917, described them as being
-either anxiety conditions or simple conversion hysterias. He looked
-upon fatigue as being a very important factor in the development of
-a neurosis, with either a physical accident or a mental shock as the
-precipitating cause. He defines war neuroses as "Those functional
-nervous conditions arising in soldiers which are immediately determined
-by modern warfare and have a symptomatology whose content is directly
-related to war." MacCurdy found that concussion could be considered as
-a possible factor in less than one-fourth of the cases he observed.
-He refers to minute cerebral and retinal hemorrhages with blood in
-the cerebrospinal fluid as an evidence that concussion is a cause in
-some cases. Curschmann, Meyers, Buzzard, Farrar and various others
-have noticed that the gross hysterical manifestations were extremely
-rare in officers. After an extended discussion of the etiology of
-the war neuroses, Farrar in 1918 expressed as one of his conclusions
-the opinion that "The drift of opinion is unmistakable towards the
-psychogenic basis of war neuroses of all types, including shell shock.
-Even in the initial unconsciousness or twilight state of some duration
-there is evidence that the psychogenic element may have as great if
-not a greater rôle than the item of mechanical shock, although this is
-also important."
-
-Hartung[102] in 1918 reported a study of 780 cases of war neuroses
-treated by him at Thal. About ninety-eight per cent were cured by
-psychic and mechanical treatments. One hundred and sixty-two cases
-showed hysterical paralysis, the lower limbs being affected twice as
-often as the upper. Tremors of the head or upper limbs were present
-in twenty-eight per cent, hysterical convulsions in eight per cent,
-speech disturbances in five per cent, hearing disorders in one per
-cent, cardiac and respiratory symptoms in 1.5 per cent, neuroses of the
-digestive system in 1.5 per cent, and bladder disturbances in 1.5 per
-cent of the cases. Neurasthenia "in the strictest sense of the word"
-was present in twenty per cent. Hurst[103] and others have spoken of
-endocrine disturbances in war neuroses. He includes hyperadrenalism and
-hyperthyroidism due to an over-stimulation of the sympathetic nervous
-system, resulting from such emotions as anger and fear. Rapid pulse,
-enlargement of the heart, and high blood pressure were common symptoms.
-The patients in some cases showed conditions strongly suggesting
-Graves' disease. In addition to the circulatory disturbances there was
-paroxysmal sweating, the eyes were slightly prominent, sometimes with
-von Graefe's sign, and pilomotor reflexes were present.
-
-An important contribution to the discussion as to the etiology of war
-neuroses was the statement made by Major General Ireland[104] to the
-Senate Committee on Military Affairs, that of the twenty-five hundred
-cases of shell shock awaiting transportation to the United States,
-twenty-one hundred recovered within a day or two after the armistice
-was declared. He gave the incidence of mental and nervous diseases
-in the forces in camps in this country as 2.5 per thousand and ten
-per thousand overseas. Another interesting phase of shell shock was
-the surprising results which various German observers obtained by the
-so-called "Kaufmann" treatment, the sudden application of a strong
-faradic current. One of the most significant contributions to the
-psychiatric history of the war as far as this country is concerned
-is the statement made by Col. Salmon[105] that in the latter part
-of December, 1920, of the beneficiaries of the War Risk Insurance
-thirty-two per cent were suffering from general diseases; forty-one
-per cent from tuberculosis; and twenty-seven per cent from various
-neuropsychiatric disorders. "The vague idea that all these men are
-suffering from "shell shock" or other mysterious maladies developed
-under the stress of modern warfare was replaced by the realization
-that more than two-thirds of all neuropsychiatric patients have one or
-another type of insanity." Of these cases sixty-six per cent had well
-developed psychoses; nineteen per cent psychoneuroses; five per cent
-epilepsy; two per cent mental deficiency; and eight per cent organic
-nervous diseases or injuries. On December 16, 1920, there were five
-thousand five hundred cases receiving hospital treatment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-ENDOCRINOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY
-
-
-The important influence exercised by the glandular structures on the
-human organism has long been recognized. Perhaps the earliest evidence
-of this is the study of alterations due to the removal of the sexual
-glands. Eunuchoidism was described by Larrey as early as 1812 in
-his well-known account of the Egyptian campaign. In 1845 Bouchardat
-advanced the theory that pancreatic lesions were responsible for the
-development of diabetic disorders. Thomas Addison in 1855 showed the
-existence of a very definite disease process caused by pathological
-conditions in the adrenals. Mongolianism was recognized as a distinct
-entity by Langdon-Down in 1866. Gigantism was studied very thoroughly
-by von Langer in 1872. The existence of the parathyroids was unknown
-until they were described by Sandström in 1880. Weiss in 1881 showed
-that the extirpation of the thyroid sometimes caused tetany. After
-myxedema had been studied clinically by Charcot and others the fact
-that it was clearly related to disturbances of the functions of
-the thyroid gland was demonstrated by Kocher and Reverdin in 1882.
-Adipositas Dolorosa was described by Dercum as a form of dysthyroidia
-in the same year. Acromegaly was originally defined by Pierre Marie
-in 1886 and its relation to the hypophysis was pointed out by him.
-In 1886 Möbius called attention to the part played by the ductless
-glands in Basedow's disease, Grawitz in 1888 showed the significance
-of thymic hyperplasia and Paltauf in the following year described the
-"lymphato-chlorotic constitution." The pancreatic origin of diabetes
-was elaborately outlined by von Mering and Minkowski in 1889. The
-influence exerted by glandular secretions on general metabolism was
-demonstrated by Brown-Sequard in the same year. Lemoine and Launois
-in 1891 reported the existence of sclerosis of the blood and lymph
-vessels in the pancreas and Laguerse in 1893 found that the Islands of
-Langerhans were often involved in diabetes. Thyroigenic obesity was
-reported by von Hertoghe in 1896. The isolation and chemical definition
-of adrenalin by Takamine in 1901 was a decided step in advance.
-Fröhlich in 1901 suggested that obesity, infantilism of the genitalia
-and myxedematous alterations of the skin pointed to tumors of the
-hypophysis. In the same year Neumann thoroughly reviewed the subject
-of growths in the epiphysis, submitting a study of twenty-two cases.
-The various types of dwarfism were first described by von Hansemann in
-1902. Thyroplasia and myxedema were exhaustively studied by Pineles
-in 1910 and 1912. The literature on the subject of the ductless or
-so-called endocrine glands has grown enormously during the last two or
-three decades and is shown in full by Falta and Meyers.[106]
-
-The endocrine syndromes as now understood have been briefly summarized
-by Blumgarten[107] in a very graphic form as follows:—
-
-
- THYROID STIGMATA
-
- _Symptoms of So-called Hyperactivity_
-
- Exophthalmus.
- Wide palpebral slits.
- Tachycardia.
- Nervousness.
- Tremors.
- Stelwag's sign.
- Scanty and frequent menstruation.
- Emaciation.
- Periodic loss of flesh and strength.
- Mild hyperthermia.
- Increased basal metabolism.
- Lymphocytosis.
- Von Graefe's sign.
- Anginoid attacks.
- Hyperidrosis.
- Deformities of the nails.
- Dryness of the mouth.
- Excessive salivation.
- Vomiting attacks.
- Diarrhea.
- Irregular breathing.
- Eosinophilia.
- Increased coagulation time.
- Increased emotional irritability.
- Ideas of reference and persecution.
- Manic symptoms.
- Bluish-white teeth.
- High hair line.
- Hourglass contraction of the stomach.
-
-
- _Symptoms of So-called Hyposecretion_
-
- Precocious graying of the hair.
- Drowsiness.
- Anorexia.
- Small stature.
- Puffiness of the face.
- Sallow complexion.
- Scanty hair.
- Deepset eyeballs.
- Dull and listless cornea.
- Hard, brittle nails.
- Scanty eyebrows.
- Cold, bluish, moist hands.
- Tending to chilblains.
- Irregularly developed teeth which decay easily.
- Defective development.
- Dry, thick, scaly skin.
- Acrocyanosis.
- Localized transitory edema.
- Urticaria.
-
-
- _Parathyroid Stigmata_
-
- Intermittent cramps.
- Twitching of the hands.
- Tetany with associated symptoms.
-
-
- _Pituitary Stigmata_
-
- Greatly thickened nose.
- Prominence of superciliary ridges.
- Tendency to increased tuftings of terminal phalanges.
- Coarse, heavy, overhanging eyebrows.
- Protruding thick lips.
- Prominent hypertrophied lower jaw.
- Increased sugar tolerance.
- Increased interdental spaces.
- Enlarged sella tursica.
- Hypertrophied nails.
- Hypertrophied, thickened skin.
- Short, square hands.
- High carbohydrate tolerance.
- Amenorrhea.
- Visceroptosis.
-
-
- _So-called Deficiency Symptoms_
-
- Adiposity.
- Fat pads around the malleoli.
- Increased development of the mammary glands.
- Deposit of fat around the buttocks and the neck.
- Alabasterlike skin.
- Irregular menstruation.
- Subnormal temperature.
- Wide intercostal angle.
- Fatigability.
- Infantile uterus.
- Slow pulse.
- Sluggish mentality.
- Mononucleosis.
- Eosinophilia.
- Leucocytosis.
- Short stature.
- Childlike voice.
- Bitemporal headache.
- Supraorbital headache.
- Sterility.
-
-
- _Adrenal Stigmata_
-
- Aggressive type of individual.
- Increased growth of hair on body.
- Masculine type of female and vice versa.
- Prominent canine teeth.
-
-
- _So-called Deficiency Symptoms_
-
- Asthenia.
- Low blood pressure.
- Muscular pains.
- Fatigability.
- Pigmentation.
- Sergent's white line.
-
-
- _Thymus Stigmata_
-
- Very long stature.
- High palatal arch.
- Infantile epiglottis.
- Lymphocytosis.
- General glandular enlargement.
- Abnormally long thorax.
- Visceroptosis.
- Eosinophilia.
-
-
- _Gonadal Stigmata_
-
- Hermaphroditism.
- Pale, anemic skin.
- Flushes in the female.
- Scanty growth of lanugolike hair.
- Sparse eyebrows.
- Dull, lethargic mentality.
- Characteristic pyramidal pubic hair in males and flat in females.
-
-
- _Symptoms of So-called Gonadal Hyperactivity_
-
- Precocious sexual activity.
- Jolly, gay disposition.
- Marked fecundity.
- Menorrhagia or metrorhagia.
-
-
- _Symptoms of So-called Hyposecretion_
-
- Infantilism.
- Small, atrophic testes.
- Late menstruation.
- Menorrhagia.
- Dysmenorrhea.
- Infantile uterus.
- Nervous constipation.
- Deficient lateral incisors.
- Sterility.
- Absent lateral incisors.
-
-
- _Pineal Stigmata_
-
- (occur only in children)
-
- Precocious sexual and mental development.
-
-
-It will be noted that he associates manic symptoms, increased
-emotional irritability, ideas of reference and persecution with
-thyroid hyperactivity and speaks of a sluggish mentality in pituitary
-deficiency and gonadal stigmata. Blumgarten's summary of these
-conditions is very interesting: "The study of the various stigmata
-shows that many of these are present regularly in certain types of
-individuals. Consequently we may group individuals from an endocrine
-viewpoint into various types according to the prominent endocrine
-stigmata which they show. For example, the nervous, thin individual
-with tachycardia, rather prominent eyeballs, fine, delicate hair,
-suffering occasionally from gastric symptoms, suggests the thyroid
-type, as does also the clean-cut, alert individual, and the young woman
-suffering with amenorrhea and a tendency to obesity and lethargic
-mentality. On the other hand, the aggressive, energetic individual,
-with the history of an ancestry subject to vascular disease, with
-high blood pressure, with abundant, unusual distribution of hair and
-a tendency to pigmentation, suggests the adrenal type. And so does
-the tired, asthenic individual with low blood pressure and Sergent's
-white line, who may have had influenza or diphtheria and even may be
-suffering from tuberculosis. On the other hand, however, the heavily
-built individual with broad, large frame, wide intercostal angle, broad
-nose, prominent supra-orbital ridges, prominent lips, large, square
-fingers, suggests the pituitary type. These individuals are very fond
-of meats, are heavy eaters, and are constantly subject to diseases of a
-gouty nature, may have a history of syphilis, are often musical and, as
-a rule, are usually successful in their particular community."
-
-According to Kaplan[108] "such states as lack of courage, melancholy,
-suicidal tendencies, dementia praecox, precocious adolescence, and
-immature senility, sadism and masochism; all of these are possible
-manifestations in a gonadotrop individual." Garretson[109] is of the
-opinion that the "large group of patients generally misunderstood and
-frequently classed in civil life as neurasthenics, psychasthenics,
-hysterics, cyclothymics, and hypochondriacs, is now capable of an
-intelligent analysis and rational therapy, if one will concede that
-these are the victims of an endocrinic asthenia."
-
-As an evidence of the influence of the endocrine glands on psychical
-functions, Falta[110] refers to "the alteration in character that is
-almost always associated with the development of Basedow's disease;
-to the psychical irritability, the inclination to irascibility, the
-manic-euphoristic attitude of patients with Basedow's disease; to the
-apathy and lack of interest of the myxedematous; to the characteristic
-quiet mental attitude in hypophysial dystrophy, and the feeling of
-mental want of strength in those suffering with Addison's disease;
-to the depressive attitude of the tetany patient, and finally to the
-profound influence that the ripening of the sexual glands at the time
-of puberty or the loss of function of the sexual glands in castrates
-exercises on the psyche." Going into this subject more in detail Falta
-gives the following mental symptoms as associated with Basedow's
-disease: abnormal irritability, "immotivated" gaiety, hasty speech,
-rapid flow of thoughts, a suggestion of flight of ideas, changeable
-moods and terrifying dreams. He also finds an alteration in the
-personality as shown by suspiciousness, capriciousness, irritability
-and either euphoric or depressed tendencies. Möbius compares this with
-a condition of mild intoxication associated with maniacal periods
-alternating with depression. Occasional attacks of delirium with
-confusion and hallucinations terminating in coma have been described.
-Sattler, who has analyzed 150 of these cases as reported in current
-literature, classifies over seventy as cases of manic-depressive
-insanity. Boinet, Parhan and others have shown that depression with
-suicidal inclinations may follow the ingestion of large amounts
-of thyroidin. Conditions of excitement have also been reported in
-thyroidism, and, according to Falta, are not uncommon. Brunet has
-expressed the opinion that in such cases Basedow's disease acts only as
-a precipitating factor in an individual predisposed to a psychosis.
-
-The English Myxedema Commission found the apathy characteristic of that
-disease present in all but three of 109 cases. This condition develops
-early and may manifest itself in the form of a mild mental dulness.
-Intellectual activities are often markedly diminished and there is a
-slow, monotonous form of speech. Deterioration may be well developed
-and memory seriously impaired. The commission in its investigations
-found illusions in eighteen cases, hallucinations in sixteen and
-psychoses in sixteen. These took the form usually of a depression
-with occasional excitements. The symptoms, in some cases at least,
-disappeared after thyroid treatment was instituted.
-
-The psychic changes in cretinism have been made the subject of
-considerable study. The usual mental state is, of course, one of
-feeblemindedness. Perception has been shown to be disturbed, memory is
-impaired and there is a marked emotional deterioration and instability.
-
-In the parathyroid form of tetany von Frankl-Hochwart found depressions
-and confused states with hallucinations. Depressions were reported by
-him in fourteen of thirty-seven cases examined. Excitements were also
-noted in some instances. Falta refers to "a characteristic apathy, a
-want of initiative, and a slowing of speech" in acromegaly. In rare
-cases he has also noted mental exaltation. Oppenheim (1914) has called
-attention to cases of acromegaly presenting the picture of general
-paresis but due to an alteration of glandular functions and not
-syphilitic in origin.
-
-Falta includes the following in his description of the symptomatology
-of Addison's disease: "Almost always the disease manifests itself
-in ready fatigability, disinclination for work, and apathy; to
-these symptoms are sometimes added headaches, poor sleep, sometimes
-obstinate insomnia, psychical ill humor and depression, often too,
-abnormal irritability; further, diminution in memory, noises in
-the ears, vertigo and commonly fainting attacks, singultus, and
-rheumatoid pains in the back and in the extremities, sometimes, also
-epileptiform convulsions. Extremely stormy manifestations on the part
-of the nervous system may, especially in the later stages, make their
-appearance—violent delirium, acute confusion, convulsions, deep
-stupor, and coma."
-
-Raeder[111] has made an analysis of glandular involvements found in
-the study of one hundred cases of feeblemindedness at autopsy. He
-classifies these as 1, extreme changes—in which three or four glands
-were involved and where there were marked anomalies of growth,
-underdevelopment, disproportion of the body parts, etc.; 2, marked
-changes—in which at least two glands were involved and where there
-were distinct changes in growth and anomalous development; 3, moderate
-changes—in which one or two glands were involved; and 4, cases where
-no glandular involvement was found. He noted extreme changes in ten per
-cent of the series, marked changes in eleven per cent, moderate changes
-in fifty-three per cent and none at all in twenty-six per cent. Sixty
-per cent of these individuals showed deviation from the normal in size,
-fifty-one per cent were undersized and nine per cent were above the
-average height, while thirty-eight per cent were normal. The pituitary
-was found to be involved in forty per cent of the one hundred cases,
-the thyroid in nineteen per cent, the suprarenal in twenty-seven per
-cent, the sex glands in thirty-eight per cent, the thymus in twelve
-per cent and other glands in six per cent. He frequently found several
-involved: "Pituitary with gonads in nine cases, was the most common
-dual adenosis, though there were combinations of sex and thyroid in
-four instances, sex and suprarenal in four cases, and in three cases
-the thyroids, pituitary and gonads were affected in triple involvement.
-Furthermore, there were six cases in which the gonads were combined
-with three other glands; two included the gonads, thyroid, pituitary
-and suprarenal; two, gonads, thyroid, pituitary and thymus." Further
-investigation only can accurately determine the exact relation which
-exists between disturbance of these glands and the presence of mental
-deficiency.
-
-Attention was called some time since to the fact that the injection
-of adrenalin leads to an increase in blood pressure. This has been
-discussed by Falta, Newburgh, Nobel and others. Neubürger[112] made a
-study of thirty-nine cases, seven of which were normal, the others
-including alcoholism, neurasthenia, manic-depressive, etc., but not
-dementia praecox. A fairly well marked rise of blood pressure followed
-adrenalin injection very quickly, reaching its maximum in from six
-to twelve minutes. He found the reaction diminished or absent in
-eighty per cent of the sixty-three cases of dementia praecox which he
-examined, but does not advance the claim that this can be utilized
-for diagnostic purposes. Walter and Krumbach[113] found an increased
-pressure in sixty per cent of normal control cases and obtained similar
-reactions in dementia praecox. Schmidt, on the other hand, confirmed
-the findings of Neubürger. Emerson[114] found status lymphaticus in over
-twenty-nine per cent of his cases of dementia praecox and Davis[115]
-found the same condition in twenty-four per cent of war neuroses in
-a series of over one hundred cases. These findings, however, lack
-confirmation by other observers. Straus[116] includes as mental
-symptoms in thyroidal disbalance: sluggish mental reactions alternating
-with sparkling wit, irritability, general moodiness and depression,
-difficulty in thought with inability to concentrate, forgetfulness,
-fatigability and somnolence.
-
-Turro[117] has shown that all of the physical evidences of
-fright—pallor, dilatation of the pupils, rapid pulse, cutis anserinus,
-perspiration, etc., can be produced experimentally by the injection of
-epinephrin in certain cases. Knauer and Billigheimer[118] have called
-attention to the striking similarity between the functional changes
-to be found in disturbances of the vegetative (sympathetic) nervous
-system and certain manifestations associated with fear neuroses. They
-attribute these disturbances to congenital inferiority, toxic sources,
-emotional shock or fatigue.
-
-A uniform defective development of the physical and mental personality
-of the individual has been designated by Lasègue as infantilismus.
-As described by Di Gaspero and de Sanctis the mental status of these
-cases belongs to the domain of feeblemindedness and in some instances
-to imbecility. According to Kraepelin[119] the attention is easily
-attracted and as easily distracted. These individuals are inquisitive
-and flighty. Apprehension is defective. What they hear and see can only
-be related in a fragmentary and unreliable manner. They often learn
-readily and forget as quickly. Pende described the mental development
-as only one-third of the normal. Memory gaps are supplied by
-exaggeration and fabrication, as influenced by emotion or suggestion.
-Di Gaspero found falsification of memory in twenty per cent of
-his cases. Imagination is very active with a tendency to dreamlike
-unrealities, wonderful tales of adventure, etc. Mental processes are
-inadequate, vague and uncertain. The real and the unreal are not
-clearly differentiated. Explanations and descriptions are inaccurate
-and indefinite. Standards of value, size or time are vague. The store
-of ideas is impoverished and associations are poor. Calculations
-are slow and faulty. These persons are illogical, impractical and
-credulous. They are swayed by prejudices, catchwords and hasty
-judgment. Their range of thought is narrow and their viewpoint of life
-childish. The emotional and volitional content is immature. They are
-cheerful but lack earnestness, and are often ambitious and boastful. At
-other times they are likely to be despondent, timid, anxious, fearful
-and lacking in self-confidence. The mood is exceedingly variable. They
-are not industrious, cannot apply themselves constantly to any line of
-work, and tire easily. Their conduct is very uncertain and unreliable.
-Some have criminal tendencies. Occasionally hysterical symptoms appear.
-Evidences of an absence of physical development manifest themselves
-in all varieties of immaturity. These defects, according to Falta,
-are shown especially in the genitalia and the lymphatic apparatus,
-with a delay in the closure of the epiphysis and the retention of a
-childish physique generally. The skeletal framework shows a failure of
-development, the lower length of the body exceeds the upper slightly,
-if at all, the head is relatively large, the bones slender and the
-pelvis infantile in type. The sexual organs and the "vita sexualis"
-are those of a child. The blood shows a large lymphocyte count and a
-definite status lymphaticus is sometimes found to be present. The hairy
-development of the pubis and axillary surface is slight. The internal
-organs are normal. True infantilism, according to Falta, is not due to
-a glandular disturbance. He also maintains that the mind, while that of
-a child, is normal otherwise and shows no defects. Juvenile myxedema,
-hypophysial dystrophy and eunuchoidism, Falta would not include with
-the infantilismus group. Infantilism has been ascribed to syphilis,
-tuberculosis, alcoholism, etc., of the parents. Brissaud in 1907
-advanced the theory that it was a hypothyroid symptom. His views have
-been supported by various other writers, although not shared by either
-Falta or Kraepelin. The latter has also described mental conditions
-more or less suggesting feeblemindedness and associated with lesions of
-the hypophysis, the pineal gland, the adrenals, the sexual glands and
-the thymus.
-
-Lesions in the anterior lobe of the pituitary result in gigantism or
-acromegaly, with a childish mentality most marked in the emotional
-sphere. These persons are usually indifferent, good-natured and
-boastful, and at the same time clumsy and inactive. A diminished
-activity of the glandular portion of the hypophysis means dwarfism.
-Lesions of the posterior or "nervous" lobe may cause "dystrophia
-adiposo genitalis," the "adipositas dolorosa" of Dercum. The mental
-status in this condition Kraepelin compares to that described in
-acromegaly—apathy and indifference, with occasional restless or
-excited types. The intellectual capacity may be normal, mediocre or
-somewhat deficient.
-
-The pineal gland is spoken of as having a very definite relation to
-sexual development. Extirpation is said to lead to rapid development
-of the body, the accumulation of fat and early sexual development,—a
-condition described by Pellizzi as "makro-genitosomia praecoce."
-Schüller in fifty-one cases with pineal involvements found ten
-occurring during the first decade of life. Death usually takes
-place within a few months or years. Similar conditions result from
-hyperactivity of the adrenal cortex,—rapid development of the body,
-and particularly of the sexual organs, obesity and overgrowth of the
-hair and beard. Wiesel described as a "suprarenal genital symptom
-complex" cases of pseudo-hermaphrodism in women.
-
-Lesions of the adrenal, as studies of Addison's disease show, have,
-according to Kraepelin,[120] the following symptoms: weakness of memory,
-apathy, dulness, inactivity and inhibition of growth. He also calls
-attention to the fact that in anencephaly, hemicephaly and microcephaly
-defective development of the adrenals is very common. "Eunuchoidismus"
-and "viriginität" with mental symptoms due to defective development of
-the sex glands are also described. The physical manifestations include
-defective secondary sexual characteristics, in men in the growth of
-the beard and change of the voice, and in women in the development
-of the mammary glands, the fat deposits and the curve of the hips.
-There is a failure of sexual development and absence of menses, as
-well as defective physical growth. Eunuchoidismus may manifest itself
-in a giantism somewhat suggesting that resulting from lesions of the
-pituitary or in a dwarflike physical development. The former variety
-is characterized by an unusual height with long arms and legs. The
-forehead is receding, with a low hair line. The external genitals are
-very small and there is little pubic or axillary hair. Ossification is
-delayed. In the second form (dwarfs) the body, arms and legs are short
-and thick. The head is large and the neck short. The genitals are small
-and the penis is short and button-shaped. Hair formation is slight. The
-mental condition in either case is characterized by an intellectual
-defect with timidity, emotional instability, helplessness and weakness
-of will, sometimes with an active imagination. Kraepelin also describes
-endocrine conditions resulting from thymic lesions—thymic idiocy,
-status thymolymphaticus—and mentions the pancreatic infantilismus
-referred to by Brownell, Basedow's disease, acromegaly, pluriglandular
-insufficiency and other conditions already mentioned. Kraepelin has
-encountered only seven "dysadenoid" forms in a study of 244 cases.
-Bourneville has reported 104 cases of persistent thymus.
-
-One of the most interesting contributions to the literature of
-endocrinology is Mott's[121] suggestion that dementia praecox is due
-to a combination of degenerative changes in the cortical neurones and
-the generative organs. As a result of the study of twenty-two cases of
-dementia praecox he found that more marked pathological changes were
-found in the testes than were observed in cases of manic-depressive
-insanity, alcoholic psychoses, epilepsy or paranoia. The characteristic
-findings consisted in regressive changes in the seminal tubules and
-abnormal staining reactions in the spermatozoa. He found more evidences
-of virility in a senile individual of eighty than in any of his cases
-of dementia praecox. His theory as to the pathogenesis of the disease
-is based on the fact that the changes in the neurones are of the same
-character—a degeneration of the nuclear elements. These findings have
-not at this time been confirmed by other observers.
-
-Timme[122] has described a psychic makeup due to subinvolution of the
-thymus. "The mental picture presented by these subinvoluted thymic
-states is also of great importance, for analogous to their structural
-lack of differentiation is their psychic makeup. They remain child-like
-in their character, so that they are self-centered; simple in their
-mental processes and imitative; looking for protection and care, and
-more or less unfitted for the active struggles of life. They are
-obstinate and negativistic; if, however, an efficient compensation
-takes place, then, although the mental development may have been
-delayed, it nevertheless seems finally to reach complete maturity; and
-these individuals are among the brightest and most intelligent of their
-community." In cases of precocious involution of the thymus he finds
-the mental condition to be of chief interest. "They are precocious,
-with much initiative, are easily aroused to anger and are resentful.
-They have cruel instincts and show little inhibition. Although they
-seem far advanced for their years while still young, yet they never
-seem thoroughly to mature, and become blocked in early adolescence.
-They seem to retain their impulsive, unreasoning characteristics, brook
-no restraint and remain constantly a prey to their easily aroused
-anger." Of thyroid insufficiency he says: "Mentally, the patient is
-dull, sluggish and with little initiative. He moves slowly and thinks
-slowly, is extremely forgetful and his lethargy is occasionally
-disturbed by outbursts of anger due probably to his maladjustment
-to the more quickly moving world about him." In his summary of the
-hyperthyroid makeup, Timme says: "Both mind and body are everlastingly
-busy. And not only with present problems, but anticipatory of
-tomorrow's as well. The patient shows no rest or relaxation. His mind,
-filled with echoes of the day's troubles, prevents his falling to sleep
-until long after he retires, and he is again awake and immediately on
-the "qui vive" as soon as daylight comes." Statistics on endocrine
-conditions are unfortunately not available as yet.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE MODERN PROGRESS OF PSYCHIATRY
-
-
-The remarkable accomplishments of medical science during the last
-few decades may be looked upon as a fairly accurate index of modern
-progress in general. Nor have these advances been confined to any
-limited field. Standards of education have changed with almost
-startling rapidity. The most extended course of instruction open
-to medical students fifty or sixty years ago covered a period of
-two years. Qualifications for entrance consisted in little more
-than a demonstration of the candidate's ability to pay the required
-matriculation fee. The three year course, only recently established
-and generally recognized, was lengthened to four years during the
-latter part of the nineteenth century. The number of medical colleges
-has been materially reduced and the size of the graduating classes has
-decreased fifty per cent or more during the last twenty-five years
-as a result of the higher standards. Several of our medical schools
-admit college graduates only and two years of college work is now a
-minimum entrance requirement in institutions of the highest type.
-Very few men feel properly equipped for taking up the practice of
-medicine today until they have had an experience of at least a year in
-a general hospital. The profession is tending more and more towards
-specialization and the old-fashioned general practitioner is now at a
-considerable disadvantage. Ophthalmology has become almost an exact
-science. Gynecologists, obstetricians, pediatrists, orthopedists,
-laryngologists, neurologists and internists are looked upon as almost
-indispensable in a community of any size. All of these specialists are
-more or less dependent on the cooperation of a pathologist, who can do
-nothing without a well equipped laboratory at his disposal. Surgery has
-long been regarded as a specialty which required an extended training
-as well as years of experience.
-
-The progress of modern medical science has been almost bewildering. It
-has been a comparatively short time since the principles of antisepsis
-and asepsis were established by Lister. The plasmodium of malaria was
-described in 1880. It was not until 1882 that the tubercle bacillus was
-discovered by Koch. Diphtheria was rendered an almost harmless disease
-by the discovery of a specific antitoxin. The uncertainties relating
-to the diagnosis of typhoid fever were entirely removed when the Widal
-reaction came into general use. The Roentgen ray has revolutionized
-surgery. The diagnostic and therapeutic use of tuberculin has been of
-inestimable value to internal medicine. Schaudinn's discovery of the
-treponema pallidum in 1905 cleared up one of the greatest scientific
-mysteries of modern times. The introduction of salvarsan has added
-a new and important chapter to our history of therapeutics. The
-Wassermann reaction represents probably the most important diagnostic
-discovery of the century. The recent studies of the so-called ductless
-glands have opened up new and important fields of research which
-promise to be far-reaching in their results. Social service, unknown
-only a few years ago, is now an indispensable adjunct of the modern
-hospital organization. Training schools for nurses have become highly
-specialized educational institutions.
-
-What is to be said of the progress made in our knowledge of mental
-diseases? Certainly much has been accomplished during the last
-century. The earliest American contributor to this branch of medicine
-was Benjamin Rush (1745-1813), professor in the Medical Department
-of the University of Pennsylvania, member of the Continental
-Congress, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and one time
-physician-in-chief to the American armies. His "Medical Inquiries and
-Observations into Diseases of the Mind," which appeared in 1812 was the
-first publication of the kind in this country. It is interesting to
-note that he condemned the misuse of mechanical restraint, advocated
-hydrotherapy and recommended the appointment of instructors to
-direct the employment and amusement of patients. Incidentally he was
-the chairman of a committee appointed by the College of Physicians
-of Philadelphia to memorialize Congress and the legislature of
-Pennsylvania on the evils of alcoholism. Reference should also be made
-to the fact that he opposed capital punishment, advocated the abolition
-of slavery and objected to the study of the classics as a required
-part of the college curriculum. He even favored woman suffrage. In
-addition to his other activities this remarkable man was treasurer at
-one time of the United States Mint, vice-president of the American
-Bible Society, one of the founders of Dickinson College and associated
-for many years with Franklin in the work of the American Philosophical
-Society. Certainly he was many years in advance of his time. When
-his work on "Diseases of the Mind" appeared, the word psychiatry was
-unknown in this country. The term lunatic, which first appeared in
-the English statutes in 1320, during the reign of Edward the Second,
-was still in quite general use. The only state hospital for mental
-diseases was the one at Williamsburg, Virginia. Such institutions were
-universally known as asylums for many years.
-
-Insanity was generally discussed in the terminology of Pinel and
-Esquirol as including mania, melancholia, dementia and idiocy. Those
-not thoroughly familiar with the psychiatry of the past may not
-understand the sense in which the word dementia was employed. It was
-defined by Esquirol in the following terms: "There exists, therefore,
-a form of mental alienation which is very distinct—in which the
-disorder of the ideas, affections and determinations is characterized
-by feebleness and by the abolition, more or less marked, of all the
-sensitive, intellectual, and voluntary faculties. This is dementia." It
-was looked upon usually as a terminal state following excitements or
-depressions and in some rare instances as being primary in origin.
-
-There have been many important developments in psychiatry since the
-days of Benjamin Rush. The mania, melancholia and dementia of the
-eighteenth century have apparently gone for all time. The events of
-the last hundred years include more particularly the delimitation and
-complete differentiation of general paresis, the rise and fall of the
-paranoia concept, the description of the traumatic psychoses, the
-establishment of the alcoholic insanities as clinical entities, a study
-of the mental diseases due to endogenous and exogenous toxins, the
-recognition of the neuroses and psychoneuroses in their modern sense,
-the addition of the psychopathic personalities to our classification
-and the definition of manic-depressive insanity, dementia praecox and
-involutional melancholia. The mental states due to somatic conditions
-have been exhaustively studied and the psychoses associated with
-epilepsy and pellagra have been fully investigated. Psychology and
-psychiatry have been definitely correlated and pathological research
-placed upon a firm foundation. The psychiatric phraseology of today
-would have been practically meaningless to the students of Pinel.
-Curiously enough the word psychiatry, which goes back to nearly 1800 in
-the literature of Germany and Italy has only been used for a few years
-in this country and England. The word psychosis is of even more recent
-origin.
-
-This modern era may be said to have been ushered in by the preliminary
-studies made of general paresis by Haslam in 1798. These were
-followed by the researches of Bayle, Delaye and finally Calmeil,
-which definitely established the integrity of that disease as a
-clinical entity. Even then its specific origin was only a matter of
-conjecture. When Esmarch and Jessen suggested that general paresis
-was a syphilitic disease in 1857, their views were rejected by men as
-prominent as Charcot and Déjerine. Although paranoia is a term which
-has appeared in the literature of medicine for centuries, it has only
-had the significance now attached to it since the latter part of the
-nineteenth century. Its description was foreshadowed perhaps by the
-monomania of Esquirol and Pritchard and the partial insanity of Rush
-and others. Heinroth, Griesinger, Magnan, Lasègue, Régis, Falret,
-Mendel, Krafft-Ebing, Herz, Snell, Werner, Schüle, Ziehen, Kraepelin
-and many other well-known psychiatrists have played a part in the
-evolution of paranoia which only definitely displaced the wahnsinn,
-verrüchtheit, and various other designations of the earlier writers,
-in the neighborhood of 1890. Paranoia is a term which has only been
-infrequently used since the general acceptance of Kraepelin's paranoid
-forms of dementia praecox. Its territory has been still further invaded
-by paraphrenia, the fate of which, however, is somewhat uncertain as
-yet. The forerunners of the psychopathic personalities were the moral
-insanity of Pritchard, the insanity of degeneracy of Morel, Magnan,
-Régis, Lombroso, etc., and the "demifous et demiresponsables" of
-Grasset, Trélat and others. The introduction of the "constitutional
-inferiority" idea into the psychiatry of this country was directly
-attributable to Adolf Meyer following the work of Koch in Germany.
-After the elaborate study of alcoholism made by Magnus Huss in 1852 the
-psychoses due to that condition were described by Bonhöffer, Magnan,
-Korsakow, Kraepelin and various other writers. The psychoneuroses
-represent the developments of Brachet, who wrote on hysteria in 1847,
-Briquet, Oppenheim, Lasègue, Möbius, Charcot, Janet, Babinski, Beard,
-Kraepelin and many others. To Meyer again we are indebted for the
-first exhaustive study and classification of the traumatic psychoses.
-The description of amentia by Meynert in 1881 was of considerable
-significance. The first comprehensive study of mental disorders
-associated with the use of cocaine was made by Erlenmeyer in 1886. The
-same writer was responsible for the first elaborate investigation of
-morphinism in the year following. Circular insanity was described by
-Falret in 1851 and again as "folie à double forme" by Baillarger in
-1854. Hecker was responsible for an event of great importance in the
-history of psychiatry when he published his description of hebephrenia
-in 1871. Kahlbaum in his "Katatonia" made a contribution which was
-destined to influence the future of medicine in 1874.
-
-In the meanwhile what is to be said as to the progress of pathological
-research? The earliest contribution to psychiatry from that point of
-view was made by Morgagni in 1761, his opinions being based on the
-autopsy reports in some thirteen cases. Greding in 1790 published the
-results of autopsies in a series of thirty-seven cases. The findings
-at that time included variations in the thickness of the skull,
-adhesions and thickenings of the dura, changes in the consistency of
-the cerebrum and cerebellum, effusions into the ventricles and various
-gross defects. The early writers attached a great deal of importance
-to the pineal gland changes. These pathological conditions were so
-generally reported, that Portal in the eighteenth century went so far
-as to say that "Morbid alteration in the brain or spinal marrow has
-been so constantly observed, that I should greatly prefer to doubt the
-sufficiency of my senses, if I should not at any time discover any
-morbid change in the brain, than to believe that mental disease could
-exist without any physical disorder in this viscus, or in one or other
-of its appurtenances." Pinel spoke very discouragingly, however, of the
-results and Esquirol finally reached the conclusion that nothing really
-important had been accomplished after all. In his Charenton reports
-(1835) he expressed himself on this subject as follows:—"However
-important may have been the researches of anatomists made during our
-days into diseases which affect the mind, we may venture to repeat
-that pathological anatomy is yet silent as to the seat of madness,
-and that it has not yet demonstrated what is the precise alteration
-in the encephalon which gives rise to this disease. What shall we,
-then, think of the rash pretensions of those who assume that they can
-fix upon the diseased portion of the brain, judging merely from the
-character of the disease?" In 1836 Guislain summarized the various
-lesions found in insanity at autopsy under nine headings—congestion of
-the brain or meninges or both, serous congestion of the same, cerebral
-softening, adhesions of the membranes to each other or to the brain,
-cerebral induration, cerebral hypertrophy, and abnormalities of the
-brain or skull. The appointment of a pathologist at the Utica State
-Hospital in 1868 as a result of the remarkable interest taken in this
-subject by Dr. John P. Gray must be looked upon as one of the important
-events in the history of American psychiatry. The later developments of
-the nineteenth century included studies of general paresis, cerebral
-syphilis, arteriosclerosis, senility, epilepsy, mental deficiency,
-pellagra and various other somatic conditions. It may fairly be said,
-at least, that pathology has kept fully abreast of the progress made by
-clinical psychiatry during the nineteenth century.
-
-Notwithstanding all of these advances, the generally recognized mental
-diseases, as late as 1895, included the following types:—mania,
-melancholia, dementia, imbecility, idiocy, general paresis, chronic
-delusional insanity or paranoia and senile insanity. This was in
-substance the psychiatry of Savage, Maudsley, Clouston, Blandfield,
-Régis, Chapin, Kellogg, Spitzka, Kirchoff, Berkley and many other
-well-known writers of a comparatively recent date. A new era in the
-history of mental medicine was ushered in by Kraepelin when the sixth
-edition of his "Psychiatrie" appeared in 1899. This established
-manic-depressive insanity and dementia praecox as clinical entities.
-Kraepelin called attention to the fact that excitements and depressions
-frequently recur in the same individual, often with frequent attacks
-but with no marked tendency towards mental enfeeblement. This class of
-cases he grouped together as manic-depressive psychoses and pointed
-out certain characteristics common to the excitements and depressions
-included. He showed that certain other forms of depression marked
-by anxiety, fear, restlessness, self-accusation, marked suicidal
-tendencies, etc., were common to the involutional period of life.
-To this anxious depression the name involution melancholia has been
-applied, although Kraepelin is now somewhat in doubt as to its
-differentiation from the manic-depressive group. To certain other
-cases characterized by emotional dulness, apathy, hallucinations with
-phantastic delusions, and in some types, mannerisms, negativism,
-stereotypy, verbigeration, etc., tending sooner or later towards
-deterioration, he attached the name dementia praecox. This included the
-hebephrenia of Hecker and the katatonia of Kahlbaum.
-
-Wernicke in 1906 advanced the hypothesis that psychical symptoms may
-be attributed to disturbances of various association mechanisms. These
-interruptions were to be found in various parts of the psychical
-reflex arcs. This included the psychosensory tracts or receptive
-mechanisms, the intrapsychical tracts or elaboration mechanisms and the
-psychomotor mechanisms. Manic-depressive psychoses were looked upon as
-representing a disorder of the intrapsychic mechanism, while dementia
-praecox was considered to be an illustration of a disturbance of the
-psychomotor mechanisms. This was an exceedingly interesting but purely
-theoretical scheme for putting psychiatry on a definite anatomical and
-pathological basis.
-
-The progress made by Kraepelin, Stransky, Wernicke, Bleuler, Ziehen
-and other modern psychiaters led to renewed interest in pathological
-research. This was to a considerable extent due to the suggestion
-of Kraepelin that dementia praecox was autotoxic and endogenous in
-origin. The neurons were exhaustively studied by Alzheimer and changes
-in metabolism thoroughly investigated by Folin and many others. To
-the researches of Nissl and Alzheimer in 1904 we are largely indebted
-for an accurate knowledge of general paresis. Studies of the cortex
-in dementia praecox by Alzheimer and many others have been extremely
-interesting if not conclusive. The introduction of lumbar puncture
-by Quincke and the studies of the cerebrospinal fluid made by Widal,
-Plaut, Nonne, Mott and others were of great aid in diagnostic
-procedure. These have been supplemented by the Wassermann reaction, the
-colloidal gold test, etc. The isolation of the treponema pallidum in
-the cortex settled the question of the identity of general paresis and
-cerebral syphilis for all time.
-
-Another line of research responsible in no small measure for the
-remarkable progress of psychiatry during the last few decades was
-that instituted by Freud, Jung and others in their studies of
-psychological mechanisms. It is a rather remarkable fact that it is
-only in comparatively recent years that a study of the psychological
-processes of the normal mind has been looked upon as essential to an
-understanding of the mental reactions involved in the development of a
-psychoneurosis or psychosis. This is really the basis of Freud's work.
-
-Psychiatry may be said to be practically the only branch of medical
-science in which a study of pathological processes has not been based
-largely upon physiological and anatomical foundations. Our textbooks
-for many years have insisted that "insanity" was a disease of the
-brain but have not given much consideration to a correlation of the
-physiology with the pathology of that organ. The application of
-psychological methods to psychiatric research was largely a result
-of the studies of hysteria by Janet. This was supplemented by the
-important contribution of Breuer and Freud in 1895 calling attention
-to their theories in regard to the production of the psychoneuroses
-by psychic traumas, usually of a sexual nature. Freud's views
-were outlined more fully in his "Selected Papers on Hysteria,"
-"Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory," and his studies of the
-"Psychopathology of Everyday Life," etc. The psychological processes of
-dementia praecox and paranoia were subjected to elaborate studies by
-Freud, Jung and various other authors.
-
-The relation existing between psychology and psychiatry has been placed
-on a very practical basis by the studies of shell shock and other
-hysterical conditions so important during the recent war. Probably
-nothing will contribute more towards a recognition of the importance
-of psychiatry than the discovery made early in the war that mental
-diseases and defects were responsible for more disabilities than were
-attributable to almost any other single cause. Certainly the inactivity
-of many years has been followed by an awakening which has placed modern
-psychiatry on a dignified plane and its progress will now compare
-favorably with the accomplishments of any other branch of medicine.
-The statement is, I think, justified, that psychiatry has been
-established on a thoroughly scientific basis as the result of the work
-of comparatively few years. We have, however, reached a stage where
-careful analyses should be made of the clinical data upon which future
-progress entirely depends.
-
-A brief consideration of existing conditions should be sufficient to
-show this conclusively. Psychiatric literature is, and for many years
-has been, characterized largely by an unfortunate absence of accurate
-scientific information which would warrant the conclusions reached in
-many instances by the authors of our textbooks. We have been subjected
-to an avalanche of theories and a remarkable paucity of facts. In the
-discussion of abstract propositions where concrete evidence is not
-obtainable this is of course unavoidable. There has, however, been a
-very noticeable oversight of many facts which the wealth of clinical
-material in our hospitals has placed at our disposal. Our literature
-has been filled with too many unsubstantiated statements. There is
-no reason why many of the views entertained by various authorities
-should be matters of personal opinion or based entirely on individual
-observation. The fact that there are over two hundred thousand cases
-of mental disease in the state hospitals of this country, with an
-admission rate of sixty thousand annually, is sufficient evidence to
-justify the statement that there is no lack of material for accurate
-studies.
-
-A brief reference to some of the discrepancies shown in a consideration
-of the various psychoses will serve to illustrate the need of more
-accurate information on many of these subjects. In discussing the
-predisposing causes of mental diseases, for instance, White[123] made
-the following statement, which is perfectly correct: "An inherited
-predisposition to mental disorder is found in from 30 to 90 per cent
-of cases according to different authorities, while the average for all
-conditions has been estimated at from 60 to 70 per cent." Information
-on this subject is certainly far from being complete or satisfactory.
-The Thirty-first annual report of the State Hospital Commission shows
-that of 4,492 first admissions to the New York hospitals during the
-year ending June 30, 1919, 2,003, or 44.6 per cent, were reported as
-having a family history of insanity, nervous diseases, alcoholism or
-other neuropathic taint. As far as could be determined 55.4 per cent
-showed no evidence of heredity in their family history. The necessity
-of further information on this important subject would appear to be
-obvious. The question as to the relation between syphilis and general
-paresis may be said to have been definitely settled for all time. The
-origin of this disease has, however, been the subject of controversy
-since 1857. Paton[124] in a review of this discussion in 1905 states
-that Gudden found a history of syphilis in 35.7 per cent of his cases,
-Hirsch, in fifty-six per cent, Jolly, in sixty-nine, Mendel, in
-seventy-five, and Alzheimer, in ninety per cent. In the light of our
-present knowledge this difference of opinion and experience is quite
-interesting and illuminating.
-
-The most extravagant and misleading statements made about etiological
-factors, perhaps, are those which relate to the alcoholic psychoses.
-This was due largely to the statements of enthusiastic propagandists
-who were advocating prohibitory legislation. The facts of the matter
-are that when the use of liquor was unrestricted, the admission rate of
-alcoholic psychoses, as shown by the New York state hospital reports,
-had averaged ten per cent for a number of years (1908 to 1913).
-
-Frequent contributions have been made from time to time to the
-literature of psychiatry on the subject of dementia praecox. Voluminous
-articles have been written on its pathology, psychological mechanisms,
-etiology, etc. Many of the theories advanced are not in harmony with
-what little definite information we possess. Many of the theses on
-this subject have been based on the study of a surprisingly small
-number of cases. The statement has been made[125] that attacks either
-of a syncopal or epileptic nature are among the most important
-physical symptoms of dementia praecox, and "occur in about eighteen
-per cent of the cases." In his eighth edition Kraepelin speaks of
-convulsive attacks of various sorts in sixteen per cent of all cases
-of dementia praecox, and says that they also occur in a few cases of
-manic-depressive insanity. These findings are certainly not consistent
-with those of other observers. In a review of eight hundred cases, five
-hundred of dementia praecox, one hundred and eighty of manic-depressive
-insanity and sixty in each of the "allied to" groups, Simon[126] found
-convulsions in less than one per cent of the total number of cases in
-which epilepsy or organic conditions could be definitely excluded. In
-a study of 367 cases of dementia praecox Ullman[127] found convulsive
-manifestations in 2.7 per cent of the total. He also reported seizures
-in 1.4 per cent of 340 cases of manic-depressive insanity. Kraepelin
-formerly held that recovery was to be expected in about eight per cent
-of the cases of hebephrenic dementia praecox and thirteen per cent of
-the cases of katatonia (seventh edition). Notwithstanding this, he says
-in his eighth edition in one place:[128] "Further investigations of a
-series of observations carried on extensively and carefully for decades
-must show how far the view, which is gaining in probability for myself,
-is correct, that permanent and complete recoveries of dementia praecox,
-though they may perhaps occur, still in any event belong to the
-rarities." As Kraepelin himself suggests, the widely varying views on
-this subject are due to different conceptions as to what constitutes
-dementia praecox and what is to be considered a cure. Certainly we
-are in need of further information. On June 30, 1918, there were
-37,352 patients in the state hospitals of New York.[129] Twenty-one
-thousand nine hundred and two cases were diagnosed as dementia
-praecox. Fifty-four of these were discharged as recovered during the
-year. This represents 3.2 per cent of the 1,687 cases discharged as
-recovered, 2.8 per cent of the 1,883 cases of dementia praecox admitted
-during that period (first admissions) and .2 per cent of the 21,902
-cases of dementia praecox in the hospitals. The reports of the State
-Psychopathic Hospital at the University of Michigan show 1.19 per cent
-of recoveries in the cases of dementia praecox discharged during a
-period of eleven years. Reference is made to these discrepancies not
-in any spirit of criticism but for the purpose of pointing out the
-necessity of utilizing such facts as may be available.
-
-There is nothing new about this suggestion. It was strenuously
-advocated by Louis, the founder of one of the greatest French schools
-of medicine many years ago. This was referred to by his pupil and
-admirer, Oliver Wendell Holmes, in his farewell address to the Harvard
-Medical School in 1882 in the following words: "The 'numerical
-system,' of which Louis was the greatest advocate, if not the absolute
-originator, was an attempt to substitute series of carefully recorded
-facts, rigidly counted and closely compared, for those never-ending
-records of vague, unverifiable conclusions with which the classics of
-the healing art were overloaded. The history of practical medicine had
-been like the story of Danaides. 'Experience' had been, from time
-immemorial, pouring its flowing treasures into buckets full of holes."
-
-A determined effort has been made by the American Psychiatric
-Association to correlate the activities of the various state hospitals
-for mental diseases and utilize the great wealth of clinical material
-within the walls of these institutions for such studies as may promote
-the advancement of psychiatry. With this end in view a committee was
-appointed at the annual meeting at Niagara Falls in 1913 to formulate
-a plan for the compilation of statistical data relating to mental
-diseases. The conclusions reached by this committee are illustrated
-by the following quotation from their report in 1917: "That the
-statistical data annually compiled by the various institutions for
-the insane throughout the country should be uniform in plan and scope
-is no longer open to question. The lack of such uniformity makes it
-absolutely impossible at the present time to collect comparative
-statistics concerning mental diseases in different states and
-countries, and extremely difficult to secure comparative data relative
-to movement of patients, administration and cost of maintenance and
-additions. The importance and need of some system whereby uniformity in
-reports would be secured have been repeatedly emphasized by officers
-and members of this Association, by statisticians of the United
-States Census Bureau, by editors of psychiatric journals, and by
-administrative officials in various states. We should know accurately
-the forms of mental disease occurring in all parts of the country; we
-should know the movement of patients in every hospital for the insane;
-we should know the cost of maintenance of patients and the amounts
-spent for additions and improvements in every state hospital; we should
-be able to compile annually complete data concerning these and other
-matters, and compute rates and draw comparisons therefrom. Such data
-would serve as the basis for constructive work in raising the standard
-of care of the insane, as a guide for preventive effort, and as an aid
-to the progress of psychiatry."
-
-A permanent committee on statistics has been maintained by the
-Association since 1913. The following statistical tables were
-officially adopted some years ago and are now in general use: 1.
-General information; 2. Financial statement; 3. Movement of patients;
-4. Nativity and parentage of first admissions; 5. Citizenship of
-first admissions; 6. Psychoses of first admissions, types as well as
-principal psychoses to be designated; 7. Race of first admissions
-classified with reference to principal psychoses; 8. Age of first
-admissions classified with reference to principal psychoses; 9.
-Degree of education of first admissions classified with reference to
-principal psychoses; 10. Environment of first admissions classified
-with reference to principal psychoses; 11. Economic condition of first
-admissions classified with reference to principal psychoses; 12. Use
-of alcohol by first admissions classified with reference to principal
-psychoses; 13. Marital condition of first admissions classified with
-reference to principal psychoses; 14. Psychoses of readmissions, types
-as well as principal psychoses to be designated; 15. Discharges of
-patients classified with reference to principal psychoses and condition
-on discharge; 16. Causes of death of patients classified with reference
-to principal psychoses; 17. Age of patients at time of death classified
-with reference to principal psychoses; 18. Duration of hospital life
-of patients dying in hospital, classified with reference to principal
-psychoses.
-
-An elaborate statistical manual fully explaining the use of these
-tables has been furnished to the psychiatric hospitals of the country
-by the Association. Since this work has been undertaken the full
-cooperation of the institutions of the following states has been
-assured: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut,
-Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas,
-Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan,
-Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
-Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North
-Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South
-Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia,
-Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming, and the District of
-Columbia. Practically every state hospital in the United States is
-now officially represented in this important movement. The success of
-this undertaking has been largely due to the active cooperation of the
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene through its Bureau of Statistics.
-It should receive the enthusiastic support of all who are interested in
-the future progress of modern psychiatry.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-THE CLASSIFICATION OF MENTAL DISEASES
-
-
-When the American Psychiatric Association first approached the problem
-of formulating a definite scheme for the collection of statistical
-data relating to mental diseases it was immediately confronted with
-the necessity of adopting an official classification of psychoses
-purely for purposes of uniformity. This undertaking, which suggested
-no difficulties at the outset, led to all kinds of unexpected
-complications and embarrassments. Classifications of "insanity" are
-almost as old as the terms mania and melancholia and have been given a
-grossly exaggerated importance by the space which for so many years has
-been devoted to a consideration of this subject in textbooks. This, if
-nothing else, appears to have been demonstrated quite clearly by the
-discussions of the last few years.
-
-A review of the literature of psychiatry shows that attempts to
-classify the psychoses date back almost to the beginning of medical
-history. Hippocrates is said to have recognized three forms of mental
-disorders—mania, melancholia and dementia, although there is some
-question as to his having used those terms in accordance with their
-present significance. Celsus[130] also described three forms of
-insanity. The first, which was accompanied by febrile symptoms, he
-termed phrenitis. The second was characterized by sadness and caused by
-black bile. The third was accompanied in some cases by false images,
-while in others the whole mind or judgment was impaired. The Roman law
-divided the dementes or mad into two classes, the excited or violent
-(furiosi) and those deficient in intellect (menti capti). Aretaeus[131]
-discussed mania, melancholia and dementia, apparently regarding them
-as all manifestations of some one disease process. Melancholia, he
-said, "does not affect all the faculties of the mind; the patients are
-sad and dismayed; they are without fever." He described it as only
-an initial stage of mania. Caelius Aurelianus[132] did not regard
-melancholia as a form of insanity, "from which disease it differs in
-that the stomach chiefly suffers, while in Madness it is the head."
-Galen in his writings referred to amentia or dementia, imbecility,
-mania and melancholia.
-
-In the sixteenth century Felix Plater[133] devised the following
-classification: 1. Mentis imbecillitas: Hebetudo, tarditus, oblivio,
-imprudentia. 2. Mentis consternatio: Somnus immodicus, carus,
-lethargus, apoplexia, epilepsia, convulsio, catalepsis, ecstasis.
-3. Mentis alienatio: Stultitas, temulentia, amor, melancholia,
-hypochondriacus morbus, mania, hydrophobia, phrenitis, saltus viti.
-4. Mentis defatigatio: Vigiles, insomnia. Linnaeus[134] in 1763 called
-his fifth class of diseases Mentales, divided into three orders:
-Ideales, Imaginarii and Pathetici. Sauvages in the same year included
-Hallucinationes, Morositates and Deliria under the heading of Vesaniae
-in his "Nosologia Methodica." Vogel[134] in 1764 divided Paranoiae
-into mania, melancholia, and amentia. Cullen in 1772 included insanity
-or the Vesaniae in the neuroses, divided into four groups—Amentia,
-Melancholia, Mania and Oneirodinia. He described eight varieties of
-melancholia and three of mania. Oneirodinia included somnambulism and
-nightmare. According to Jelliffe, Plocquet described six varieties of
-delirium in his treatise on paranoia in 1772. Pinel in 1791 limited
-himself to four classes of insanity—mania, melancholia, dementia
-and idiotism. He looked upon melancholia as a delirium exclusively
-directed upon one object or series of objects and accompanied by
-sadness. Idiotism was an advanced form of dementia. Esquirol in 1838
-modified Pinel's scheme somewhat and described Lypemania, Monomania,
-Mania, Dementia and Imbecility or Idiocy. The active discussion of
-classifications of various kinds led Pritchard[135] to make the
-following interesting comment in 1822: "I cannot conceive anything
-more preposterously absurd than the attempt to classify diseases with
-all the divisions and technology of a botanical or zoological system,
-and to force what is essentially disorder and confusion to assume the
-appearance of that order and symmetry which nature displays in the
-arrangement of the organized world. An aetiological classification
-is the only mode of terminology and arrangement that can be of any
-practical advantage, and that is all that we have to consult."
-He nevertheless published a classification of his own which was
-essentially psychological in principle, although containing nothing new.
-
-The German school of this time was exceedingly prolific in the
-production of classifications, as will be shown by the following
-interesting and elaborate scheme of Flemming's[136] published in 1844:—
-
-
- FAMILY-AMENTIA—MENTAL DISEASES
-
-
- _First Group_—Infirmitas (Feeblemindedness).
-
- Varieties:
-
- A. According to etiology:
- 1. Inf. primaria, or congenita (Idiocy)
- 2. Inf. secundaria, or acquisita (Imbecility)
- a. Inf. e. morbo (Brain injuries, encephalitis, epilepsy, etc.)
- b. Inf. senilis
-
- B. According to degree:
- 1. Inf. adstricta, or partial feeblemindedness (Weakness of a single
- mental faculty)
- a. Dysmnesia (weakness of memory)
- b. Inf. adstr. surdo-mutorum (feeblemindedness of the deaf and
- dumb)
- c. Inf. adstr. coecorum (feeblemindedness of the blind)
- 2. Inf. sparsa—General (absolute or relative weakness of general
- mental faculties)
-
- _Second Group_—Vesania.
- _First Order_:—Dysthymodes or Dysthymia.
-
- Varieties:
-
- A. According to types:
- 1. Dys. transitoria or subita (acute)
- 2. Dys. continua (chronic)
- 3. Dys. remittens (remittent)
-
- B. According to degree:
- 1. Dys. adstricta (limited or partial)
- a. Dys. atra (melancholia or lypemania)
- 1. Homesickness.
- 2. Ferocitas et morositas ebriosorum (Alcoholic excitement
- and ill humor)
- b. Dys. candida (cheerful dysthymia or melancholia hilaris)
- c. Dys. mutabilis (changeable or alternating)
- 2. Dys. sparsa (apathica)—General dysthymia (melancholia attonita).
-
- _Second Order_:—Vesania anoëtos or Anoësia—Deliria of various forms.
-
- Varieties:
-
- A. According to types:
- 1. Anoësia transitoria or subita (acute)
- Species:
- a. A. e febre—fever delirium
- b. A. e potu—alcoholism
- c. A. ex affectu—affective
- d. A. semisomnis—confusion of drunken sleep
- e. A. Somnambula—somnambulism
- 2. Anoësia continua—chronic
- 3. Anoësia remittens—remittent.
-
- B. According to degree:
- 1. Anoësia adstricta—partial or limited
- a. A. ad sensationes—hallucinatory delirium
- b. A. ad cogitationes—delusional delirium
- 2. Anoësia sparsa—general
- a. Delirium tremens
-
- _Third Order_:—Vesania Maniaca (Mania).
-
- Varieties:
-
- A. According to types:
- 1. Mania transitoria or subita—acute
- a. M. s. a febre—encephalitic delirium
- b. M. s. a potu—alcoholic mania
- c. M. s. ex affectu—affective mania
- d. M. s. e partu—puerperal mania
- e. M. s. e mordo occulto—amentia occulta, which includes the
- above forms.
- 2. Mania continua—chronic mania
- 3. Mania remittens—remittent mania
-
- B. According to degree:
- 1. Mania adstricta seu instinctiva—partial or limited mania. (Mania
- sine delirio of Pinel.) (Moral insanity, monomania.)
- 2. Mania sparsa—general mania.
-
-
-This is said to have been based on Jacobi's somato-aetiological
-theory (1830) that "there is no disease of the mind existing as
-such, but that insanity exists solely as the consequence of disease,
-either functional or organic, in some parts of the body system."
-Heinroth[137] saw in the various mental disorders a disturbance of one
-or the other of the normal functions of the mind which he divided into
-three classes. "If the cause of derangement is in relation to one of
-these manifestations of mental existence—and to one or another it
-must belong, since the mind is ever occupied with phenomena related
-to one out of the three classes—we have only to inquire to which
-modification the disorder actually refers itself, or whether it affects
-the feelings, the understanding, or the will. Since one of these has
-possession of our consciousness, or is at least predominant at every
-point of time, whichever function of the mind happens to be that which
-is falling into disorder, by it the form of insanity is determined."
-Griesinger[138] in 1845, on the other hand, was of the opinion that
-all classifications must in the end return to the principal forms
-previously described—mania, melancholia and dementia. In 1860 Morel
-announced his well-known classification: Hereditary Insanity, which
-included imbecility and idiocy; Toxic Insanity (alcohol, lead, mercury,
-etc., as well as cretinism); Insanity produced by the transformation
-of other diseases (hysterical, epileptic, hypochondriacal); Idiopathic
-Insanity (general paresis, etc.); Sympathetic Insanity, and Dementia,
-"a terminative state."
-
-Maudsley spoke of Affective or Pathetic, and Ideational Insanity.
-The former was divided into maniacal perversion, melancholic
-depression and moral alienation. The latter included general forms
-(mania or melancholia), partial forms (monomania or melancholia),
-dementia (primary and secondary), general paralysis and imbecility.
-Régis described five forms of mania, five of melancholia, two of
-insanity of double form, and a systematized progressive insanity.
-In addition to these, he divided constitutional insanity into two
-groups—the degeneracy of evolution and the degeneracy of involution.
-Krafft-Ebing[139] included melancholia, mania, primary dementia,
-exhaustion psychoses and terminal conditions in his group of
-psychoneuroses. Under the heading of degenerative forms he described
-constitutional affective insanity, paranoia and periodical insanity.
-Neurasthenic, epileptic, hysterical and hypochondriacal psychoses were
-grouped together under the constitutional neuroses. In addition to
-this he described chronic intoxications, organic brain diseases and
-arrested development. At a meeting of the International Congress of
-Alienists in 1889 the following classification was adopted: 1. Mania;
-2. Melancholia; 3. Periodical Insanity; 4. Progressive Systematical
-Insanity; 5. Dementia; 6. Organic and Senile Dementia; 7. General
-Paralysis; 8. Insane Neurosis (hysteria, epilepsy, hypochondriasis,
-etc.); 9. Toxic Insanity; 10. Moral and Impulsive Insanity; and 11.
-Idiocy. Ziehen[140] had a classification scheme which represented an
-advance in some respects. Mania and melancholia were described as
-affective psychoses, and paranoia as an intellectual disorder. He also
-referred to mixed or combined forms. Imbecility, general paresis,
-terminal deteriorations, etc., were grouped together under the general
-heading of psychoses with intellectual defects.
-
-The British Medico-Psychological Association has had an official
-classification for many years. This was quoted by Savage[141] in 1907 as
-follows:—
-
- 1. Congenital or infantile mental deficiency (idiocy or imbecility)
- occurring as early in life as it can be observed:
- (1) Intellectual
- a. Without epilepsy
- b. With epilepsy
- (2) Moral
- 2. Insanity arising later in life:
- (1) Insanity with epilepsy
- (2) General paralysis of the insane
- (3) Insanity with the grosser brain lesions
- (4) Acute delirium (acute delirious mania)
- (5) Confusional insanity
- (6) Stupor
- (7) Primary dementia
- (8) Mania
- a. Recent
- b. Chronic
- c. Recurrent
- (9) Melancholia
- a. Recent
- b. Chronic
- c. Recurrent
- (10) Alternating Insanity
- (11) Delusional Insanity
- a. Systematized
- b. Non-systematized
- (12) Volitional Insanity
- a. Impulse
- b. Obsession
- c. Doubt
- (13) Moral Insanity
- (14) Dementia
- a. Secondary or terminal
- b. Senile
-
-An elaborate classification was also officially adopted by the Royal
-College of Physicians of England[142] about the same time. This
-recognized seven varieties of mania, seven of melancholia and six of
-dementia. The subject of classifications would not be complete without
-a reference to Kraepelin. His eighth edition (1910-1915) showed the
-following:—
-
- 1. Psychoses accompanying Injuries to the Brain:
- Concussion
- Traumatic delirium
- Traumatic epilepsy
- Traumatic enfeeblement
-
- 2. Psychoses accompanying Diseases of the Brain:
- Meningitis
- Brain tumors
- Abscesses
- Hemorrhages
- Thrombosis
- Embolism
- Encephalitis
- Multiple sclerosis
- Lobar sclerosis
- Huntington's chorea
- Amaurotic idiocy
-
- 3. The Intoxication Psychoses:
- Acute:
- Endogenous—Uraemia, Eclampsia, Acute yellow atrophy of the liver.
- Exogenous—Ether, Santonin, Hashish, Nitrous Oxide Gas, Atropin,
- Hyoscin, Carbonic Oxide Gas, etc.
- Chronic:
- Alcohol:
- Delusional (jealousy)
- Delirium Tremens
- Korsakow's Psychosis
- Acute Hallucinosis (paranoid)
- Alcoholic paralysis and pseudo-paralysis
- Morphine
- Cocaine
-
- 4. The Infectious Psychoses:
- Fever delirium
- Infection delirium
- Acute confusion (amentia)
- Infective exhaustive conditions
-
- 5. The Psychoses of Syphilis:
- Syphilitic neurasthenia
- Gummatous growths
- Syphilitic pseudo-paralysis
- Syphilitic apoplexy
- Syphilitic epilepsy
- Paranoid forms
- Tabetic psychoses
- Hereditary syphilis
-
- 6. Dementia Paralytica:
- Paralytic, Depressive, Expansive and Agitated forms
-
- 7. The Senile and Presenile Psychoses:
- Presenile psychoses
- Arteriosclerotic psychoses
- Senile deterioration
-
- 8. The Thyroigenous Psychoses:
- Basedow's Disease
- Myxoedema
- Cretinism
-
- 9. The Endogenous Dementias:
- Dementia praecox:
- Dementia simplex
- Hebephrenia
- Depressive dementia
- Circular form
- Agitated form
- Periodical form
- Katatonia
- Paranoid form
- Schizophasia
- Paraphrenia:
- Systematica
- Expansiva
- Confabulans
- Phantastica
-
- 10. The Epileptic Psychoses.
-
- 11. The Manic Depressive Psychoses:
- Manic form
- Depressive form
- Mixed form
-
- 12. The Psychogenic Disorders:
- Nervous exhaustion
- Dread neurosis
- The Induced psychoses
- The psychoses of the Deaf
- The Accident or Traumatic neuroses
- The Psychogenic disorders of Prisoners
- The Querulants
-
- 13. Hysteria
-
- 14. Paranoia
-
- 15. The Constitutional Disorders:
- Nervousness
- The Compulsion neuroses
- The Impulsion neuroses
- Sexual perversions
-
- 16. The Psychopathic Personalities:
- The Excitable
- The Unstable
- The Impulsive
- The Eccentric
- The Liar and Swindler
- The Antisocial
- The Quarrelsome
-
- 17. Defective Mental Development (oligophrenia)
-
-At the annual meeting of the American Medico-Psychological Association
-in 1869 Nichols called attention to the statistical studies proposed
-by the International Congress of Alienists in 1867. As a result of
-his efforts a series of twenty-one statistical tables was prepared
-and used unofficially for several years, although never formally
-adopted. A committee reported again on this subject in 1896, but
-without any definite action being taken. The Italian psychiatrists have
-had a classification which has been in general use by them for some
-time. Interest in this subject has been stimulated by the frequent
-publications of Kraepelin during the last thirty years. Meyer and Hoch
-have been largely responsible for bringing his work to the attention
-of the profession in this country, and Kraepelin's classification with
-some modifications has come into very general use here. It was not
-until the publication of its twenty-first annual report in 1909 that
-the New York State Commission in Lunacy adopted a modern classification
-of psychoses.
-
-At that time there were practically as many different forms of
-statistical reports in the United States as there were hospitals. In
-the meanwhile almost every textbook published during the last fifty
-years has announced a new classification of mental diseases. They have
-been based on etiology, pathology, symptomatology and psychology.
-English, French, German, Italian and American classifications
-have appeared, each representing, as a rule, different schools of
-psychiatry. Kempf[143] would discard the term psychosis altogether
-and speak only of neuroses as "more consistent with the integrative
-functions of the nervous system." For diagnostic purposes he proposes
-to separate the benign from the pernicious processes and classify them
-according to their psychological mechanisms as suppression, repression,
-compensatory, regression and dissociation neuroses. The easiest way
-out of all these difficulties, as Southard[144] has said, would be "to
-deny the existence of entities in mental disease. There are two forms
-of this contention; first, that mental disease is nothing more or less
-than insanity, an entity itself, a genus with but one species, or
-secondly, that all victims of mental disease are individually to be
-provided with entities, that is, all examples of mental disease are sui
-generis. The development of psychiatry has killed the former contention
-stone dead, but the latter contention still flourishes to an extent
-among those who overstress the individual factor. And this latter
-contention is bolstered up by the existence of so many psychopathic
-patients of whom a diagnosis cannot be rendered for practical or
-theoretical reasons. However, there are no really consistent advocates
-of the sui generis plan of classification." It is interesting to
-note that he concedes ... "that the American Medico-Psychological
-Association's classification, adopted as it has been by a great number
-of American institutions and by the United States Government for war
-purposes, is a reasonably good classification and aware that its
-constituent elements fairly well correspond with what all American
-psychiatrists agree upon."
-
-Southard[145] raises the question as to how this classification can
-be used for diagnostic purposes. He answers this query by suggesting
-"A key to the practical grouping of mental diseases"[146] ... "to be
-followed, when necessary, like a botanical key in the search for
-the classification of a plant."... "It is a key to study and not an
-analytical classification with any pretence to finality."... "The plan
-is not so much an excursion into nosology as an essay in the technique
-of psychiatric diagnosis for the tyro."
-
-The problem presenting itself in the adoption of a classification
-purely for statistical purposes was not a question of a scientific
-grouping of the psychoses based on either etiological, anatomical,
-pathological, clinical or prognostic considerations. It was a question
-of compiling a tabulation or list of clinical entities recognized
-generally by American psychiatrists, subject to such changes and
-modifications as may be necessary to make it conform to accepted
-standards. As a matter of fact, no adequate reason for a classification
-of mental diseases for any other than statistical purposes has even
-been advanced by the authors of our textbooks on psychiatry. They
-do not contribute anything of value whatever to our knowledge of
-symptomatology, diagnosis or treatment. Practically the only point
-on which the writers of our textbooks agree is that there is no one
-fundamental principle upon which a satisfactory classification can be
-based. It is unfortunate that tradition seems to demand the serious
-consideration of a problem which many believe admits of no solution and
-which would mean little or nothing to the future of psychiatry if it
-were solved. The views of the Committee on Statistics are shown by a
-quotation from the report made to the Association at its meeting in
-New York in 1917:—"Your Committee feels that the first essential
-of a uniform system of statistics in hospitals for the insane is a
-generally recognized nomenclature of mental diseases. The present
-condition with respect to the classification of mental diseases is
-chaotic. Some states use no well-defined classification. In others the
-classifications used are similar in many respects but differ enough
-to prevent accurate comparisons. Some states have adopted a uniform
-system, while others leave the matter entirely to the individual
-hospitals. This condition of affairs discredits the science of
-psychiatry and reflects unfavorably upon our Association, which should
-serve as a correlating and standardizing agency for the whole country.
-The large task of your Committee therefore has been the formulation of
-a classification which it could unanimously recommend for adoption by
-the Association. The task was accomplished only after several prolonged
-conferences at which classifications now in use in various states
-and countries, and the recommendations of leading psychiatrists were
-considered. The classification finally adopted is simple, comprehensive
-and complete; it copies no other classification but includes the strong
-features of many others; it meets the demands of the best modern
-psychiatry but does not slavishly follow any single system. In short,
-your Committee has endeavored to formulate a classification that could
-be easily used in every hospital for the insane in this country and
-that would meet the scientific demands of the present day."
-
-Since the compilation of statistical data relating to the various
-activities of the hospitals for mental diseases in this country was
-definitely decided upon by the Association at its meeting in 1913,
-the membership of the Committee on Statistics has from time to time
-included the following:—Dr. Thomas W. Salmon, Medical Director,
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene; Dr. Owen Copp, Physician in
-Chief and Superintendent, Pennsylvania Hospital, Department for
-Nervous and Mental Diseases; Dr. E. Stanley Abbot, Medical Director,
-Public Charities Association of Pennsylvania; Dr. Henry A. Cotton,
-Medical Director, New Jersey State Hospital, Trenton; Dr. L. Vernon
-Briggs, Boston, former member of the Massachusetts State Board of
-Insanity; Dr. Adolf Meyer, Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins
-University; Dr. Albert M. Barrett, Professor of Psychiatry and
-Neurology, University of Michigan; Dr. George H. Kirby, Director
-of the Psychiatric Institute, New York City; Dr. Samuel T. Orton,
-Professor of Psychiatry and Director of the Psychopathic Hospital,
-University of Iowa; Dr. Frankwood E. Williams, Associate Medical
-Director, National Committee for Mental Hygiene; Dr. Elmer E. Southard,
-Director of the Massachusetts State Psychiatric Institute; Dr. C.
-Macfie Campbell, Director of the Boston Psychopathic Hospital, and the
-writer. Associated with the committee officially were: Dr. August Hoch,
-formerly Director of the Psychiatric Institute, New York; Dr. H. M.
-Pollock, Statistician of the New York State Hospital Commission; Miss
-Edith M. Furbush, Statistician of the National Committee for Mental
-Hygiene, and various others.
-
-The Association's classification of mental diseases at this time (1921)
-is as follows:
-
- 1. Traumatic psychoses:
- (a) Traumatic delirium
- (b) Traumatic constitution
- (c) Post-traumatic mental enfeeblement (dementia)
- (d) Other types
- 2. Senile psychoses:
- (a) Simple deterioration
- (b) Presbyophrenic type
- (c) Delirious and confused types
- (d) Depressed and agitated type
- (e) Paranoid types (f) Pre-senile type (g) Other types
- 3. Psychoses with cerebral arteriosclerosis
- 4. General paralysis
- 5. Psychoses with cerebral syphilis
- 6. Psychoses with Huntington's chorea
- 7. Psychoses with brain tumor
- 8. Psychoses with other brain or nervous diseases:
- (a) Cerebral embolism
- (b) Paralysis agitans
- (c) Meningitis, tubercular or other forms (to be specified)
- (d) Multiple sclerosis
- (e) Tabes dorsalis
- (f) Acute chorea
- (g) Other diseases (to be specified)
- 9. Alcoholic psychoses:
- (a) Pathological intoxication
- (b) Delirium tremens
- (c) Korsakow's psychosis
- (d) Acute hallucinosis
- (e) Chronic hallucinosis
- (f) Acute paranoid type
- (g) Chronic paranoid type
- (h) Alcoholic deterioration
- (i) Other types, acute or chronic
- 10. Psychoses due to drugs and other exogenous toxins:
- (a) Opium (and derivatives), cocaine, bromides, chloral, etc., alone
- or combined (to be specified)
- (b) Metals, as lead, arsenic, etc. (to be specified)
- (c) Gases (to be specified)
- (d) Other exogenous toxins (to be specified)
- 11. Psychoses with pellagra
- 12. Psychoses with other somatic diseases:
- (a) Delirium with infectious diseases
- (b) Post-infectious psychosis
- (c) Exhaustion delirium
- (d) Delirium of unknown origin
- (e) Cardio-renal diseases
- (f) Diseases of the ductless glands
- (g) Other diseases or conditions (to be specified)
- 13. Manic-depressive psychoses:
- (a) Manic type
- (b) Depressive type
- (c) Stuporous type
- (d) Mixed type
- (e) Circular type
- (f) Other types
- 14. Involution melancholia
- 15. Dementia praecox:
- (a) Paranoid type
- (b) Catatonic type
- (c) Hebephrenic type
- (d) Simple type
- (e) Other types
- 16. Paranoia or paranoid conditions
- 17. Epileptic psychoses:
- (a) Epileptic deterioration
- (b) Epileptic clouded states
- (c) Other epileptic types (to be specified)
- 18. Psychoneuroses and neuroses:
- (a) Hysterical type
- (b) Psychasthenic type
- (c) Neurasthenic type
- (d) Anxiety neuroses
- (e) Other types
- 19. Psychoses with psychopathic personality
- 20. Psychoses with mental deficiency
- 21. Undiagnosed psychosis
- 22. Without psychosis
- (a) Epilepsy without psychosis
- (b) Alcoholism without psychosis
- (c) Drug addiction without psychosis
- (d) Psychopathic personality without psychosis
- (e) Mental deficiency without psychosis
- (f) Others (to be specified)
-
-
-
-
- PART II
-
- THE PSYCHOSES
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE TRAUMATIC PSYCHOSES
-
-
-Traumatic affections of the nervous system have been recognized in a
-general way for centuries, although the psychoses resulting directly
-from injuries have been given very little consideration or attention
-in the past. Concussion of the brain, referred to in the writings of
-Hippocrates, Galen and Celsus, was first studied postmortem in 1705 by
-Littré. It is now discussed in all textbooks on surgery. Usually milder
-forms are described with evidences of shock or collapse—a brief period
-of unconsciousness, partial or complete, with visual and auditory
-disturbances, dizziness, muscular relaxation or temporary paralysis,
-respiratory symptoms, dilated pupils, weakness of the pulse, lowered
-temperature, etc. Delirium and stupor or coma are associated with more
-severe injuries. If the cortex is lacerated, twitchings or convulsions
-often occur. Returning consciousness shows various reactions—headache,
-vomiting, amnesia, etc., and may be succeeded by convulsions,
-encephalitis or mental disturbances. DaCosta[147] says that some cases
-are followed by a complete change in the personality, forgetfulness,
-headache, insomnia, attacks of depression, lassitude and vertigo with
-increased susceptibility to alcohol, heat and physical exertion.
-Acute surgical injuries, and compression due to growths, hemorrhages,
-fractures, etc., have been exhaustively studied. Compression has been
-differentiated surgically[148] by the later appearance of a gradual
-unconsciousness, more definite paralysis, usually on the side opposite the
-injury, slow pulse and stertorous respirations, unequal immobile
-pupils, choked disc, convulsive movements, etc. Traumatic encephalitis
-and meningitis have long been recognized but present no definitely
-characteristic symptoms which distinguish them from simple inflammatory
-reactions.
-
-One of the earliest accurate descriptions of brain injury associated
-with mental symptoms was that of the well-known "crowbar" case. It will
-be recalled that while blasting in Vermont in 1848 a man by the name of
-Gage had an iron bar driven through the frontal region of his skull,
-making a complete recovery and living for over twelve years after
-the accident. An autopsy showed that only the prefrontal cortex was
-involved. A very interesting report on his mental condition was made by
-Dr. John M. Harlow:[149] "His contractors, who regarded him as the most
-efficient and capable foreman in their employ previous to his injury,
-considered the change in his mind so marked that they could not give
-him his place again. The equilibrium, or balance, so to speak, between
-his intellectual faculties and animal propensities seems to have been
-destroyed. He is fitful, irreverent, indulging at times in the grossest
-profanity (which was not previously his custom), manifesting but little
-deference for his fellows, impatient of restraint or advice when it
-conflicts with his desires, at times pertinaciously obstinate yet
-capricious and vacillating, devising many plans of future operations,
-which are no sooner arranged than they are abandoned in turn for others
-appearing more feasible. A child in his intellectual capacity and
-manifestations, he had the animal passions of a strong man. Previous
-to his injury, though untrained in the schools, he possessed a well
-balanced mind, and was looked upon by those who knew him as a shrewd,
-smart business man, very energetic and persistent in executing all his
-plans of operation. In this regard his mind was radically changed, so
-decidedly that his friends and acquaintances said he was 'no longer
-Gage.'"
-
-Various other cases reported have established the fact that mental
-deterioration usually follows extensive injuries to the frontal lobes.
-Witmer[150] summarizes this as consisting of "slight intellectual
-degradation, moral and emotional perversion, deficiency of attention,
-and volitional inefficiency."
-
-A work by Ericksen in 1866 on "Railway Injuries to the Nervous
-System" and Page's book in 1882 on "Injuries of the Spine" pointed
-the way to an extensive study of the so-called traumatic neuroses.
-This characterization of the functional disturbances of the nervous
-system following injuries was apparently the result of a monograph by
-Oppenheim on that subject in 1889. They had previously been considered
-as purely organic in origin. Traumatic hysteria was discussed very
-fully at various times by Charcot, whose work is so well known as to
-require no comment. In 1892 Friedmann described a vasomotor complex
-due to concussion. This is accompanied by such symptoms as headache,
-dizziness, loss of capacity for both physical and mental work with
-an increased fatigability, irritability, memory defects, and changes
-in personality, such as sensitiveness and eccentricity with a marked
-intolerance to alcohol. This condition appears some time after the
-symptoms of concussion and shock have subsided and may last for some
-months. Friedmann looked upon this as purely a vasomotor disturbance.
-It is probably an important factor, in some cases at least, of
-"shell shock". Traumatic epilepsy may result from foci of softening
-or other local areas of injury to the brain. Neurasthenia, hysteria
-and other neuroses are now generally looked upon as being essentially
-functional and not organic in origin, although they may follow a
-trauma. The simulation of these conditions has led to a great deal of
-discussion, notwithstanding the fact that Oppenheim found them in only
-about four per cent of his cases. Köppen (1897) made a very elaborate
-study of the postmortem lesions in the "traumatic neuroses". He found
-that violence to the skull often resulted in small injuries at the
-base of the frontal area, at the apices of the parietal lobes or in
-the occipital region. The pathological changes involved represented
-localized encephalitis with hemorrhagic infiltration. Foci of softening
-were often found in the cerebral cortex. He noted coma and convulsions
-with only minute areas of destruction of the basal cortex at autopsy.
-This would indicate a severe irritation, probably due to circulatory
-disturbances. The resulting symptoms he thought were very likely to be
-confused with general paresis. In cases of extreme dementia following
-traumatism he often found no pathological lesion other than a cicatrix
-in the cerebral cortex.
-
-One of the most important contributions to the literature of traumatism
-as associated with psychoses was made by Adolf Meyer[151] in 1903.
-Notwithstanding the statements of such observers as Savage, appearing
-as late as 1905, he expressed the opinion that traumatism and general
-paresis are not directly related except that injuries may rarely act as
-precipitating factors. He does not expect to find psychoses resulting
-from small lacerations or other similar lesions in the cortex. As a
-result of his observations Meyer[152] described the following forms of
-traumatic disorders:—
-
- 1. The direct post-traumatic deliria with the following subdivisions:
- a. Preeminently febrile reactions;
- b. The delirium nervosum of Dupuytren, not differing from deliria
- after operations, injuries, etc.;
- c. The delirium of slow evolution of coma, with or without alcoholic
- basis;
- d. Forms of protracted deliria, usually with numerous tabulations,
- etc. (with or without alcoholic or senile basis).
-
- 2. The post-traumatic constitution:
- a. Types with mere facilitation of reaction to alcohol, grippe, etc.;
- b. Types with vasomotor neurosis;
- c. Types with explosive diathesis;
- d. Types with hysteroid or epileptoid episodes, with or without
- convulsions (such as most reflex psychoses);
- e. Types of paranoic development.
-
- 3. The traumatic defect conditions:
- a. Primary defects allied to aphasia;
- b. Secondary deterioration in connection with epilepsy;
- c. Terminal deterioration due to progressive alterations of the
- primarily injured parts, with or without arteriosclerosis.
-
- 4. Psychoses in which trauma is merely a contributing factor:
- a. General paralysis, with or without traumatic stigmata;
- b. Manic-depressive and other transitory psychoses, catatonic
- deterioration and paranoic conditions, with or without traumatic
- stigmata.
-
- 5. Traumatic psychoses from injury not directly affecting the head.
-
-The most interesting feature perhaps of this classification is the
-post-traumatic constitution. Meyer[153] quotes Köppen's excellent
-description of this condition as follows:—"Men who have suffered from
-a cranial lesion in which there has been a severe damage of the brain,
-with or without an injury to the cranial bones, on their recovery from
-the immediate results complain especially of all kinds of sensations
-in the head, which they describe either as pain or as pressure with
-feeling of crawling or dullness of the head, more or less definitely
-located at the point where they were hit. They frequently become
-dizzy, and at times even faint for a short time without any epileptic
-attack. Although slight attacks of dizziness may recur frequently,
-epilepsy with typical attacks need not develop. There is further in our
-patients a great irritability and nervosity. The formerly good-natured
-or even-tempered persons become irascible, hard to get along with;
-formerly conscientious fathers cease to care for their family. The
-irritability at times increases to excessive violence in which actions
-occur of which they have no remembrance; the nervous system is not only
-under the influence of psychic irritation but especially susceptible
-to the influence of alcohol or tobacco, in even small quantities. The
-working capacity of our patients is very poor. It suffers variously,
-although such individuals often give an impression of perfect capacity;
-and since the morbid symptoms are essentially subjective, they always
-arouse doubts whether they could not do something at least, even if
-they are unable to work in a noisy shop or on a high scaffolding. It
-is, however, certain that the patients are very forgetful; in giving
-orders or doing errands they make the most incredible blunders;
-frequently everything must be written down. Their capacity for thought
-has suffered, as is sometimes shown, especially in the great slowness
-of thought. These patients are unable to concentrate their attention,
-not even in occupations which serve for mere entertainment, such as
-reading or playing cards. They like best to brood unoccupied; even
-conversation is rather obnoxious. This point is so characteristic that
-it gives a certain means of distinction from simulation, which as a
-rule does not interfere with taking part in the conversations and
-pleasures of the ward and playing at cards, which means as a rule too
-much of an effort for the brain of actual sufferers. The patients are
-usually advised to take light physical work, but even there they are
-perfectly useless. Excessive sensitiveness of their head obliges them
-to avoid all work which is connected with sudden jerks, bending over is
-especially troublesome; and there is hardly any physical work in which
-this can be avoided; the blood rushes to the head, headache increases,
-dizziness sets in and the work stops. Patients feel best when in the
-open air, inactive and undisturbed. There are but few objective signs,
-such as increase of pulse, flushing of the face, dermatographia,
-trembling and uncertainty in the Romberg position, such as is shown
-in all general nervosity. But the complaints are so exceedingly
-uniform that the uniformity of the subjective complaints justifies the
-conclusion that they are well founded. The picture thus is briefly
-that of a mental weakness shown by easy fatigue, slowness of thought,
-inability to keep impressions, irritability, and a great number of
-unpleasant sensations, before all headaches and dizziness."
-
-It is exceedingly interesting to note that Schläger in discussing
-disorders resulting from concussion of the brain, in 1857, as quoted by
-Griesinger,[154] makes the following comment on these cases:—"Very often
-the character and disposition changes; in 20 cases great irascibility,
-an angry, passionate manner even to the most violent outbursts
-of temper was remarked—less frequently over-estimation of self,
-prodigality, restlessness, disquietude; in 14 cases there were attempts
-at suicide, frequently weakness of memory, confusion." Meyer found,
-furthermore, in his analysis "all the possible degrees of episodes
-of more or less dazing and dream states; from a temporary dazed
-feeling to episodes of hysteriform or epileptoid absences. Apart from
-the subjective feeling of haziness, the characteristic trait is the
-occurrence of complete dream interpretations and peculiar fabrications,
-which color the primary traumatic insanity as well as the subacute and
-episodic types, and even the paranoic type."
-
-Kraepelin[155] describes concussion and compression, traumatic
-delirium, traumatic epilepsy and traumatic mental enfeeblement. He
-finds these conditions due to concussion, compression or injury to
-the brain substance either at the site of traumatism or at some
-point opposite. There may be contusions, lacerations of the brain
-tissue or hemorrhages, usually in the frontal, occipital or parietal
-regions. Injuries to the cortex are not demonstrable in all cases. The
-circulatory disturbances he considers an important factor and thinks
-that they account for smaller lesions of the cerebral tissue in many
-instances where no gross changes are apparent. More or less disturbance
-of consciousness is to be expected in these conditions. The patient is
-somewhat dull, drowsy, clumsy, forgetful and absentminded. Memory is
-sometimes much affected. In more severe cases there is a complete loss
-of consciousness which may last a few minutes only or be a matter of
-hours or days. On waking, the patient is bewildered and confused, with
-a marked disturbance of apprehension. Perception is involved as in the
-recognition of complicated pictures or the understanding of long and
-detailed statements. A clear comprehension of events and surroundings
-is lacking. The patients may know that they are in a hospital without
-knowing what hospital it is or why they are there and are unable to
-recognize persons around them. Occasionally hallucinations of sight
-or of hearing occur. At times delusional ideas are expressed, usually
-of a depressive type. They have no realization whatever of their own
-condition. The memory disturbance may take the form of a Korsakow's
-complex. Memory gaps appear sometimes for events just before the
-accident and in other cases cover long periods of time. While as a rule
-events of the remote past are retained, recent impressions are quickly
-lost. They cannot repeat what is read to them, do not remember
-the names of persons about them, and sometimes show evidence of
-falsification of memory with fabrication. All idea as to time is
-usually lost. Mental reactions become noticeably difficult. The patient
-is distractible, cannot count accurately, has difficulty in repeating
-dates and numbers and forms no correct judgment as to his own personal
-affairs. Many express themselves, however, on the other hand, with
-great facility and readiness. Some show considerable fatigability.
-The mood is often elated with a tendency to facetiousness, although
-frequently tearful and anxious, particularly at night. Irritable,
-faultfinding trends usually appear later. As a rule they are talkative,
-restless, sensitive, abusive or even insolent. Bonhöffer has reported
-stereotypies as well as stuporous and other catatonic types. In speech
-the patients often become incoherent, make mistakes, forget words
-or coin new ones. Similar mistakes appear in reading and writing.
-Asymbolism and parapraxia are observed. Residual symptoms of the brain
-injury are headaches, dizziness, fainting attacks and convulsions. The
-pupils are contracted and do not react properly to light. The pulse is
-frequently very slow.
-
-In fractures at the base of the brain there is likely to be a
-hemorrhage from the ears and deafness from injuries to the labyrinth.
-Involvement of the pyramidal tracts may cause unilateral weakness or
-even paralysis, with increased knee-jerks and occasionally a Babinski
-reflex. Usually the mental symptoms appear promptly after the injury.
-Sometimes, however, there is for a while only a slight dulness.
-The patients are unable to go about the house unassisted, and act
-peculiarly, becoming clouded or delirious after a few hours or days.
-Improvement begins to show itself in a few weeks as a rule unless
-some intercurrent affection intervenes, but the symptoms may persist
-for several months. Meningitis or abscess formation often causes
-death. These developments are usually indicated by a marked delirium
-or coma. There may also be paralysis, convulsions, disturbances of
-speech, rise of temperature, etc. The subsidence of active delirious
-symptoms is sometimes succeeded by Kraepelin's traumatic neurosis.
-Following the traumatic delirium or concussion psychosis described,
-mental enfeeblement sometimes appears. Clouding of consciousness is
-not a factor in this condition. There is usually a complete change
-in the psychic personality. The patients tire easily, are incapable
-of sustained mental efforts, forgetful, absentminded, complain
-of dizziness, dulness, noises in the ears, pressure in the head,
-migraine, palpitation, etc. Or they may be irritable, with outbursts
-of anger often alternating with apathy. Some are depressed, anxious or
-hypochondriacal. There is a greatly increased susceptibility to alcohol
-and intoxication often induces excitements, epileptiform attacks,
-stupors or rarely actual dreamstates.
-
-Wildermuth found a history of traumatism in 3.8 per cent of his cases
-of epilepsy. The statistics of the German Army show 4.2 per cent. When
-the convulsive manifestations are in the foreground and the picture
-is one of traumatic epilepsy, advanced mental deterioration may be
-exhibited, with impairment of mental capacity and disturbance of
-memory. These cases remain apathetic, forgetful, dull, irritable and
-childish. At autopsy there are often no evidences of any great injury
-to the brain. Occasionally extensive areas of softening may, however,
-be found. Usually there is a widespread destruction of the nerve cells
-and their associated fibres. There is often a proliferation of the
-glia, with changes in the vessel walls which may be thickened and
-dilated, with capillary hemorrhages and softenings. Extensive areas
-of the cortex may be involved. Bleuler's description of the traumatic
-psychoses is not essentially different from that of Kraepelin.
-
-The differentiation of these conditions as suggested in the statistical
-manual of the American Psychiatric Association is as follows:—
-
-"The diagnosis should be restricted to mental disorders arising as a
-direct or obvious consequence of a brain (or head) injury producing
-psychotic symptoms of a fairly characteristic kind. The amount of
-damage to the brain may vary from an extensive destruction of tissue
-to simple concussion or physical shock with or without fracture of the
-skull.
-
-"Manic-depressive psychoses, general paralysis, dementia praecox, and
-other mental disorders in which trauma may act as a contributory or
-precipitating cause, should not be included in this group.
-
-"The following are the most common clinical types of traumatic
-psychosis and should be specified in the statistical record of the
-hospital:—
-
-"(a) Traumatic delirium: This may take the form of an acute delirium
-(concussion delirium), or a more protracted delirium resembling the
-Korsakow mental complex.
-
-"(b) Traumatic constitution: Characterized by a gradual post-traumatic
-change in disposition with vasomotor instability, headaches,
-fatigability, irritability or explosive emotional reactions; usually
-hyper-sensitiveness to alcohol, and in some cases development of
-paranoid, hysteroid, or epileptoid symptoms.
-
-"(c) Post-traumatic mental enfeeblement (dementia): Varying degrees of
-mental reduction with or without aphasic symptoms, epileptiform attacks
-or development of a cerebral arteriosclerosis.
-
-"(d) Other types."
-
-We have not as yet, unfortunately, sufficient data at our disposal to
-warrant intelligent conclusions as to the frequency of the various
-forms of traumatic psychoses. One hundred and twenty-seven cases
-reported from the New York state hospitals during a period of six years
-were classified as follows:—
-
- _Form_ _Number_ _Per cent_
-
- Traumatic delirium 38 29.32
- Traumatic constitution 32 25.19
- Post traumatic mental enfeeblement 32 25.19
- Others, not specified 25 19.70
-
-Undoubtedly with a more definite understanding as to the delimitation
-of these different conditions more complete information will be
-available later. We are nevertheless justified in feeling that the
-frequency of the traumatic psychoses considered as a group can be
-determined with a fair degree of accuracy. Of 49,640 first admissions
-to the New York hospitals during a period of eight years, 161, or .32
-per cent, were definitely ascribed to traumatism. Twenty-one other
-hospitals in fourteen different states reported forty-five cases of
-traumatic psychoses (.24 per cent) in 18,336 admissions. Two hundred
-and seventeen cases (.3 per cent) have therefore been reported in a
-total of 70,987 first admissions to forty-eight state hospitals for
-mental diseases in this country.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE SENILE PSYCHOSES
-
-
-Never until very recently has any great importance been attached to the
-psychoses due solely to age or much interest manifested in them. These
-forms of insanity in the majority of our textbooks have appeared only
-under the designation of senile dementia. This is true of the earlier
-editions of Krafft-Ebing and many other writers. Clouston referred to
-senile dementia as one of four varieties of mental enfeeblement. "Most
-cases,"[156] he says, "fall under three varieties. The first has as its
-chief characteristics depression and lethargy. The second consists
-chiefly of excitement, sometimes with a certain exaltation, but always
-with irritability, restlessness, unreason, suspicion, and change of
-affection. The third variety consists chiefly of the abolition of
-mind in all its forms, or senile dementia, and of complete dotage. In
-some cases those three varieties form three different stages in the
-same case. In others they do not change." Régis, in a work on mental
-medicine covering 668 pages in all, devoted two and one-half pages to
-a consideration of the insanity of old age. Ziehen[157] in 1894 included
-"dementia senilis" with general paralysis, epileptic, alcoholic and
-terminal deteriorations in his group of "acquired defect psychoses" and
-characterized it as "a chronic organic psychosis of advanced years,
-the principal symptom of which is a progressive intelligence defect."
-Excitements, depressions, confusional states, deliria, deteriorations,
-mental mechanisms of any and all kinds, occurring late in life,
-were usually disposed of without any effort at differentiation by
-the very convenient method of relegating them to the obscure domain
-of senile dementia. This is a field which on exploration has been
-found to be one of considerable interest. It has been pointed out
-that manic-depressive insanity not infrequently occurs in persons of
-advanced age. Uncomplicated alcoholic psychoses are not at all rare.
-Bleuler has advanced the theory that dementia praecox and certain of
-the senile conditions are similar if not identical processes. General
-paresis has been demonstrated in the later periods of life by modern
-laboratory methods and the diagnosis confirmed at autopsy. Cerebral
-syphilis certainly cannot be left out of consideration. Toxic deliria
-are encountered now and then. Even the psychoneuroses are possibilities.
-
-Kraepelin first established the importance of involution melancholia
-as a form of depression warranting separate consideration. The anxiety
-psychoses occurring late in life have since been made the subject of
-exhaustive study by various observers. It was discovered that many of
-the mental disturbances of the aged could be attributed directly to
-arteriosclerosis alone. Korsakow's syndrome has been found to be as
-frequently due to senility as it is to alcoholism. Some of our more
-modern works on psychiatry have included very elaborate chapters on
-purely "presenile" conditions. Kraepelin[158] in his last edition devotes
-twenty pages to a review of this subject.
-
-He divides the presenile psychoses into melancholia, anxieties, late
-katatonia, depressive delusional conditions, anxious delusional
-types terminating in advanced deterioration, depressive states with
-deterioration, excitements and paranoid forms. The development of
-Kraepelin's conception of melancholia has been fully discussed in
-another chapter. He speaks also of the occasional occurrence of anxious
-conditions in late life with excitements or an exalted mood with
-grandiose ideas or even paranoid manifestations. These may present a
-catatonic picture with more or less inaccessibility, stereotypies,
-peculiar attitudes and movements, absurd resistance, impulsiveness,
-desultoriness and disconnected speech. Our knowledge as to the exact
-causation and nature of katatonia still being far from complete, he
-knows of no reason why a process of that kind should not be recognized
-as one of the presenile conditions. Thalbitzer suggested the name,
-depressive delusional insanity (depressiven Wahnsinn), for the
-conditions exhibiting numerous delusions and active hallucinations
-with an emotional reaction "determined by the course of the disease."
-Rehm also described a similar form associated with arteriosclerotic
-changes and characterized by hallucinations of hearing, together with
-mannerisms and sterotypies.
-
-Kraepelin[159] describes first a group of presenile cases showing the
-development of depressive ideas and anxious states with a progressive
-mental enfeeblement. Delusions of self-accusation and persecution
-present themselves early in the course of the disease. Symptoms of a
-more decidedly hypochondriacal type may occur later. Hallucinations and
-somatic delusions also develop, often with nihilistic trends. Everyone
-is dead, the patient is the only one left in the world, has no legs,
-cannot go out of the house, has entirely disappeared, does not exist
-any more, etc. The consciousness is usually fairly clear, orientation
-is well preserved and there is no marked disturbance of thought.
-Anxious excitement is often an important feature. The termination
-is in mental enfeeblement invariably. This condition manifests
-itself usually at about the fortieth year. He is of the opinion that
-this symptom complex cannot be considered either as belonging to
-manic-depressive insanity or attributable to arteriosclerosis, nor is
-it catatonic in its origin.
-
-He finds another group of cases occurring in women between forty-five
-and fifty years of age, characterized pathologically by striking
-anatomical changes and clinically by a very unfavorable course. A
-depression first appears, followed by anxiety with thoughts of suicide.
-Hallucinations do not occur as a rule. Restless and agitated excitement
-is a prominent symptom leading finally to confusion, clouding of
-consciousness, and disorientation. This is followed by a condition of
-mental enfeeblement terminating in early death. Well-defined postmortem
-changes have been found, such as the "grave alteration" described by
-Nissl, proliferation of the glia, swelling of the protoplasmic bodies
-with cell enclosures, etc., but no fibril formation. Large quantities
-of lipoid material are found in the surrounding vessels and in the
-vascular sheaths. This condition, also observed by Nitsche and Döblin,
-Kraepelin looks upon as probably a presenile process of autotoxic
-origin, there being no other cause demonstrable. He does not consider
-this disease process as being related to "late katatonia," genuine
-katatonia or manic-depressive insanity.
-
-He would also separate out another smaller group as probably belonging
-to the presenile forms—cases with excitements of long duration,
-terminating in a marked deterioration. This condition is likely to
-be of sudden onset, with depressive ideas of self-accusation, later
-showing an active restlessness. These patients soon become clouded
-and confused, often with grandiose ideas suggesting general paresis.
-They may show memory falsifications. Stuporous states occasionally
-intervene, followed by an active excitement. Echolalia is common.
-
-The excitement may last for months or even for a year or more and
-often stops suddenly, always with deterioration later. In the
-cases which have come to autopsy Alzheimer has reported severe and
-widespread cell alterations, fibre loss, glia reactions, and changes
-in the vessel walls, somewhat suggesting the pathological findings
-in general paresis. The cases in this group usually have been of the
-male sex between sixty and seventy years of age. Kraepelin speaks of
-the clinical picture as a mixture of the symptoms of general paresis,
-katatonia and manic-depressive psychoses and it is usually diagnosed as
-one or the other of these conditions.
-
-The paranoid presenile forms occur usually in women. Consciousness is
-clear, although there may be a mild anxiety or hypochondriasis. The
-persecutory ideas are variable and changeable. Delusions of jealousy
-are common although hallucinations are infrequent. Memory is often
-somewhat impaired and retrospective falsifications are occasionally
-observed. The mood is as a rule anxious and suspicious. Suicidal
-tendencies often appear. Restlessness, excitement, impulsive actions
-and outbursts of anger are noted at times. Rarely a more cheerful mood
-develops. The disease may become stationary and show no marked changes
-for years.
-
-Kraepelin himself seems to be very uncertain as to the significance and
-the delimitation of these various presenile forms. It must be confessed
-that some of the types described very strongly suggest the condition
-formerly looked upon by him as involutional melancholia. It will be
-noted that he considers as possible etiological factors the disturbance
-of metabolism which may result from regressive or involutional
-processes. The differentiation from manic-depressive forms, from
-arteriosclerotic disorders and from senile psychoses must also be
-looked upon as presenting some difficulties which cannot be entirely
-disregarded. Many possibilities suggest themselves.
-
-In the senile deteriorations Kraepelin notes particularly a loss in
-the capacity of apprehension and perception, with a sluggishness of
-the train of thought, a dulling of the emotions, a reduction of energy
-and the development of conduct disorders. Ranschburg in psychological
-tests noticed a lengthening of the reaction time, with a delay in the
-choice of action, the reading of words, the performance of addition,
-and the formation of judgment. The retardation was shown particularly
-in psychic processes and the association time. The reactions were,
-moreover, much more monotonous, irregular and unreliable than in the
-young. Memory tests also showed poor associations.
-
-The most advanced form Kraepelin describes as senile dementia, a
-progressive mental enfeeblement in which the loss of apprehension
-and memory becomes a conspicuous feature. The perception of external
-impressions is diminished and delayed and there is a profound disorder
-of attention. Memory of the remote past is much better than it is for
-current events. Retrospective falsification is a common symptom. The
-patient is, moreover, unable to change old viewpoints or acquire new
-ones. Delusional manifestations such as childish egotism, foolish
-suspicions or notions of impending illness develop. Grandiose ideas
-often occur, delusions of great wealth being common. These symptoms
-are transitory and come and go without apparent reason. In some cases
-the hallucinations resemble those found in the alcoholic psychoses.
-Sooner or later there is a disturbance of consciousness leading to
-a dreamlike existence suggesting a delirium. There is a noticeable
-dulling of the emotional feelings. The patients become indifferent
-and apathetic, losing interest in their surroundings, and are often
-irritable and excitable. In a certain number of cases depressive
-states develop, sometimes with suicidal tendencies. The delusions
-may be hypochondriacal or nihilistic in character. Complaints of
-persecution are common. Some of the patients show a simple, childish
-deterioration with seclusive tendencies. Stuporous or cataleptic states
-may develop. Others become uneasy, wander in the streets, remove their
-clothes, collect rubbish, or show sexual excitement. Restlessness at
-night is especially suggestive.
-
-Delirious excited states ("Senile Delirium") characterized a certain
-number of Kraepelin's cases. In these, clouding of consciousness is
-marked. The presbyophrenic complex described by Kahlbaum often occurs.
-These cases are fairly clear mentally at first, as far as their
-surroundings are concerned, but show memory disturbances, particularly
-for recent events. Orientation is lost very soon and they fail to
-recognize old friends and relatives. Fabrications are resorted to for
-the purpose of remedying these defects of memory and delusions are very
-common. Nevertheless, judgment about many things is well retained. In
-some instances, however, orientation for time, place and person is
-completely lost. Kraepelin is in doubt as to whether presbyophrenia
-should be looked upon as constituting a definite entity or only a form
-of senile insanity. It may last for years or terminate in a marked
-deterioration. In some of the senile cases arteriosclerotic changes
-in the cortex are very pronounced. This is more noticeable in the
-depressive and anxious forms and in the incoherent varieties. These
-individuals become clouded, incoherent, and deteriorate rapidly.
-
-There is also a characteristic paranoid form of senile psychosis.
-Delusions of suspicion and jealousy are common in these cases. They
-usually develop persecutory trends and often exhibit hallucinations
-of hearing. They sometimes show partial disorientation and gaps in
-the memory. The mood is usually irritable and often anxious. There is
-very likely to be a disturbance of sleep and often signs of physical
-enfeeblement. There may be neurological symptoms caused by the
-arteriosclerotic complications, such as headache, pupillary changes,
-tremors of the tongue and disturbance of the reflexes. Tremors are
-also shown in the writing. Paraphasia occurs and there may be sensory
-aphasia or apraxia.
-
-In severe cases of senile dementia Kraepelin expects to find definite
-lesions at autopsy. The brain weight is always decreased, sometimes
-to a very striking degree. The volume of the brain is reduced and the
-ventricles enlarged. The cortex is diminished in thickness, the frontal
-region being most affected. The parietal region may be involved, but
-not to any such extent as in general paresis. There may be localized
-areas of atrophy. Pachymeningitis and hemorrhagic membranes are often
-found. The microscope shows a proliferation of the glia cells and
-there is often some disturbance of the layering of the cortex. Cell
-alterations appear, with fatty degeneration, some neurones showing
-little more than a darkly colored nucleus. The glia cells are enlarged.
-There should be no marked changes in the vessels. Fatty changes in the
-ganglion cells are very noticeable. There is also some loss in the
-tangential fibres.
-
-Quite characteristic of the senile brain is the occurrence of
-the miliary plaques or "drusen" described by Redlich in 1898.
-Fischer in 1907 reached the conclusion that these "drusen" were
-pathognomonic of presbyophrenia, as he did not find them in senile
-dementia, in other psychoses or in normal brains. Hübner, however,
-noted them in alcoholics and "circular" cases as well as in normal
-individuals. Oppenheim also found them in the brains of the aged
-when no psychoses were observed. The interior of the plaque is a
-homogeneous, dark-staining, structureless mass. Sometimes there is a
-clear space around this center, with club- or spindle-shaped bodies
-in the periphery, representing remnants probably of neurones, glia
-cells or axis cylinders. The whole structure is encapsulated in glia
-fibres. These so-called plaques were spoken of by Fischer as "miliare
-Nekrosen" and by Redlich as "miliare Sclerosen." Kraepelin is of the
-opinion that they are associated either with senile cases showing
-arteriosclerotic changes or presbyophrenia. Alzheimer has described a
-senile atrophy of the brain with wedgeshaped areas showing cell loss.
-This is due to a gradual occlusion of the smaller vessels extending
-down from the meninges into the cortex, and may result in a hemorrhage,
-a softening or merely an atrophic area characterized by an absence of
-ganglion cells. He has also described another group of cases showing
-characteristic cell changes.
-
-This condition has been given the name "Alzheimer's disease" by
-Kraepelin.[160] It is marked clinically by a gradual senile deterioration
-with organic brain changes. These eases show some thought defect,
-loss of memory, confusion, and clouding. Later they become restless,
-talkative, sing and laugh, etc. Aphasic disturbances develop early,
-with paraphasia or apraxia. There are speech disturbances ending
-in a senseless jargon and writing becomes impossible. An advanced
-deterioration ensues. Physically there is a general weakness and
-uncertain gait, sometimes with epileptiform attacks. The pupillary
-reaction may be lost and evidences of arteriosclerosis usually appear.
-The disease may last for many years. At autopsy "drusen" are common
-in the cortex and almost a third of the nerve cells are found to be
-destroyed. These are replaced by darkly-staining fibril bundles. There
-is marked neuroglia reaction, particularly around the "drusen" and
-retrogressive changes are found in the vessel walls. This disease
-usually appears about the fortieth year and may be looked upon,
-Kraepelin says, as a "senium praecox," although its significance is not
-clear.
-
-He finds the senile psychoses occurring usually between the ages of
-sixty-five and eighty, although they occasionally appear before sixty.
-Seven and sixty-seven hundredths per cent of his cases were between
-sixty and sixty-five years of age; ten per cent between sixty-five
-and seventy; thirty-five per cent between seventy and seventy-five;
-27.8 per cent between seventy-five and eighty; 22.2 per cent between
-eighty and eighty-five; 10.5 per cent between eighty-five and ninety;
-and 2.78 per cent were over ninety years of age. Of 183 cases studied,
-twenty-three per cent were cases of presbyophrenia; sixty-three per
-cent of simple deterioration; eight per cent of arteriosclerotic
-origin; and the remainder, of delusional forms. More than half of the
-cases of presbyophrenia occurred in persons over seventy-five. The
-paranoid and arteriosclerotic forms occurred in younger individuals. In
-the alcoholic cases the Korsakow complex was common. The analysis of
-presenile psychoses made by Kraepelin is, to say the least, exceedingly
-interesting. Such clear-cut differentiations as he describes are,
-however, not always possible or necessary. Very few other writers have
-gone into the question so exhaustively, nor is his classification of
-these conditions generally accepted. Bleuler[161] in 1918 in discussing
-the presenile psychoses quotes Kraepelin's classification and
-also refers to Gaupp's anxious depressive forms. Under the senile
-deteriorations he describes "dementia senilis" and presbyophrenia. He
-also calls attention to the fact that Binswanger spoke of a "pre-senile
-dementia" occurring between the fortieth and fiftieth years of age and
-characterized by an emotional dulness and a diminished capacity for
-work. Bleuler speaks of the affective disturbances in advanced years
-as senile mania and melancholia, which he says may recover, the former
-frequently, the latter more rarely.
-
-The American Psychiatric Association has only attempted to cover
-the principal groupings of the characteristic senile forms. The
-differentiation of these conditions as suggested in the statistical
-manual is as follows:—
-
-"A well defined type of psychosis which as a rule develops gradually
-and is characterized by the following symptoms: Impairment of retention
-(forgetfulness) and general failure of memory more marked for recent
-experiences; defects in orientation and a general reduction of
-mental capacity; the attention, concentration and thinking processes
-are interfered with; there is self-centering of interests, often
-irritability and stubborn opposition; a tendency to reminiscences and
-fabrications. Accompanying this deterioration there may occur paranoid
-trends, depressions, confused states, etc. Certain clinical types
-should therefore be specified, but these often overlap:
-
-"(a) Simple deterioration: Retention and memory defects, reduction
-in intellectual capacity and narrowing of interests; usually also
-suspiciousness, irritability and restlessness, the latter particularly
-at night.
-
-"(b) Presbyophrenic type: Severe memory and retention defects with
-complete disorientation; but at the same time preservation of
-mental alertness and attentiveness with ability to grasp immediate
-impressions and conversation quite well. Forgetfulness leads to absurd
-contradictions and repetitions; suggestibility and free fabrication are
-prominent symptoms. (The general picture resembles the Korsakow mental
-complex.)
-
-"(c) Delirious and confused types: Often in the early stages of the
-psychoses and for a long period the picture is one of deep confusion
-or of a delirious condition.
-
-"(d) Depressed and agitated types: In addition to the underlying
-deterioration there may be a pronounced depression and persistent
-agitation.
-
-"(e) Paranoid types: Well marked delusional trends, chiefly persecutory
-or expansive ideas, often accompany the deterioration and in the early
-stages may make the diagnosis difficult if the defect symptoms are mild.
-
-"(f) Pre-senile types: The so-called 'Alzheimer's disease.' An early
-senile deterioration which usually leads rapidly to a deep dementia.
-Reported to occur as early as the fortieth year. Most cases show an
-irritable or anxious depressive mood with aphasic or apractic symptoms.
-There is apt to be general resistiveness and sometimes spasticity.
-
-"(g) Other types."
-
-The frequency of senile cases is shown by the fact that of 84,143
-admissions to the New York hospitals during a period of sixteen years,
-12,017, or 14.2 per cent, were over sixty years of age, while 8.4
-per cent were between sixty and seventy years old, and 4.5 per cent
-between seventy and eighty. Of 49,640 first admissions to the New York
-state hospitals during eight years 4,724 cases, or 9.52 per cent,
-were diagnosed as senile psychoses. They constituted 9.63 per cent of
-the admissions in Massachusetts during 1919 and 10.61 per cent of the
-18,336 admissions to twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other states. Of
-70,987 admissions to all of the institutions referred to, 6,961, or 9.8
-per cent, were senile psychoses.
-
-During a period of eight years in the New York state hospitals, when
-the present classification was not adhered to absolutely, 4,724 senile
-psychoses were divided into types as follows:—Simple deterioration,
-52.01 per cent; presbyophrenia, 5.75 per cent; delirious and confused
-states, 12.99 per cent; depressed and agitated forms, 8.25 per cent;
-and paranoid varieties, 16.23 per cent. During the same period less
-than one per cent of presenile psychoses were reported. Since the
-Association's classification has been in use the same institutions
-show the following distribution of 1,351 senile psychoses during 1918
-and 1919:—Simple deterioration, 56.24 per cent; presbyophrenia, 4.14
-per cent; delirious and confused states, 13.53 per cent; depressed
-and agitated forms, 18.65 per cent; and paranoid varieties and
-presenile forms, less than one per cent. The senile psychoses in the
-Massachusetts hospitals during 1919 were divided as follows:—Simple
-deterioration, 56.94 per cent; presbyophrenia, 7.79 per cent; delirious
-and confused states, 7.45 per cent; depressed and agitated forms, 7.11
-per cent; paranoid conditions, 18.64 per cent; and presenile forms,
-2.03 per cent. In nineteen hospitals in other states 1,823 cases
-were classified as follows:—Simple deterioration, 64.39 per cent;
-presbyophrenia, 11.62 per cent; delirious and confused states, 9.59 per
-cent; depressed and agitated forms, 4.71 per cent; paranoid conditions,
-6.91 per cent; and presenile forms, .27 per cent. The total of 6,842
-cases referred to above were, therefore, distributed as to type as
-follows:
-
- _Type_ _Per Cent_
-
- Simple deterioration 55.52
- Presbyophrenia 7.40
- Delirious and confused states 11.83
- Depressed and agitated forms 7.26
- Paranoid conditions 13.85
-
-Four hundred and nineteen cases reported by the Ohio state hospitals in
-1920 and not included in the above summary were shown as follows:—
-
- _Type_ _Per Cent_
-
- Simple deterioration 49.88
- Presbyophrenic types 6.20
- Delirious and confused forms 18.61
- Depressed and agitated conditions 7.39
- Paranoid states 15.75
- Presenile types 2.14
-
-These constituted in all 14.4 per cent of the 2,895 first admissions
-during the year, a much higher rate than that shown in other states. In
-analyzing these findings it should be borne in mind that the American
-classifications do not take into consideration presenile conditions
-as such, they being all reported with the senile psychoses, with the
-exception of involutional melancholia, which is, of course, shown
-separately.
-
-Southard[162] has called attention to the margin of error in the
-diagnosis of senile psychoses. Forty-two cases unanimously diagnosed
-as "senile dementia" were "reviewed clinically and anatomically, with
-a surprisingly low general percentage of accuracy (sixty-six per cent)
-where either cerebral atrophy or cortical arteriosclerosis or both were
-regarded as confirmatory, and with still lower percentages: (48 per
-cent) where cortical arteriosclerosis was considered essential and (38
-per cent) where cerebral atrophy was considered essential for a correct
-diagnosis." It is significant that exactly one-third of the cases
-studied were found by Southard to more properly "belong in a group of
-acute psychoses or other mental diseases occurring in old age but not
-dependent on recognizable senile changes."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE PSYCHOSES WITH CEREBRAL ARTERIOSCLEROSIS
-
-
-Sufficient weight has not been attached heretofore to the important
-influence of cerebral arteriosclerosis in the production of mental
-diseases. Unquestionably it has been a complicating factor in many of
-the generally recognized psychoses which has not been given adequate
-consideration. Its relation to involution melancholia as well as
-the presenile and senile disorders has been given a great deal of
-attention, but cannot as yet be clearly defined. Only in its syphilitic
-forms can it be looked upon as contributing to the clinical picture in
-general paresis. It is, however, productive of late deterioration in
-the chronic alcoholic conditions and in the manic-depressive psychoses
-occurring in advanced years. It plays a part frequently in the terminal
-stages of dementia praecox. In paranoia and the paranoid conditions of
-long standing it often becomes a factor to be reckoned with. Certainly
-in the differentiation of the epilepsies of the aged it must be taken
-into definite account.
-
-The importance of arteriosclerosis, a term used first by Lobstein some
-seventy-five years ago, has long been recognized. Osler in referring to
-this subject made the following interesting comment:—"To a majority of
-men death comes primarily or secondarily through this portal. The onset
-of what may be called physiological arteriosclerosis depends, in the
-first place, upon the quality of arterial tissue (vital rubber) which
-the individual has inherited and secondarily upon the amount of wear
-and tear to which he has subjected it. That the former plays the most
-important rôle is shown in the cases in which arteriosclerosis sets in
-early in life in individuals in whom none of the recognized etiological
-factors can be found. Entire families sometimes show this tendency to
-early arteriosclerosis, a tendency which cannot be explained in any
-other way than that in the make-up of the machine bad material was used
-for the tubing."
-
-Our present knowledge as to the relation of syphilis to this disease
-has not changed the significance of the observations made by Osler in
-any way. Heredity more than any other one factor undoubtedly determines
-the development of both senility and arteriosclerosis. "When," as
-Lambert[163] expresses it, "physiological involution anticipates in time
-or exceeds in direction, extent and severity normal senescence, the
-various senile and arteriosclerotic disorders are the result." It is
-as a rule only in the later stages of the disease when focal symptoms
-occur or a psychosis develops that hospital care becomes necessary.
-Practically any of the vessels of the brain may be involved and it
-frequently happens that more than one is affected either directly or
-indirectly. The neurological symptoms resulting depend entirely on the
-location and extent of the lesion. Lambert[164] has made the following
-excellent anatomical classification of the more common arteriosclerotic
-processes:—
-
- I. Incipient type.
- II. Focal types.
- (a) Trunk disorders.
- 1. Basilar-carotids.
- (b) Branch disorders.
- 1. Inferior cerebellar.
- 2. Superior cerebellar.
- 3. Posterior cerebral.
- 4. Middle cerebral.
- 5. Anterior cerebral.
- (c) Twig disorders.
- 1. Medullary.
- 2. Cortical.
-
-Some reference should be made, perhaps, to the focal symptoms resulting
-from more or less sharply circumscribed lesions which are productive of
-certain fairly well known complexes, whether due to arteriosclerotic
-softenings, hemorrhages, or growths. These have been concisely
-summarized by Barker[165] somewhat as follows:—
-
-Frontal Lobes—Lesions of the left inferior frontal in righthanded
-persons cause motor aphasia. Subcortical involvements cause word
-dumbness. Disturbances in the anterior part of the frontal region are
-sometimes associated with the Witzelsucht of the German writers—a
-tendency towards joking and witticisms.
-
-Central and Paracentral Lobules—Contralateral sensory, motor symptoms
-or a combination of the two. Monoplegias, anesthesias and Jacksonian
-epilepsies are characteristic. Contralateral tactile agnosia and
-apraxia occur, especially in lesions of the left hemisphere. An
-involvement of the left side may also cause a homolateral apraxia,
-dyspraxia or a tactile agnosia.
-
-Parietal Lobes—Lesions in the anterior part cause contralateral
-somesthetic disturbances, tactile agnosia or apraxia. Involvement of
-the left angular gyrus may cause optic aphasia or alexia; if deep
-enough, hemianopsia results. The voluntary movement of the eye may be
-interfered with.
-
-Temporal Lobe—Lesions in the posterior half of the first temporal may
-cause Wernicke's sensory aphasia and a subcortical involvement, word
-deafness. Bilateral destruction of the first and transverse temporals
-causes cortical deafness. Extensive bilateral lesions in the lower
-part of these lobes result in mind deafness. Irritative lesions in the
-uncinate gyrus lead to hallucinations of taste and smell, with smacking
-of the lips and tongue movements.
-
-Island of Reil—Lesions of the anterior part cause symptoms resembling
-Broca's motor aphasia. Lesions of the posterior part result in symptoms
-suggesting Wernicke's sensory aphasia. Transcortical motor and sensory
-aphasia may result.
-
-Occipital Lobes—Lesions of the calcarine area give rise to
-hemianopsia, and bicortical involvements lead to cortical blindness.
-Bilateral lesions of the lateral surface may cause mind blindness.
-
-Disturbances in the centrum ovale may cause monoplegias or
-monoanesthesias, and lesions in the corpus callosum, apraxic symptoms.
-Characteristic of cerebellar lesions are ataxias and disturbances of
-equilibrium, often with vertigo and paroxysmal vomiting.
-
-An involvement of the corpora quadrigemina may cause pupillary changes,
-unilateral or bilateral paralysis of eye muscles, nystagmus, visual
-disturbances, deafness and ataxia or anesthesia.
-
-Lesions of the cerebral peduncles may give rise to very characteristic
-syndromes. If the tegmentum and pes pedunculi (basis pedunculi) are
-both involved, there may be a complete hemiplegia of the opposite side
-with an oculomotor paralysis on the same side (Weber-Gubler syndrome).
-Or there may be in addition to this a marked tremor in the limbs of the
-paralyzed side (Benedikt's syndrome). A unilateral oculomotor paralysis
-may be combined with a cerebellar ataxia (Nothnagel's syndrome).
-The thalmic syndrome of Déjerine and Roussy shows a contralateral
-hemianesthesia, violent and persistent pains on the anesthetic side,
-hemiataxia, hemichorea or hemiathetosis, slight temporary hemiparesis
-and sometimes hyperesthesia. Lesions further back, possibly involving
-the internal capsule, may cause hemianesthesia of touch, pain and
-temperature senses.
-
-S. A. K. Wilson in 1912 called attention to a particularly important
-syndrome, designated by him as "progressive lenticular degeneration"
-and characterized by dysarthria, dysphagia, general tremors of the
-extremities, forced laughing and crying, muscular rigidities and
-contractures, with a slight intellectual impairment. Interesting
-features of this disease complex are that it is familial in type, but
-not hereditary, comes on early in life, usually progressing to a fatal
-termination, and is associated with a cirrhosis of the liver which
-is not alcoholic in origin. At autopsy degenerations of the nucleus
-lentiformis have been found. J. Ramsey Hunt in 1916 called attention to
-the association of both paralysis agitans and Huntington's chorea with
-lesions in the globus pallidus. Oppenheim has recently differentiated
-a striatum syndrome to which he gave the name "dystonia musculorum."
-Difficulties in writing, tremors, disturbance of the gait, rigidities,
-tonic and clonic movements of the muscles and other neurological
-symptoms are present. Several cases reported by Abrahamson in 1920
-showed definite emotional disturbances. Cecile and Oskar Vogt have
-recently (1919) studied the striatum lesions from a standpoint of both
-pathology and symptomatology. As summarized by Lhermitte[166] their work
-shows that athetosis, paralysis agitans, Huntington's chorea, dystonia
-musculorum, probably paralysis agitans and various other neurological
-syndromes are to be attributed directly to conditions involving the
-striate bodies. Prominent among these are softenings and hemorrhages
-which may result from arteriosclerosis. In view of these facts a
-careful study of the focal lesions associated with the arteriosclerotic
-disorders is exceedingly important.
-
-The pathological processes involved have been carefully studied by
-Heubner and others. He was originally of the opinion that cerebral
-arteriosclerosis was always of specific origin. Baumgarten, however,
-subsequently showed that this was not the case. The more characteristic
-changes in the larger vessels manifest themselves in the form of
-patches of atheromatous thickening so common at autopsy. As a result
-of degenerative changes in the elastica and media, and a consequent
-weakening of the vessel wall, intimal thickening takes place. This is
-not the circular, uniform, concentric involvement found in syphilitic
-processes but a localized proliferation of the intima at some one
-point. There may be an infiltration of colloid and calcareous material
-in the media. This leads to further intimal thickening. In the smaller
-vessels arteriocapillary fibrosis has been described—a uniform
-thickening of the vessel walls with a connective tissue formation.
-Endarteritis obliterans, first described by Friedländer in 1876, is
-probably always of syphilitic origin.
-
-In addition to the vascular changes in the cerebral vessels
-Kraepelin[167] finds usually atheromatous changes in the aorta and its
-branches, particularly the coronaries, with ulcerations or calcareous
-plates, hypertrophy and dilatation of the heart, myocarditis,
-interstitial nephritis and infarctions of various organs. At autopsy
-the dura and pia are usually thickened and adherent, with a general
-atrophy of the cerebral convolutions. There are often fresh
-hemorrhages under the membranes as well as cyst formations and
-dilatation of the brain ventricles. He particularly emphasizes a
-splitting of the elastica in the larger cerebral vessels with a
-thickening and tortuosity, fatty infiltration and calcareous deposits.
-Hyaline degeneration is common in the elastica and muscularis with
-fatty granular cells in the adventitia. Capillary aneurysms are often
-found. Glia proliferation is to be expected in the surrounding area. A
-condition described by Alzheimer as perivascular gliosis often occurs.
-There is a disappearance of the perivascular nervous elements with
-consequent proliferation of the neuroglia. In a general way Kraepelin
-differentiates several distinct pathological groups—a diffuse cortical
-involvement, circumscribed processes in the neighborhood of vessels,
-hemorrhages and softenings. There is also a loss of nerve fibres
-which are replaced by neuroglia. Binswanger has described a "chronic
-subcortical encephalitis" due to arteriosclerosis. This consists of an
-atrophy of the white matter due to an involvement of the deeper marrow
-vessels. Large gaps and lacunae are found in the course of the vessels.
-There is an extensive atrophy of the fibres and there may be occasional
-foci of softening. As a general rule involvement of the large vessels
-is liable to affect the medullary substance while sclerosis of the
-smaller vessels leads to cortical disturbances. It is also possible
-to have extensive lesions without mental symptoms and well developed
-psychoses with only a slight physical basis. The site of the damage to
-the vessels determines this. On the other hand, the mental condition
-may be due to cardiovascular complications resulting usually in
-anxiety psychoses. The symptomatology may be complicated by senility,
-alcoholism or syphilis.
-
-Clinically Kraepelin[168] divides the arteriosclerotic psychoses into
-deteriorations, or milder forms of mental enfeeblement, dementias,
-depressions, excitements, late epilepsies, and apoplectic dementia.
-In the milder forms there is a gradual change in the entire psychic
-personality, with a later development of more marked changes, either
-physical, mental or both. The early symptoms are a general reduction
-of the mental capacity and an impairment of memory. The patient tires
-easily and loses all evidences of energy, with no inclination to
-undertake anything new. Familiar names and dates are forgotten. Recent
-occurrences are particularly lost to memory. The real is confused with
-the false. In business the patient becomes careless and unreliable,
-overlooks important transactions and forgets appointments. There are
-often subjective feelings of impending illness. The mood becomes
-depressed, whining and tearful. Irritability and outbursts of anger
-occasionally appear, characterized by a marked emotional instability,
-varying rapidly from tears to laughter. Suicidal tendencies are
-sometimes noted. Mild confusional states may be induced by alcoholic
-indulgences. Early physical symptoms are headache, sensations of
-fulness and pressure in the head, followed by a feeling of dizziness,
-fatigue, exhaustion, debility, etc. Sooner or later, following a
-seizure of some kind, neurological signs appear—drooping of the
-mouth, lateral deviation of the tongue, weakness of an arm, dragging
-of one leg, loss of sensation on one side, ankle clonus, an increase,
-decrease or inequality of the patellar reflexes, and sometimes a
-Babinski reflex. The pupils are very likely to be unequal and sluggish
-in reaction. The features present a tired, sleepy expression and
-speech becomes tremulous and monotonous. There may be a difficulty
-in finding words, or the misuse of words. There are usually tremors
-of the fingers and movements are uncertain, the gait being unsteady.
-Romberg's symptom may be present. Dizzy spells and fainting attacks
-also occur, sometimes followed by genuine convulsions. Apoplectiform
-seizures may be observed, with unconsciousness for hours or days. These
-may be followed by sensory or motor aphasia, unilateral paralysis with
-or without disturbances of sensation, hemianopsia, alexia, agraphia,
-asymbolism or apraxia. Cardiac disturbances with anxieties are often
-complications. These apoplectiform and other severe attacks sometimes
-occur a long time after mental symptoms have appeared. They are likely
-to recur, mental deterioration progressing rapidly with the repetition
-of the seizures.
-
-Apprehension is much disturbed and memory weakened, in the advanced
-cases of deterioration. The patients cannot remember anything for
-more than a short time. They become disoriented as to time, place and
-person and forget their own names. Genuine "confabulation" sometimes
-appears. There are often confusional and delirious states. The mood is
-frequently depressed or anxious, sometimes irritable or quarrelsome
-and at times humorous. There is a group of cases showing genuine
-depressions, usually with hypochondriacal delusions, sometimes with
-delusions of persecution, self-accusation, and ideas of sinfulness.
-Even delusions of grandeur are observed. Hallucinations are not
-infrequent in these cases. States of excitement may intervene with
-occasional delusions and confused attacks. These excitements are
-usually of the agitated, restless type, sometimes with suicidal
-inclinations. Stuporous or even cataleptic states may follow. In the
-highest forms of excitement sensory or motor aphasia may develop,
-often with speech disturbances, sometimes of a genuine scanning
-type. Paraphasias are common. The writing is ataxic or paragraphic.
-Ideational or motor apraxia often is a symptom. Cyanoses and other
-evidences of general arteriosclerotic involvement appear. There may be
-an albuminuric retinitis. Albumen and sometimes sugar appear in the
-urine. The radials and temporals are thickened or hardened and cardiac
-murmurs are often found. Blood pressure is greatly increased in many
-instances, although Romberg found it in only ten per cent of his cases.
-Sleep is usually interfered with to a marked degree.
-
-In a certain number of the more advanced cases of arteriosclerosis late
-epilepsies appear. The attacks usually begin between the forty-fifth
-and sixty-fifth years. There may be fainting spells or genuine
-convulsions recurring at frequent intervals. These may be associated
-with brief periods of delirium or may even occur without loss of
-consciousness. Forgetfulness and mental enfeeblement soon appear in
-such cases. They also show physical changes with tremors, disturbed
-reflexes, paralyses, increased blood pressure, etc. Alcoholism seems
-to be a strongly predisposing factor in this form of arteriosclerotic
-disorder. Kraepelin found that the epileptic attacks almost invariably
-appeared in cases which showed a previous history of alcoholic excesses.
-
-In nearly half of his cases Kraepelin found apoplectiform attacks
-appearing without any marked psychosis preceding them. In some
-instances no mental symptoms appeared for many years. The attacks
-were, however, immediately followed, usually, by periods of confusion
-and clouding, sometimes of excitement and violence. The acute
-disturbance as a rule subsides rather quickly and clears up partially
-or completely. Usually there remains a memory defect, an increased
-fatigability and a depressed or irritable mood. These he refers to as
-cases of apoplectic deterioration or mental enfeeblement. Recurrent
-apoplectiform seizures may result in excitement, depressions or
-deliria. Gradual progressive deterioration is the usual picture. As a
-general rule the cases with marked excitements, depressions and deliria
-are of short duration and have a bad prognosis.
-
-Kraepelin finds that the arteriosclerotic psychoses appear a decade
-earlier than the senile psychoses. Less than one per cent developed at
-the age of forty; 2.7 per cent at forty-five; 3.7 per cent at fifty;
-7.4 per cent at fifty-five; twenty-two per cent at sixty; twenty-two
-per cent at sixty-five; 18.57 per cent at seventy; twelve per cent at
-seventy-five, etc. In the cases observed at a particularly early age
-he believes heredity to be a very important factor. Seventy-one and
-five-tenths per cent of his cases were men. Sixty-two per cent of the
-men and fifty-three per cent of the women were less than sixty-five
-years of age. The epileptic and demented forms appear earlier than the
-apoplectiform variety. Arteriosclerotic involvement of the smaller
-vessels occurs earlier than that of the larger arteries. Kraepelin
-found alcoholism more common in the history of his cases than syphilis.
-He is uncertain whether specific infections can produce a genuine
-arteriosclerosis or not.
-
-Erb has shown that by the experimental injection of adrenalin into
-the blood stream artificial arteriosclerosis can be produced, with
-an increase of blood pressure, splitting of the elastica, thickening
-of the vessel walls and aneurysm formation. Thoma considers alcohol,
-tobacco, coffee, tea, and infectious poisons important causes. Cramer
-found the disease more common in innkeepers, actors, directors,
-officers, bankers and parliamentarians. Alcohol, syphilis, overwork
-and high living are important etiological factors. Kraepelin assumes
-the existence of certain metabolic products in the blood, possibly the
-result of infections which affect blood pressure and the structure of
-the vessel walls during a period of lowered resistance.
-
-The pathological changes associated with the arteriosclerotic psychoses
-are quite clearly demarcated. Clinical differentiations, however, are
-not so well established. There is some question as to the justification
-of the separate entities into which Kraepelin would divide the
-arteriosclerotic processes. For statistical purposes the Association's
-committee felt that a determination of the frequency of occurrence of
-the arteriosclerotic group as a whole is all that should be attempted
-at this time. The following suggestions were offered in the manual as
-to the delimitations of these conditions:—
-
-"The clinical symptoms, both mental and physical, are varied depending
-in the first place on the distribution and severity of the vascular
-cerebral disease and probably to some extent on the mental make-up of
-the person.
-
-"Cerebral physical symptoms, headaches, dizziness, fainting attacks,
-etc., are nearly always present, and usually signs of focal brain
-disease appear sooner or later (aphasia, paralysis, etc.).
-
-"The most important mental symptoms (particularly if the
-arteriosclerotic disease is diffuse) are impairment of mental tension,
-_i.e._, interference with the capacity to think quickly and accurately,
-to concentrate and to fix the attention; fatigability and lack of
-emotional control (alternate weeping and laughing), often a tendency
-to irritability is marked; the retention is impaired and with it there
-is more or less general defect of memory, especially in the advanced
-stages of the disease, or after some large destructive lesion occurs.
-
-"Pronounced psychotic symptoms may appear in the form of depression
-(often of the anxious type), suspicions or paranoid ideas, or episodes
-of marked confusion.
-
-"To be included in this group are the psychoses following cerebral
-softening or hemorrhage, if due to arterial disease. (Autopsies in
-state hospitals show that in arteriosclerotic cases softening is
-relatively much more frequent than hemorrhage.)
-
-"Differentiation from senile psychosis is sometimes difficult
-particularly if the arteriosclerotic disease manifests itself in
-the senile period. The two conditions may be associated; when this
-happens preference should be given in the statistical report to the
-arteriosclerotic disorder.
-
-"High blood pressure, although usually present, is not essential for
-the diagnosis of cerebral arteriosclerosis."
-
-In the 49,640 admissions to the New York state hospitals during a
-period of eight years the 2,318 cases diagnosed as psychoses with
-arteriosclerosis constituted 4.67 per cent of the total number. In
-twenty-one hospitals in other states there were 18,336 admissions, of
-which 492, or 2.68 per cent, were cases of arteriosclerosis. On the
-other hand, the Massachusetts hospitals show 9.63 per cent of their
-first admissions during 1919 as arteriosclerotic psychoses. There would
-appear to be no way to harmonize these dissimilar findings unless it
-is merely a question of differentiation between the senile psychoses
-and those due to arteriosclerosis. In a total of 70,987 admissions to
-all institutions, there were 3,100 cases of arteriosclerotic psychoses,
-a percentage of 4.36. It is worthy of note that in all of the various
-groups of institutions the percentage of senile and arteriosclerotic
-cases combined is practically the same. This would strongly suggest
-varying standards of diagnosis which will undoubtedly be reconciled in
-time. It is only recently that any great amount of attention has been
-given to the psychoses due to arteriosclerosis and it must be confessed
-that there has been entirely too great a tendency to dismiss without
-further interest as senile psychoses all mental disturbances occurring
-in persons of advanced years. On the other hand, the custom of basing
-a diagnosis of arteriosclerotic psychosis on the mere presence of an
-increased blood pressure without the existence of any of the other
-symptoms which characterize that condition indicates, if nothing else,
-the necessity of a greater uniformity in our methods of diagnostic
-procedure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-GENERAL PARALYSIS
-
-
-General paralysis of the insane, general paresis, or dementia
-paralytica, as it is variously known, from the standpoint of etiology,
-symptomatology and pathology, is unquestionably the most clearly
-differentiated and sharply circumscribed of the psychoses at this
-time. Its history, like its pathology, is inseparable from that of
-syphilis—a subject of never failing interest and importance, from the
-time of the first appearance of that word in a poem (Syphilidis, sive
-morbi Gallici) written by the Italian physician and poet Fracastoro
-in 1530. Guarinoni referred to epilepsies due to syphilis in the
-seventeenth century. Frequent allusions are made in the literature of
-that period to manifestations of the disease in the nervous system.
-Thomas Willis called attention to the association of paralysis with
-mental disorders as early as 1672. A form of mania due to syphilis was
-described by Sanché in 1777. Jelliffe found references in literature
-to a specific leptomeningitis in 1766 and paraplegias in 1771. Haslam,
-a pharmacist at the Bethlem Hospital, is said to have given a fairly
-accurate description of general paresis in 1798. A French writer, A.
-L. Bayle, is usually spoken of as having clearly differentiated the
-disease in 1822. The work of Calmeil, "De la Paralysie Consididérée
-chez les aliénés," in 1826, was, however, the first elaborate
-monograph ever written on this important psychosis and established its
-recognition as an entity. Griesinger looked upon it as a combination of
-different mental conditions. Esquirol is credited with having been the
-first to describe the speech defect now considered such an important
-symptom. Baillarger is said to have introduced the term dementia
-paralytica in 1846.
-
-The etiology of the disease was a subject of controversy for many
-years. The early writers ascribed it to sexual excesses, masturbation,
-alcoholism, heredity, overwork, and various other causes. It was looked
-upon by some as one of the sequelae of syphilis and was described as a
-"meta syphilitic" disease by Möbius and a "para syphilitic" disorder
-by Fournier. It was noted by many as occurring only in the more
-intellectual and highly developed races and was therefore referred
-to by Krafft-Ebing as a disease of "syphilization and civilization."
-Both Bayle and Esquirol mentioned syphilis very casually in their
-writings. Sandras in 1852 spoke of it as one of the principal causes
-of general paresis. Its etiological importance was, however, first
-given serious consideration by Esmarch and Jessen, prominent Danish
-writers, in 1857. Their views were corroborated by Steenberg in 1860
-and by Kjellberg in 1863. The theory of an exclusively specific origin
-was not generally accepted, however, for many years. Rieger published
-elaborate statistics in 1886 showing that the incidence of general
-paresis was sixteen or seventeen times as great in syphilitics as it
-was in healthy persons. The fact that a definite history of infection
-was not available in many cases led to considerable doubt. Such eminent
-authorities as Charcot, Binswanger and Déjerine went so far as to
-deny that there was any relation between the two diseases. That some
-uncertainty was warranted by the information at hand is shown by the
-fact that Kraepelin[169] found a history of syphilis in seventy-eight
-per cent of his cases, while Sprengeler reported 41.5 per cent, Räcke
-57.3 per cent, Torkel fifty-one per cent, Marcus seventy-six per cent,
-Houghberg 86.9 per cent, and Alzheimer over ninety per cent. This is
-not at all surprising in view of the statement made by Kraepelin[170]
-that Hirschl could find a definite history of an initial lesion in
-only thirty-six per cent of his cases of tertiary syphilis. Hudovernig
-found that 42.3 per cent of the women suffering from syphilis did
-not know when they were infected. In discussing this subject in 1897
-Krafft-Ebing reported the inoculation of nine paretics with syphilitic
-virus without the appearance of luetic symptoms in any instance,
-although reinfections have been mentioned by other authorities.
-
-One of the first advances which contributed materially to the
-ultimate solution of the general paresis problem was the study of the
-cerebrospinal fluid by Widal, Sicard and others after the introduction
-of lumbar puncture by Quincke in 1890. This led eventually to
-discoveries which were of great diagnostic importance. The isolation
-of the spirochaeta pallidum, now known as the treponema pallidum, by
-Schaudinn in 1905 settled the question for all time as to the cause
-of syphilis. The adaptation of the principle of complement fixation,
-the so-called Bordet-Gengon phenomenon, to the study of syphilitic
-fluids by Wassermann, Neisser and Bruck in 1906 practically removed all
-doubt as to the relation between that disease and general paresis. The
-demonstration of the treponema in the cortex of paretics by Moore and
-Noguchi in 1913 was practically the only other contribution necessary.
-They have since been found in the cerebrospinal fluid. Notwithstanding
-the fact that general paresis must now be looked upon as being a
-manifestation of syphilis beyond all peradventure of a doubt, it is
-nevertheless true that we are unable to explain why that disease does
-not always yield to specific treatment. This is undeniably the case at
-this time. Just why this should be so cannot be explained in the light
-of our present knowledge. It is, however, presumably for the same reason
- that tabes and other diseases of the cord and nervous system,
-the specific origin of which cannot logically be questioned, are
-equally resistant to salvarsan and mercury, whatever that reason may be.
-
-As soon as the findings of the Wassermann reaction became evident,
-renewed efforts on the part of clinicians to find a cure for general
-paresis naturally followed. One of the first suggested was the
-Swift-Ellis treatment. This was based on the injection of salvarsanized
-blood serum into the subdural space of the spinal canal. Results were
-exceedingly encouraging for a while, but time showed that this was
-not the solution of the problem. Intravenous salvarsan administration
-was next tried. This, too, gave excellent results at first. The cases
-which were apparently cured, however, eventually relapsed sooner or
-later in almost every instance. The intraspinous use of salvarsan in
-minute doses has been no more successful than the Swift-Ellis method.
-Intracranial subdural treatments have been tried and salvarsan has
-even been injected directly into the lateral ventricles. The logical
-conclusion is either that the destruction of the nervous tissue has
-already reached a stage which is beyond repair or that the treatment
-does not reach the site of the disease.
-
-Clinically we are on much safer ground. In his third
-edition Krafft-Ebing[171] referred to dementia paralytica as
-"periencephalomeningitis diffusa," the term originally employed by
-Calmeil. "Clinically this disease is manifested as a rule as a chronic
-disease of the brain with vasomotor, psychic, and motor, functional
-disturbances, progressive in course, with a duration of from two to
-three years and nearly always a fatal termination."
-
-Régis,[172] before the cause of the disease was definitely
-determined, defined general paralysis as a "cerebral disorder,
-sometimes cerebro-spinal (diffuse chronic interstitial
-meningo-myelo-encephalitis) essentially characterized by progressive
-symptoms of dementia and paralysis (paralytic dementia) with which
-are frequently associated various accessory symptoms, and especially
-an insanity of the maniacal, melancholic, or circular type (paralytic
-insanity)."
-
-Since the time the disease was described by Bayle, general paresis
-has usually been spoken of as being represented clinically by three
-different stages. White[173] speaks of a prodromal period, one of full
-development and a terminal stage. In the first period he emphasizes
-the importance of physical symptoms, more particularly the oculomotor
-and tendon reflex disturbances. These include the sluggish reaction
-to light (28.3 per cent) or an actual Argyll-Robertson pupil (45
-per cent), with an increased, decreased or absent knee-jerk, the
-exaggerated form being the most common. The mental symptoms may be
-entirely overlooked in the first stage. There is a gradual progressive
-deterioration of the personality, with a loss of efficiency,
-impairment of memory, and failure of judgment. There may be episodes
-of excitement, depression or delirium, with or without hallucinations
-and delusions, the latter being either hypochondriacal or grandiose.
-"The demented type, without marked delusions or sensory falsifications,
-is the truly typical variety of the disease and the dementia the
-basal element of all forms" (White). There may be an incipient speech
-disorder and beginning tremor.
-
-Characteristic of the second stage is a marked increase of the physical
-symptoms already described, together with the appearance of seizures.
-Muscular weakness develops and the patient often shows a marked gain in
-weight. The mental symptoms are merely an exacerbation of those shown
-in the first stage. The expansive variety constitutes the classic form
-so often spoken of. There may be agitations, depressions, alternations
-of these symptoms or even paranoid forms.
-
-In the third stage there is a continued exaggeration of the physical
-signs of the disease with an advancing mental deterioration. The
-patient becomes helpless and practically speechless, contractures
-and bedsores develop, and death often occurs as the result of an
-unusually violent seizure. The description of this disease in the
-three traditional stages so often referred to is practically without
-significance and of very questionable value. It is, of course, a
-well-known fact that the disease may progress rapidly to a termination
-in two or three years or may continue for an almost indefinite period
-of time. It may manifest itself, furthermore, in various ways. The
-physical signs show much greater constancy than the mental symptoms.
-
-Kraepelin[174] describes demented, depressed, expansive and agitated
-forms of general paresis. The "demented" form he finds to be much
-more common than the others. This is characterized by a progressive
-mental deterioration with "paralysis." The onset is marked by a poverty
-of thought, forgetfulness, moodiness, instability and indifference.
-Consciousness gradually becomes somewhat clouded and the patient
-more or less disoriented. Transitory delusions supervene. These are
-of a depressive type, somatic or expansive in nature. The delusional
-ideas as a general rule are rather childish. Memory disorder becomes
-conspicuous and delirious excitements occur at times. All of this leads
-to a gradual deterioration. Speech defects appear sooner or later and
-conduct disorders are common. Kraepelin finds that fifty-three per
-cent of his Heidelberg cases were of the demented form. At Munich they
-constituted fifty-six per cent of the men and seventy-three per cent
-of the women. Forty-four per cent of the cases died within the first
-two years.
-
-The "depressive" form of paresis as described by Kraepelin is
-characterized by emotional depression or anxiety with delusions of
-various kinds. It may begin with a general sensation of illness and a
-gradual weakness of memory or intellect followed by symptoms of mental
-dulness. The unpleasant ideas are hypochondriacal in nature and often
-of an extravagant type. The delusions are quite frequently somatic in
-origin. Sometimes these are associated with self-accusation or there
-may be complaints of persecution. Hallucinations occur at times. In
-spite of this deplorable state of affairs a marked indifference on
-the part of the patient is the rule. Excitement, violence or suicidal
-impulses nevertheless occur, and stuporous states are described.
-Kraepelin found that the depressive form constituted twelve per cent
-of his cases at Heidelberg. He is of the opinion that the duration is
-short, much more so than in some of the other types of the disease.
-Fifty-eight and six-tenths per cent died within the first two years.
-Convulsions, however, were less frequent.
-
-The "expansive form," according to Kraepelin, may begin with an
-initial depression or show excitement early. Megalomanic symptoms of
-the most extravagant variety soon appear. The marked mental weakness
-is, however, very manifest. Hallucinations of sight and hearing
-are frequently present but transitory. The mood is usually happy,
-although hypochondriacal ideas occur for short periods now and then.
-Excitability is more common, sometimes with unusual violence. The
-course tends to a complete deterioration, with occasional exacerbations
-of excitement. Kraepelin found that the expansive form constituted
-about thirty per cent of his Heidelberg cases. Convulsions were less
-frequent and remissions more common than in other types. He found that
-this form of the disease, moreover, occurred later in life. Forty per
-cent died within the first two years. Some cases, on the other hand,
-were of long duration; one of seven, another of eight, and one of
-fourteen years. He also noted mixed varieties with alternations between
-excitement and depression.
-
-The "agitated" form as described by Kraepelin is that type in which
-extreme excitements predominate. It is often of sudden onset. Grandiose
-ideas, even more extravagant than those of the expansive form, appear.
-A flight of ideas may be observed at times and stupor often intervenes.
-The most severe cases are those which have been referred to by some
-writers as "galloping" paresis. An actual delirium may lead to an early
-termination in death. The agitated type constituted 6.3 per cent of
-Kraepelin's cases. He finds this condition somewhat analogous to the
-delirious states due to alcoholism.
-
-Remissions are more common in the agitated and expansive forms of the
-disease and may vary in duration from a few months in some instances
-to one of fourteen years reported by Dobrschansky. Nissl confirmed
-the diagnosis of paresis at autopsy in a case observed by Tuczek
-which had been stationary for nearly twenty years. Alzheimer reported
-another with a known duration of thirty-two years. Kraepelin has found,
-however, that fifty per cent of his paretics die within the first two
-years. He reports unequal pupils in from fifty to sixty per cent of
-those examined. He also finds that pupillary irregularity is one of the
-earliest physical signs in many individuals. Complete loss of light
-reaction was found in from fifty to sixty per cent of all cases, with
-a reduced range of reaction in from thirty to forty per cent. He found
-epileptiform or other attacks present in from thirty to forty per cent
-of those studied. Decreased or absent patellar reflexes were noted
-about twice as often as were increased reflexes. In from two-thirds
-to three-fourths of all cases he found both the posterior column and
-lateral tracts of the cord involved.
-
-The characteristic physical signs noted in all textbooks are described
-in detail by Kraepelin[175] as common to all of the clinical forms of the
-disease. The inequality, irregularity and immobility of the pupils,
-the speech defect, difficulty in writing, tremor of the lips, facial
-muscles and tongue, the marked changes in both superficial and deep
-reflexes, the alterations in the gait, the muscular incoordination,
-the presence of the Babinski reflex or ankle clonus, the sensory,
-motor, vasomotor and trophic disturbances constitute a combination of
-physical signs which is to be found practically nowhere else within the
-domain of psychiatry. The seizures, either epileptiform, apoplectiform
-or resembling syncopes, are almost pathognomonic when taken into
-consideration with the physical signs alone.
-
-The pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid is from three to five times as
-great as in normal individuals. The albumen content of the fluid is
-increased about six times (Kraepelin). The increase in the globulin
-content has been very frequently referred to in the literature of
-general paresis. Kraepelin states that it also occurs in tabes,
-syphilis, brain abscess, occasional cases of extra medullary tumors,
-multiple sclerosis and in some infectious diseases. He attaches a great
-deal of importance to the increase in the cellular elements of the
-spinal fluid. "Cases with repeated normal findings are so rare that the
-correctness of the diagnosis may be justly doubted." The Wassermann
-findings no longer require comment. The colloidal gold test of Lange
-is equally well known. Nowhere else in psychiatric procedure does the
-laboratory render such valuable diagnostic assistance as is the rule in
-cases of general paresis. A positive Wassermann reaction in the spinal
-fluid, the presence of an increase in the albumen and globulin
-content, with a marked lymphocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid and a
-positive gold test, is quite sufficient evidence on which to base a
-definite diagnosis. The results of an examination of the spinal fluid
-for diagnostic purposes at the time of autopsy are highly unreliable.
-An increase in the cell count, which may be misleading, is found in
-the spinal fluid of non-paretics in all cases after death. The number
-of cells depends entirely on the time of examination. It is not at
-all unusual to find from one to three hundred per cubic millimeter
-when a count is made from twenty-four to forty-eight hours after
-the death of the patient.[176] Another interesting fact is that the
-presence of sugar always shown by Fehling's solution during life
-cannot be demonstrated postmortem, at least after the lapse of a few
-hours.[177] The significance of this change is not clear. Nor is the
-increase in the globulin content of the spinal fluid, when taken alone,
-pathognomonic of either general paresis or syphilis, as was pointed
-out in 1909.[178] One of the most elaborate studies ever made of the
-spinal fluid, that of F. W. Mott, shows that this increase is due to
-degenerative processes of the nervous system which may be due to a
-variety of causes.[179]
-
-In no other psychosis do we find such clear-cut pathological findings
-at autopsy as are readily demonstrable in general paresis. We are very
-largely indebted to the exhaustive researches of Nissl and Alzheimer,
-(1904)[180] for our information on this subject. Macroscopically
-adhesions of the dura to the calvarium and of the pia to the cortical
-substance are quite common. Opacities of the meninges are practically
-always present. Pachymeningitis hemorrhagica, externa or interna, is
-common, often with the formation of extensive hemorrhagic membranes.
-Ependymitis may be readily observed in the floor of the fourth and
-lateral ventricles. There is usually a reduction in the general brain
-weight, with atrophy of various parts, usually one side or the other
-of the cerebrum. The sulci are widened and the frontal lobes are often
-noticeably smaller in size. Less frequently the temporal, parietal
-or occipital regions are affected. Often there are localized foci of
-atrophy with cyst formation. The ventricles are frequently widely
-dilated, with an increase of cerebrospinal fluid.
-
-Microscopic examination always shows a more or less diffuse
-leptomeningitis with a markedly thickened pia infiltrated with
-lymphocytes and plasma cells. In the superficial layers of the cortex
-there is a neuroglia proliferation with characteristic "spider cells."
-There is an obvious disturbance of the normal layering of the cortex
-which is very striking. The adventitia of the vascular walls shows
-an extensive infiltration by lymphocytes and particularly by plasma
-cells which are often very numerous. Rod cells or "stäbchenzellen"
-as described by Alzheimer are very noticeable as are also satellite
-cells or free nuclei. The neurones are often diminished in number
-and frequently show the "acute" or "grave" alterations described
-by Nissl, as well as shrinkage, sclerosis, pigmentary deposits,
-vacuolization, etc. The characteristic axonal alteration originally
-described by Turner as occurring in central neuritis is sometimes
-observed. Degeneration of the nerve fibres may be brought out by
-proper staining processes. Intimal thickening of the vessel walls and
-a capillary proliferation or budding should also be mentioned. Foci
-of softening sometimes are to be found in the cortex. The presence
-of occasional gummata is now conceded, although formerly denied by
-Alzheimer. The changes in the cerebellum are not essentially different,
-but are usually not so conspicuous. In the cord a pachymeningitis and
-leptomeningitis are usually present, as well as the vascular changes
-described above. The important findings, however, are the degeneration
-of the posterior columns and lateral tracts, or mixed forms involving
-both of these. Owing doubtless to defects in staining technique, the
-demonstration of the treponema is difficult and unsatisfactory. It
-must be admitted that some of the above histopathological changes in
-themselves, the cell alterations, for instance, do not, when considered
-alone, prove the existence of general paresis. The whole picture as
-shown by the microscope, however, leaves no room for argument. The
-postmortem diagnosis is absolutely conclusive.
-
-A consideration of the subject of general paresis without some
-reference to the juvenile form, first described by Clouston in 1877,
-would be manifestly incomplete. Although this term may be applied
-to a type of the disease acquired in childhood, it is usually used
-as referring to hereditary syphilis. Symptoms generally appear at
-or before the age of puberty. As a general rule the child is more
-or less defective mentally from birth, although this is not always
-true. Ordinarily the course of the disease is one of progressive
-deterioration, with an occasional episode of excitement. Convulsive
-seizures are frequent, and contractures are often noted. These cases
-are likely to be mistaken for idiocy and overlooked. The duration
-usually extends over a period of several years. The pathology is
-practically the same as that of the adult form of the disease. Almost
-invariably a positive Wassermann is obtained on examining the blood of
-the parents. It is equally interesting to note that the children of
-syphilitic parents often show a positive Wassermann reaction without
-any evidence of paresis, or at least for some time before it develops.
-
-The only question remaining at this time is whether general paresis
-and cerebral syphilis are separate and distinct disease entities. For
-many years this was held to be the case. Certainly gummata and other
-syphilitic processes are to be found in the brain where there is no
-such pathological picture as characterizes general paresis. In any
-event the latter must be recognized as a very well defined form of
-syphilis of the nervous system. In view of the very definite etiology,
-symptomatology and pathology of general paresis, the various clinical
-differentiations of Kraepelin and other writers are looked upon by many
-as not being of very great importance. In any and all clinical types,
-however described, we are unquestionably dealing with the same sharply
-circumscribed disease process. This subject is one of academic interest
-only.
-
-The American Psychiatric Association in its classification of psychoses
-made no attempt to differentiate types. For purposes of statistical
-study the following suggestions appear in the manual:—
-
-"The range of symptoms encountered in general paralysis is too great
-to be reviewed here in detail. As to mental symptoms, most stress
-should be laid on the early changes in disposition and character,
-judgment defects, difficulty about time relations and discrepancies in
-statements, forgetfulness and later on a diffuse memory impairment.
-Cases with marked grandiose trends are less likely to be overlooked
-than cases with depressions, paranoid ideas, alcoholic-like episodes,
-etc.
-
-"Mistakes of diagnosis are most apt to be made in those cases having
-in the early stages pronounced psychotic symptoms and relatively
-slight defect symptoms, or in cases with few definite physical signs.
-Lumbar puncture should always be made if there is any doubt about
-the diagnosis. A Wassermann examination of the blood alone is not
-sufficient as this does not tell us whether or not the central nervous
-system is involved."
-
-A study of the statistics of the thirteen New York state hospitals
-in the "pre-Wassermann" days and before we had acquired our present
-accurate knowledge of the pathology of general paresis shows that there
-were 84,152 admissions during the fourteen years ending on October
-1, 1888. Of this number 5,697, or 6.76 per cent, were diagnosed as
-general paresis. In the same hospitals, from 1912 to 1919 inclusive,
-6,374 cases of general paresis were reported,—12.71 per cent of
-the 49,640 first admissions. During the years 1918 and 1919 that
-disease constituted 13.19 per cent of all admissions. This apparent
-increase undoubtedly is due to the fact that modern methods have
-materially improved facilities for accuracy of diagnosis. It is not
-at all probable that the admission rate has doubled during the period
-in question for any other reason. In the Massachusetts hospitals
-during the year 1919, only 7.90 per cent of the first admissions were
-diagnosed as general paresis. There was, however, an unusually high
-rate of cerebral syphilis. In twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other
-states, reports based on the present classification show a total of
-18,336 admissions, mostly in 1917, 1918 and 1919. Of this number 1,233,
-or 6.72 per cent, were cases of general paresis. Thus, in a total of
-70,987 admissions based on the present classification of psychoses as
-used by the American Psychiatric Association there were 7,845 cases
-of general paresis in all,—a percentage of 11.05. It is, of course,
-a well-known fact that general paresis is largely a psychosis of
-densely populated communities. This is readily shown by the New York
-statistics. During the year 1919, 9.6 per cent of the admissions at
-Binghamton were cases of general paresis. The percentage at Buffalo
-was 15.5; at Gowanda, 17.3; Hudson River (Poughkeepsie), 9.0; at
-Middletown, 3.7; Rochester, 8.6; St. Lawrence (Ogdensburg), 9.2;
-Utica, 10.1; and Willard, 13. In the institutions caring for the insane
-of New York City 16.3 per cent were reported at the Manhattan State
-Hospital, 13.5 per cent at Kings Park, and 14.7 per cent at Central
-Islip. The percentage at the other institutions, except at Buffalo
-and Gowanda, which care almost entirely for residents of the city of
-Buffalo, is determined very largely by the transfer of patients from
-the hospitals of New York City and the metropolitan district. General
-paresis constitutes approximately ten per cent of the commitments in
-the city of Boston. On the other hand, we find an admission rate of
-2.3 per cent for the Vermont State Hospital (1917 and 1918), 1.5 per
-cent for the Central State Hospital, Virginia (1919), 2.5 per cent for
-the Columbia State Hospital (South Carolina) (1918), and a period of
-two years at the Spencer State Hospital, West Virginia (1917 and 1918)
-with 262 admissions and no cases of general paresis. Of 2,895 first
-admissions reported by the Ohio state hospitals for the year ending
-June 30, 1920, 438, or 15.12 per cent, were cases of general paresis.
-It is interesting, at least, to note that Letelier[181] showed an
-admission rate for this disease of seven per cent at the Casa de Orates
-at Santiago, Chili.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE PSYCHOSES WITH CEREBRAL SYPHILIS
-
-
-The indications are at the present time that the psychiatry of the
-future will not deal with a consideration of general paralysis and
-cerebral syphilis, as such, but will differentiate preferably between
-parenchymatous and interstitial, or mesoblastic, syphilitic processes
-of the nervous system. The retention of the designation general
-paresis is little, if anything, more than a concession to the claims
-of tradition. Cerebral syphilis may be said in a general way at this
-time to include all syphilitic involvements of the brain other than
-general paresis, which must be accorded the precedence due to priority
-of recognition if nothing else. In the light of our present knowledge
-we may speak in rather definite terms in considering cerebral syphilis
-from the standpoint of pathology. On an anatomical basis it is usually
-divided into three forms,—the meningitic, the endarteritic and the
-gummatous types. It is, of course, not to be understood that these
-represent separate and distinct processes. Combined forms are nearly
-always to be expected and the different types practically always
-coexist more or less.
-
-The onset of the disease may be expected anywhere from one to ten or
-even fifteen years from the date of the initial lesion. The early
-appearance of cerebral symptoms would indicate brain syphilis as
-a general rule rather than general paresis. Oppenheim[182] in his
-second edition says that cerebral syphilis often develops within a
-year after infection, a majority of the cases being noted within two
-years. He finds it a very rare occurrence after ten years. "Because,"
-as Barker[183] puts it, "of the lawlessness of the occurrence of
-syphilitic lesions in the central nervous system, all clinical
-classifications of these cases are based only on the predominance
-of certain associations of lesions." Certainly the pathology of the
-disease is quite varied in its manifestations.
-
-The meningeal form is the one most often encountered. This may appear
-on the convexity or on the base of the brain and is spoken of as
-being either localized or diffuse in character. It may or may not be
-associated with gummatous formations or cortical vascular involvement.
-The essential process is a leptomeningitis. The pia is thickened,
-opaque and adherent to the cortex. The microscope shows the presence
-of inflammatory elements consisting largely of lymphocytes and plasma
-cells which may be confined entirely to the meninges or may extend
-downward to the superficial cortical layers directly or by extension
-along the adventitial sheaths of the vessels. An examination of the
-cortex, however, shows a limitation of this invasion to the immediate
-neighborhood of the meninges. The cortical involvement, in other words,
-is entirely secondary and is not the important part of the pathological
-picture that it always is in general paresis. The meningeal condition
-is practically the same in the two diseases but more likely to be
-localized in syphilitic processes. Dunlap[184] calls attention to
-the important fact that in a group of cases occurring many years
-after infection he found involvements of the deeper cortical layers
-strongly suggesting general paresis pathologically and impossible of
-differentiation clinically. In these cases, even in the deep cortical
-vessel walls, occasional lymphoid and plasma cells were found, as
-well as typical syphilitic endarteritis in some instances. There is
-frequently, in addition to the simple meningeal involvement at the
-base, a widespread gummatous infiltration of the pia-arachnoid or in
-some instances numerous miliary granulomas. This is especially common
-in the region of the chiasm and may involve the origin of various
-cranial nerves, obviously in such cases determining the symptomatology
-to be expected. The optic and oculomotor nerves particularly are
-affected. The large vessels at the base are often involved either by
-syphilitic inflammatory processes or by direct invasion of their walls
-by gummas. An extensive specific meningo-encephalitis may lead either
-to foci or extensive areas of actual softening.
-
-The endarteritis which occurs in syphilis is characteristic and
-diagnostic. This has been studied exhaustively by Heubner. The smaller
-vessels show an infiltration of lymphoid and plasma cells in their
-adventitia, as well as in the perivascular lymph spaces. The larger
-vessels show a great thickening of the intima which is consecutive, or,
-as Lambert described it, "girdling" in character. This is associated
-with a splitting of the membrana elastica. The proliferated intimal
-tissue is very susceptible to degenerative processes. Thrombosis and
-the formation of anemic infarctions may follow the obliteration of
-the vascular channels. The involvement of the larger vessels may lead
-to very distinctive focal symptoms. Thus, as Barker[185] has pointed
-out, there may be an obliterating process in the middle cerebral with
-hemiplegia and aphasia, invasion of the basilar artery with pontile or
-bulbar symptoms, or an involvement of the posterior cerebral may
-lead to hemianesthesia or hemianopsia, while an affection of the
-vertebral may show a unilateral bulbar paralysis with hemianesthesia
-of the same side and a hemiplegia of the opposite side. The extensive
-involvements of the base are usually meningeal, with gumma formation
-and with a secondary endarteritis in addition. Large solitary gummata
-may, moreover, occur practically anywhere in the brain, although
-they are somewhat unusual. On microscopical examination they show a
-characteristic infiltration of the periphery and a caseous center. They
-are more likely to occur in the course of a large vessel.
-
-The symptomatology of brain syphilis necessarily varies with the
-nature, extent and location of the lesion. In the earlier stages of
-a diffuse meningitis the prominent symptoms to be expected first are
-headache and dizziness. In an individual with a definite specific
-history a persistence of such symptoms should suggest salvarsan
-therapy. Vomiting is a common complication. Cranial nerve palsies,
-optic neuritis or hemiplegia in such a case would, of course, be
-conclusive. Stuporous, confused or delirious states may occur, with or
-without hallucinations. When the syphilitic process is an extensive
-one with a widespread meningitis or gummatous involvement of the base,
-numerous focal symptoms are to be expected. Choked disc, optic tract
-lesions, paralysis of the ocular muscles, facial neuralgias, facial
-palsies, deafness, or anesthesias may occur. Mental deterioration
-naturally advances with the progress of the disease, but the
-personality is much better preserved than in general paresis. Periods
-of unconsciousness are not infrequent and convulsive attacks may
-appear. These may be general or local and paralyses often follow. These
-may assume the form of a hemiplegia or may involve only certain groups
-of muscles. Ptosis is often noted. Paralysis of other eye muscles is
-common, and pupillary rigidity is sometimes a symptom. Hemianopsia
-and diplopia are often observed: An important feature of the disease
-is the fact that these conditions are more or less transitory and
-rarely become permanent. Apoplectiform attacks followed by hemiplegia
-are results of gummatous growth or may be associated with areas of
-softening. These are due to vascular disturbances. Aphasia is not an
-unusual occurrence. Hemiplegias appearing suddenly in individuals under
-forty years of age are likely to be of specific origin. Epilepsies
-developing in later years should always be viewed with suspicion.
-The Korsakow symptom complex has been found in some cases of brain
-syphilis. Memory defect is present in most instances. When a marked
-mental deterioration takes place it is usually late in the disease.
-Argyll-Robertson pupils are infrequent in cerebral syphilis. Speech
-defect is practically never so conspicuous as it is in general paresis.
-Writing difficulties are also much less marked. Euphoria and grandiose
-delusions occasionally occur in brain syphilis but much less frequently
-than in general paresis. Hemiplegias, when they occur, are much more
-likely to be permanent than they are in general paresis. Paranoid
-complexes are sometimes clinical features of the disease and if they
-persist strongly suggest syphilis rather than paresis.
-
-There should be a positive Wassermann reaction in the blood serum
-of both diseases. It is more persistent, however, in the syphilitic
-form. In the spinal fluid the reverse is the case and negative
-results are often noted in cerebral syphilis. There is usually some
-increase sooner or later in the albumen and globulin content in both
-diseases. There may be a lymphocytosis in both, although usually
-much greater in general paresis. A typical colloidal gold reaction
-is more indicative of general paresis than syphilitic conditions.
-Several clinical groupings have been proposed. Plant, for instance,
-speaks of various forms of mental deterioration, pseudo-paresis,
-paranoid types, epileptiform varieties, symptomatic disturbances and
-affective reactions suggesting manic-depressive insanity. The important
-contribution made by Kraepelin[186] to the literature of this subject
-is worthy of careful study. He describes a syphilitic neurasthenia,
-a mental disturbance due to the psychic effect of the disease, and
-various conditions resulting from gummatous growths. His most important
-group is a syphilitic pseudo-paralysis, which he divides into a simple
-dementia, delirious forms, expansive types and a variety showing
-the characteristic Korsakow syndrome. He also speaks of syphilitic
-apoplexies and epilepsy, tabetic psychoses and syphilitic paranoid
-conditions.
-
-Syphilitic neurasthenia as described by Kraepelin is an affection
-which is likely to occur early in the disease and manifest itself
-shortly after the initial infection. In the milder forms, evidences of
-nervousness appear,—difficulty of thought, irritability, disturbances
-of sleep, pressure in the head, with indefinite and changeable abnormal
-sensations and vague pains. Later, feelings of anxiety, depression,
-dizziness, mental dulness, a difficulty in finding words, transient
-weaknesses, disturbances of sensation, nausea and a slight rise of
-temperature are observed. He admits that there is some question as
-to whether this constitutes a clinical entity and if so, whether it
-is directly due to the infectious process or is to be attributed to
-psychic disturbances. Nervous reactions of various kinds are to be
-found in syphilitics without psychosis. Thus, Meyer in sixty-one cases
-of secondary syphilis found eighteen with sluggish pupils, thirty-two
-with increased reflexes, and twelve with general nervous manifestations
-such as headache, vertigo, etc., appearing shortly after the period of
-infection. In only five of these patients were there any evidences of
-an organic disease. In twelve tertiary cases he found indications of an
-involvement of the nervous system in only two. In thirty examinations
-following lumbar puncture a lymphocytosis and an abnormal protein
-content were observed. Buttino, in a study of thirty syphilitics,
-reported that fourteen showed a diminished light reaction within one
-year of the time of infection. Later, after unmistakable symptoms
-of cortical involvement have existed for some time, neurasthenic
-complexes are common. These take the form of a difficulty of thought,
-absentmindedness, forgetfulness, and a reduction of interests. The mood
-may be irritable, surly, depressed, anxious, fearful, and changeable,
-showing at the same time considerable indifference and dulness.
-Some are quiet and reserved while others are excited and violent.
-Severe headaches may be common, more often at night. There are also
-occasional attacks of dizziness or fainting, disturbances of sensation,
-sleeplessness, sensitiveness to alcohol, and occasional diplopia. These
-are preliminary to more severe disturbances, which simulate nervous
-exhaustion, and are not strikingly unlike the earlier stages of general
-paresis. They may be differentiated by examination of the spinal fluid.
-
-Another group of cases is characterized by conditions due to an
-increased intracranial pressure. These are marked by thoughtlessness,
-dulness, and indifference terminating in a complete lethargy and
-somnolence, during which the patient occasionally demonstrates that he
-is not so badly damaged mentally as he appears. Physically there may be
-weakness, twitchings, fainting spells, convulsions, ataxias, paralyses,
-dysesthesias, choked disc, etc. The basis of this disturbance is a
-gummatous growth, its location, of course, largely determining the
-symptoms. Kraepelin suggests the possibility of getting this disease
-picture in a syphilitic as the result of a growth of some other kind—a
-glioma or endothelioma.
-
-Slightly more than a third of the cases encountered in his clinic
-showed the symptom-complex which he describes as syphilitic
-pseudo-paresis. As a rule these cases are of the simple demented
-type with a general mental deterioration. The patients show some
-disturbance of apprehension and attention, tire easily and are quite
-forgetful and dull. Delirious states may supervene, with clouding,
-confusion and disorientation, as well as hallucinations of sight and
-hearing. Memory is markedly impaired and confabulation may be noted.
-Judgment is not so much interfered with as in paresis. The patients
-have some insight into their condition and complain of headache,
-difficulty of thought, etc. Occasional delusions are observed. These
-may be of a hypochondriacal type or grandiose in character. As a rule
-the mood is cheerful, but it may be depressed, anxious or fearful,
-with suicidal tendencies. Sleep is disturbed and there is considerable
-restlessness, usually at night. With all of these symptoms there
-are the physical signs of a severe cortical involvement, dizziness,
-fainting spells, twitchings, seizures or frank convulsions, occasional
-paralyses, etc. Disturbance of sensation and motion may appear with
-a perfectly clear consciousness at times. Aphasic symptoms are not
-uncommon. The eye muscles are affected in many cases, with ptosis,
-double vision, strabismus, etc. The pupils are usually immobile or
-sluggish, frequently only one being involved. The field of vision is
-narrowed and choked disc is common. Speech is affected, as well as
-writing. All kinds of paralyses occur and they persist for some time.
-The gait may be spastic or ataxic. The reflexes are usually increased
-and often different on the two sides. Romberg's sign often appears. A
-Babinski reflex and ankle clonus may be found. The patients are usually
-untidy in their habits. Blood pressure is increased in some cases and
-the pulse slow. There may be variations in temperature. Often there are
-evidences of old syphilitic processes on the skin surface, enlarged
-glands, residuals of choroiditis, etc. Usually Kraepelin found a
-positive Wassermann reaction in the blood, but not in the spinal fluid,
-which showed a slight cell increase, often from fifteen to twenty per
-cubic millimeter, rarely in larger numbers. He found the course of the
-disease rapid, but with occasional remissions. There may be a sudden
-collapse and death. It usually terminates, however, in a profound
-dementia, often with a hemiplegia and epileptiform seizures. There are
-other conditions suggesting general paresis. Marcus, for instance,
-has described a delirious, confusional state occurring usually in
-the first year after the infection, sometimes later, but as a rule
-developing suddenly. The patients become sleepless, confused, anxious
-and disoriented. Numerous hallucinations appear, both of hearing and
-vision, usually of a very unpleasant type. The patients often become
-excited and violent or even suicidal. Physical signs more or less
-similar to those already described are to be expected. According to
-Marcus, these cases always respond to syphilitic treatment.
-
-A small group of cases, as pointed out by Westphal, shows excitements
-strongly simulating the expansive type of general paresis. This form
-begins ordinarily with a depression, sometimes appearing suddenly,
-followed by irritability, marked restless excitement, headache, and
-fainting attacks. Usually there are hallucinations, and delusional
-ideas of a grandiose type. Above all there are pupillary disturbances,
-increased or decreased reflexes, seizures, paralyses, etc., strongly
-resembling paresis. All of these symptoms may disappear under
-syphilitic treatment in time. Some cases, however, last for years,
-dying as a rule in a seizure. Kraepelin also describes at some length a
-group showing the Korsakow complex. He suggests that the fact that this
-condition usually develops in alcoholics is not without significance.
-
-Kraepelin is of the opinion that the mental picture is the conspicuous
-and characteristic feature of general paresis standing out more
-prominently than the physical evidences of the disease. In syphilitic
-pseudo-paresis, on the other hand, there is a clearer sensorium without
-such marked disorientation, and memory is not usually so much affected.
-At the same time, the physical signs are relatively more prominent,
-although the speech difficulty and writing defects may not be so
-marked. The pupils sometimes show no changes. Hemiplegias with ankle
-clonus and a Babinski reflex are, however, disproportionately common.
-The eye muscles are much more often involved than they are in general
-paresis. Loss of pain sense is not so noticeable. An advanced form of
-deterioration of many years standing is against a diagnosis of paresis
-and favors cerebral syphilis. In these cases the physical signs drop
-somewhat into the background. There are, nevertheless, stationary cases
-of general paresis which can be differentiated with great difficulty if
-at all. The development of pseudo-paresis is slower and more irregular.
-After a seizure and a paralysis there may be a long remission. The
-disease, furthermore, does not, like general paresis, always terminate
-in death.
-
-Kraepelin finds the apoplectiform type of brain syphilis very common.
-After a few premonitory symptoms such as headache, dizziness,
-irritability, weakness of memory, etc., a typical apoplexy takes place,
-leaving a hemiplegia with or without a speech defect. This sometimes
-occurs without any loss of consciousness. The patient presents the
-appearance of an ordinary hemiplegic with increased reflexes on one
-side and ankle clonus followed by a Babinski reflex, etc. Writing is
-usually affected as well as speech. There may not be another attack
-for some years. There is, however, a progressive mental deterioration.
-Occasional confusional states or excitements may be met with. In
-the meanwhile, numerous physical signs appear, papillary changes,
-disturbances of the reflexes, ptosis, tremors, hemianopsia, etc.
-Epileptiform attacks may occur. The blood pressure is usually quite
-high. There is an increase in the cells in the spinal fluid, often with
-a negative Wassermann, although the blood serum is positive. Death
-usually results from a seizure. Three-fourths of Kraepelin's cases
-developed before the age of forty-five, which, of course, assists
-materially in the diagnosis.
-
-In younger individuals usually, cerebral syphilis may manifest itself
-in the form of an epilepsy. Kraepelin is of the opinion that these
-conditions usually result from endarteritic involvements. In their
-development they show nothing differing in any way from an ordinary
-epilepsy. The attacks are usually mild at first, gradually increasing
-in severity, and are much aggravated by alcohol. There are, however,
-the usual physical signs of brain lues and later speech defects appear.
-There is eventually an emotional and intellectual deterioration. The
-changes in the spinal fluid are those described as characteristic of
-the other form of syphilis.
-
-Kraepelin describes the paranoid forms as very uncertain in type and
-not so well defined. Hallucinations and delusions play the principal
-part with physical disturbances in the background. They become more or
-less prominent, however, eventually. The patient is usually anxious,
-restless, suspicious and develops delusions with characteristic ideas
-of jealousy on a sexual basis. Full-fledged persecutory trends also
-appear, usually with numerous hallucinations. Occasionally delusions
-of sin and self-accusation are noted, although ideas of grandeur
-mixed with complaints of persecution are more common. Consciousness
-remains undisturbed as a rule and there is no disorientation. The
-mood is changeable, at times depressed, tearful, anxious, irritable,
-complaining, but often cheerful and self-satisfied. There is
-usually more or less emotional dulness, with an indifference to the
-surroundings. The emotional life is shallow and superficial. Sudden
-excitements may occur at times with outbursts of anger. There are
-usually no striking conduct disorders. There may be occasional seizures
-of a mild form, fainting attacks, dizziness, rarely epileptiform
-attacks or slight apoplectiform symptoms. Sooner or later the physical
-signs of brain syphilis develop. The course of the disease is slow.
-Similar pictures are noted in tabes. The therapeutic test is not to
-be relied upon too strongly in making a diagnosis or differentiating
-between paresis and syphilis. It must be remembered that after all
-we are dealing here with one disease process. It has been found that
-in many syphilitics, even in recent cases, a positive Wassermann
-reaction, an increase in the cell count or in the protein content may
-occasionally be demonstrated in the spinal fluid.
-
-In a study of 428 cases of neurosyphilis treated in Boston, Raeder[187]
-reported that 129, or practically thirty per cent, showed definite
-improvement, both physical and mental. He did not make any extravagant
-claims as to final results to be expected. "The therapia praesens of
-neurosyphilis is but a transition state in rational syphilography.
-Medical science has discovered several good clues which must be
-followed up; and others ferreted out and run down before the solution
-of the problem is complete. Indeed the successful treatment of
-paresis and tabes, as well as general vascular syphilis and visceral
-tertiaries, such as the crippling cradio-pathia, etc., may ultimately
-be realized in the field of preventive medicine. With chemotherapy,
-however, Ehrlich has doubtless found the most vulnerable approach to
-the treponemiatic diseases, but further research is necessary and other
-combinations must be found before the life of this anthropophagus pest
-is successfully snuffed out."
-
-Warthin[188] at autopsy found evidences of active syphilis in a series
-of forty-one inactive or "cured" cases investigated by him. Eleven of
-these had been treated, were supposed to have recovered and showed
-no syphilitic manifestations at the time of death. Five had received
-an extended course of salvarsan therapy and in twenty-five there
-was no history of syphilis at all. Spirochaetes were demonstrated
-by the Levaditi method in thirty-six of the forty-one cases—in the
-aorta in thirty-two, in the testes in thirty-one, in the liver in
-four, in the adrenals in six, in the pancreas in six, in the spleen
-in one and in the nervous system in five. In some of these cases the
-Wassermann reaction was reported as negative. Warthin concluded that
-cured syphilis in many if not all instances is in a latent condition,
-spirochaetes of a low virulence still remaining active.
-
-For purposes of statistical study the American Psychiatric Association
-has not attempted any clinical differentiation of the various types
-of this disease, a procedure which was felt to be inadvisable at
-this time. The following suggestions appear in the manual as to the
-classification of psychoses due to cerebral syphilis:—
-
-"Since general paralysis itself is now known to be a parenchymatous
-form of brain syphilis, the differentiation of the cerebral
-syphilis cases might on theoretical grounds be regarded as less
-important than formerly. Practically, however, the separation of the
-non-parenchymatous forms is very important because the symptoms, the
-course and therapeutic outlook in most of these cases are different
-from those of general paralysis.
-
-"According to the predominant pathological characteristics, three types
-of cerebral syphilis may be distinguished, viz.: (a) Meningitic, (b)
-Endarteritic, and (c) Gummatous. The lines of demarcation between
-these types are not, however, sharp ones. We practically always find in
-the endarteritic and gummatous types a certain amount of meningitis.
-
-"The acute meningitic form is the most frequent type of cerebral
-syphilis and gives little trouble in diagnosis; many of these cases
-do not reach state hospitals. In most cases after prodromal symptoms
-(headache, dizziness, etc.) there is a rapid development of physical
-signs, usually cranial nerve involvement, and a mental picture of
-dulness or confusion with few psychotic symptoms except those related
-to a delirious or organic reaction.
-
-"In the rarer chronic meningitic forms which are apt to occur a long
-time after the syphilitic infection, usually in the period in which
-we might expect general paralysis, the diagnostic difficulties may be
-considerable.
-
-"In the endarteritic forms the most characteristic symptoms are those
-resulting from focal vascular lesions.
-
-"In the gummatous forms the slowly developing focal and pressure
-symptoms are most significant.
-
-"In all forms of cerebral syphilis the psychotic manifestations are
-less prominent than in general paralysis and the personality is much
-better preserved as shown by the social reactions, ethical sense,
-judgment and general behavior. The grandiose ideas and absurd trends of
-the general paralytic are rarely encountered in these cases."
-
-It is only of comparatively late years that the hospitals of this
-country have shown the frequency of psychoses due to cerebral syphilis
-in their reports. Statistical studies indicate that such mental
-conditions are quite unusual as compared with other well recognized
-clinical entities. In a total of 49,640 first admissions reported by
-the New York state hospitals during a period of eight years only 342,
-or .67 per cent, were reported as mental diseases due to cerebral
-syphilis. The Massachusetts hospitals during 1919 reported only
-twenty-seven cases, a percentage of .89. Twenty-one hospitals in
-fourteen other states, in a total of 18,336 admissions, showed only 124
-cases (.67 per cent) of cerebral syphilis. This represents, therefore,
-a total of 70,987 admissions with only 493 diagnosed as psychoses due
-to cerebral syphilis,—a percentage of .69. When this is compared
-with eleven per cent as shown by the admissions for general paresis
-it is probably a very fair index of the comparative frequency of the
-two diseases in our institutions. It is interesting to note that the
-incidence of cerebral syphilis as shown by the hospitals of the various
-states is almost exactly the same. The admission rate for the Casa de
-Orates in Santiago, Chili, in 1918, as shown by Letelier, was .90 per
-cent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE PSYCHOSES WITH HUNTINGTON'S CHOREA, BRAIN TUMOR AND OTHER BRAIN OR
-NERVOUS DISEASES
-
-
-Huntington's chorea is said to have been referred to first by C. O.
-Waters of Franklin, N. Y., in Dunglison's "Practice of Medicine" in
-1842. An article on the subject by Irving W. Lyon also appeared in
-the _American Medical Times_ in 1863. The name by which the disease
-is now generally known was the result of an elaborate description of
-its symptomatology by George Huntington in the _Medical and Surgical
-Reporter_ in 1872. He particularly called attention to the fact that
-it is hereditary in origin, occurs in adult life, is associated
-with suicidal tendencies and often exhibits mental symptoms. On
-the important subject of heredity Huntington made the following
-observation: "If one or both of the parents have shown manifestations
-of the disease, and more especially when these manifestations have been
-of a serious nature, one or more of the offspring almost invariably
-suffer from the disease if they live to adult life; and if by any
-chance these children get through life without it, the thread is broken
-and the grandchildren or great grandchildren may rest assured that they
-are free from the disease. Unstable and whimsical as the disease may
-be in other respects, in this it is firm; it never skips a generation
-to manifest itself in another; as soon as it has yielded its claims,
-it never regains them." A well known monograph on the subject by Osler
-appeared in 1894.
-
-McCarthy[189] refers to the mental condition associated with this
-disease as "a severe and gradually progressive deterioration,
-ultimately ending in absolute dementia. In some cases the mental defect
-is noted from the onset of the symptoms, in others the mentality may
-remain unimpaired for years. Mental deterioration is the rule, and it
-is associated with a loss of memory and a tendency to self-destruction
-which gradually develops. When the mental degeneration is well marked,
-outbreaks of violence are sometimes noted. In one of the writer's
-patients, as the disease progressed, the clinical picture of paresis
-was presented. The chronic delusional state is more often noted than
-would be inferred from Huntington's description." Hamilton,[190] who
-made a clinical study of a considerable series of cases in 1907,
-expressed the opinion that mental deterioration occurs in the majority
-of instances before the onset of choreiform symptoms. He found a
-special tendency to deterioration in the cases appearing early in
-life, while irritability and delusional ideas were more often observed
-in those developing in later years. Delusions of persecution and
-deterioration, however, were symptoms more or less common to both
-groups. Diefendorf,[191] in a study of twenty-eight cases in 1908,
-called attention particularly to the irritability with occasional
-outbursts of violence as well as attacks of despondency. He emphasizes
-emotional deterioration and indifference.
-
-Kraepelin[192] also refers to the fact that the mental symptoms may
-precede the choreiform manifestations in appearance, sometimes by a
-number of years. The patients become forgetful, defective in judgment,
-somewhat dull, show a poverty of thought and an incapacity for orderly
-activities. Generally there is an emotional depression, often with
-irritability and more rarely euphoric symptoms. Delusions gradually
-develop. These are of a persecutory nature, although ideas of grandeur
-appear at times. Suicidal tendencies are common. Disturbances of
-perception and memory may be very pronounced. The relation of the
-patient to his environment becomes very much confused. In some cases,
-on the other hand, the mental symptoms are not very striking. Anxious
-states, outbursts of anger or emotional excitements may appear at
-times. Appetite and sleep are often interfered with. The pathology of
-this disease is not characteristic. There may be a chronic meningitis
-or extensive atrophies. The cells of the third layer of the cortex,
-according to Kraepelin, are decreased in number with an increase of
-glia nuclei. The remaining cells are shrunken with deeply staining
-processes, and there is a considerable loss of tangential fibres.
-Sclerotic changes with thickened walls are noted in the blood vessels.
-Hyaline degeneration and miliary hemorrhages have been observed,
-although Nissl and Alzheimer found no vascular lesions worthy of note.
-The cortical changes, according to Räcke, are more pronounced in the
-central convolutions, being much less conspicuous in the frontal and
-occipital regions. Alzheimer found the corpus striatum particularly
-involved. Here he noted a striking cell loss, with glia proliferation
-but no vascular changes. D'Ormea, according to Kraepelin, traced the
-disease through five generations in one family and Browning went as far
-back as two hundred years in another.
-
-The observations on the subject of Huntington's chorea in the
-statistical manual of the American Psychiatric Association are as
-follows:—
-
-"Mental symptoms are a constant accompaniment of this form of chorea
-and as a rule become more marked as the disease advances. Although the
-disease is regarded as being hereditary in nature, a diagnosis can be
-made on the clinical picture in the absence of a family history.
-
-"The chief mental symptoms are those of mental inertia and an emotional
-change, either apathy and silliness or a depressive irritable reaction
-with a tendency to passionate outbursts. As the disease progresses the
-memory is affected to some extent, but the patient's ability to recall
-past events is often found to be surprisingly well preserved when the
-disinclination to cooperate and give information can be overcome.
-Likewise the orientation is well retained even when the patient
-appears very apathetic and listless. Suspicions and paranoid ideas are
-prominent in some cases."
-
-Statistical reports from American institutions show that comparatively
-few cases of Huntington's chorea are committed. In 49,640 first
-admissions to the New York state hospitals only forty-eight, or .09 per
-cent, were diagnosed as Huntington's chorea during a period of eight
-years. The admission rate to the Massachusetts hospitals during 1919
-was exactly the same. In twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other states
-twenty-four cases (.13 per cent) in 18,336 admissions were reported as
-Huntington's chorea. There were only seventy-five cases (.1 per cent)
-in 70,987 admissions to forty-eight hospitals in sixteen different
-states.
-
-
-_Psychoses with Brain Tumor_
-
-Brain tumors are more common perhaps than is generally understood.
-Cushing[193] shows that they were found in fifty-five, or 1.7 per cent,
-of 3,150 autopsies at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. He refers to Siedel,
-who observed them in 1.25 per cent of his cases in Munich and states
-that Blackburn found them in about two per cent of 1,642 autopsies at
-the St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington. He also quotes Bruns as
-saying that two per cent of all neurological cases show intracranial
-growths. In the first twenty-five hundred surgical conditions admitted
-to the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston eight per cent were
-diagnosed as brain tumor. Cushing found that 66.6 per cent of 130
-carefully studied growths were gliomata. Nearly four per cent were
-endotheliomas. In another series of seventy cases he found twenty-seven
-gliomas (38.5 per cent), seventeen adenomas (twenty-four per cent),
-seven endotheliomas (ten per cent), five interpeduncular and mixed
-growths (seven per cent), and other forms in smaller percentages. Many
-of the endotheliomas have undoubtedly been included in the past with
-the sarcomas. This may also be said of gliomas.
-
-According to Cushing, growths in the brain may give rise to no
-disturbance whatever, show well defined focal signs, occasion only
-general manifestations, or have both general and focal symptoms,
-depending on the location of the neoplasm. General symptoms may be
-briefly summarized as follows:—headache, vomiting, choked disc,
-vertigo, drowsiness, convulsions, disturbances of the pulse rate,
-respiration and temperature, as well as mental disorders. The focal
-signs depend wholly on the site of the growth. Cushing mentions the
-following symptom complex as resulting from lesions of the frontal
-lobes:—"Indifference, unpunctuality, mental enfeeblement, loss of
-memory and power of attention, change in disposition with more or less
-marked irritability or taciturnity or obstinacy or jocularity, etc.,
-often a rambling speech, lack of realization of the illness, and change
-in the general conduct of life with habits of untidiness. These, in
-greater or less degree, characterize most of the cases, although it is
-often astonishing to find how inconspicuous the symptoms may be with a
-very extensive growth. They may often be of rather abrupt onset and not
-until the situation of the lesion is definitely disclosed and careful
-interrogation made into the patient's previous mental state is it
-possible to learn that in all probability some mental alteration has
-been of long standing."
-
-Bruns did not find psychoses associated very often with frontal
-lesions. Jacobi, however, in reviewing the literature of growths in
-that region, found mental symptoms in forty-nine per cent. Schuster
-observed them in from fifty to sixty per cent of all brain tumors.
-Redlich[194] described mental conditions as being either incidental and
-not related to the growth, or definitely caused by it, and was even of
-the opinion that the neoplasm could in some instances be the result of
-a psychosis. Two of Redlich's patients, moderately alcoholic, showed a
-typical Korsakow syndrome. He refers to the fact that in cases reported
-by Oppenheim, Friedrich and Fürstner, "Witzelsucht," or the tendency to
-joke, disappeared after growths were removed from the frontal region.
-A patient of Begerthal, who had hallucinations, delusions and somatic
-symptoms, recovered after a tubercle was excised from the paracentral
-lobule. A case of Friedrich's which showed an alteration of the
-personality, erotic symptoms, sudden explosive laughter, poor memory,
-etc., recovered after a sarcoma was removed from the right frontal
-lobe. A patient of Thoma's after three attacks of mental depression
-showed a gliosarcoma in the occipital lobe at autopsy. Schuster, Bruns
-and Schönthal have reported cases of brain tumor with hysterical
-manifestations.
-
-Redlich described the psychoses associated with cerebral growths
-as being epileptiform in character and origin and resembling
-post-epileptic psychoses in their symptomatology, with irritability,
-excitement or violence, confusion, delirium and hallucinations, often
-followed by partial amnesia. Epileptic manifestations may occur in the
-form of equivalents during the development of the growth. Bernhardt and
-Oppenheim have called attention to episodes of vertigo, irritability,
-excitement, clouding and occasional delirium with amnesia following
-intense paroxysms of headache. These attacks also strongly suggest
-the characteristics of epileptic psychoses. Nothnagel, Bernhardt,
-Oppenheim, Schuster, Ziehen and others attribute the mental symptoms
-associated with brain tumor to increased intracranial pressure
-producing an anaemia. Klippel, Maillard, Vigouroux, Kaplan and others
-believe that they are due to toxins originating in the growth. This
-view is based largely on the appearance of psychoses similar to the
-Korsakow syndrome. Knapp in 1906 called attention to the prominence of
-mental symptoms in growths occurring in the anterior portion of the
-corpus callosum. These may be associated with intellectual defects,
-apraxia, speech disturbances and stupor. Gianelli found mental
-disturbances in 209 of 318 cases examined.
-
-Kraepelin[195] attributes the mental symptoms of growths to an injury
-of the brain structure, changes in intracranial pressure, circulatory
-disturbances, and the absorption of toxic substances. A growth of
-considerable size but of slow development may permit of a readjustment
-of pressure, etc., and show few symptoms. On the other hand, a
-small neoplasm on account of its site or rapidity of growth may be
-accompanied by profound mental disturbances resulting from chemical
-irritation, obstruction of the aqueduct of Sylvius, or circulatory
-interferences. Kraepelin quotes Schuster (1902) as finding psychotic
-symptoms in all cases of growths in the corpus callosum, in two-thirds
-of those of the hypophysis, in one-third of those of the cerebellum and
-in one-fourth of the cases with involvement of the brain stem. These he
-looks upon as pressure symptoms except in the case of the callosal
-neoplasms. Schuster was of the opinion that growths in the cortex
-usually lead to actual psychoses and those in the deeper areas to
-dementia. He found a general mental deterioration in 423 out of a total
-of 775 cases of brain tumor. The patients were indolent, inattentive,
-clumsy, forgetful, dull, tired easily and lost more and more their
-capacity and inclination for sustained exertion. Thought, decision and
-mental processes generally, required an unusual amount of effort. The
-patients usually became somewhat confused and disoriented in regard to
-time, place and person, as well as incoherent in speech. In many cases
-there is a marked memory disturbance with a tendency to fabrication
-suggesting Korsakow's psychosis. Delirious states with hallucinations
-sometimes accompany growths in the posterior lobes. Kraepelin has also
-observed hallucinations in cases with tumor of the cerebellum. Many
-develop hypochondriacal ideas, others have delusions of persecution or
-self-accusation and suicidal tendencies. Rarely there are delusions of
-grandeur. The mood is usually anxious, depressed and at times
-irritable or apathetic. Occasionally the patients may, on the other
-hand, be cheerful in spite of the hopeless condition they are in.
-They may even show distractibility, flight of ideas, volubility and
-excitement. There is more often a childish elation with a tendency to
-joking and facetiousness. Schuster found this more common in frontal
-involvements. Kraepelin also called attention to restlessness and
-excitements often leading to violence. This may alternate with mental
-dulness and cataleptic states. The patients may repeat words and make
-meaningless response to questions, strongly suggesting katatonia.
-Mental dulness becomes more and more marked, however, even reaching
-a stuporous stage. To this is added, according to the location of
-the growth, focal symptoms of various kinds—headache, disturbance
-of vision, seizures, paralyses, aphasia, agraphia, articulatory
-disturbance, ataxia, etc. Special symptoms arise where psychogenic
-factors play a part,—excitements with paralyses or disturbance of
-perception, etc. Hysterical stigmata may appear. Cases with growths in
-the frontal region occasionally simulate general paresis but should be
-distinguished without difficulty.
-
-The Association's statistical manual has the following to say of
-psychoses with brain tumor:—
-
-"A large majority of brain tumor cases show definite mental symptoms.
-Most frequent are mental dullness, somnolence, hebetude, slowness in
-thinking, memory failure, irritability and depression, although a
-tendency to facetiousness is sometimes observed. Episodes of confusion
-with hallucinations are common; some cases express suspicions and
-paranoid ideas.
-
-"The diagnosis must rest in most cases on the neurological symptoms,
-and these will depend on the location, size and rate of growth of
-the tumor. Certain general physical symptoms due to an increased
-intracranial pressure are present in most cases, viz.: headache,
-dizziness, vomiting, slowing of the pulse, choked disc and interlacing
-of the color fields."
-
-The number of cases reaching hospitals for mental diseases is, of
-course, small. In 49,640 first admissions to the New York state
-hospitals in eight years there were sixty-seven cases (.14 per cent)
-of psychoses with brain tumor. In 18,336 admissions to twenty-one
-hospitals in fourteen other states there were eighteen cases (.09 per
-cent) diagnosed as psychoses with brain tumor. There were ninety-three
-cases (.13 per cent) in 70,987 first admissions to forty-eight
-hospitals for mental diseases in sixteen different states.
-
-
-_Psychoses with Other Brain or Nervous Diseases_
-
-Cerebral hemorrhages, thrombosis and embolism are more or less
-intimately associated etiologically, pathologically and clinically.
-They all bear a rather definite relation to the general question of
-arteriosclerosis and may all lead to cerebral softening. Apoplexy is
-a term which was employed by Aristophanes, Demosthenes and Sophocles
-and has been in general use for centuries. It was known to Chaucer and
-was referred to in Shakespeare's works ("Henry IV"). It was studied
-very elaborately by Sydenham and many other early writers. Charcot and
-Bouchard in 1864 called attention to the relation existing between
-miliary aneurysms of the cerebral vessels and hemorrhages. In a study
-of the cerebral vascular lesions at the University College Hospital,
-London, Jones (_Brain_, 1905) found records of one hundred and sixty
-cases occurring during a period of sixty-five years. Of these, 123
-showed hemorrhages; twenty-four, thrombosis; and thirteen were due to
-embolism.
-
-Thomas[196] states that: "The symptoms following acute vascular lesions
-of the brain, whether the process be the rupture of a vessel or its
-occlusion, are in many respects identical; and clinically it is often
-impossible to determine which process has been effective." He calls
-attention to the fact that in thrombosis the final closure of a vessel
-may occur suddenly and the symptoms develop with great rapidity. On
-the other hand, the rupture of a vessel may mean the escape of only a
-small quantity of blood and after an embolism the circulation is not
-always stopped immediately. In an analysis of 401 apoplectic attacks
-Thomas found no loss of consciousness in 202 cases, although it was
-interrupted or markedly disturbed in 199. Jones found a complete loss
-of consciousness in 47.7 per cent of 201 cases of cerebral embolism
-and a partial disturbance in sixty per cent. He reported consciousness
-affected in seventy-five per cent of his cases of cerebral hemorrhage
-and in 45.5 per cent of those of thrombosis. When it occurs it is
-usually not the initial symptom in his experience, being preceded by
-headache, vertigo, weakness in certain parts of the body, etc. An
-analysis of the cases of embolism reported by Virchow, however, showed
-a sudden loss of consciousness as the initial symptom to be the general
-rule. Gowers is of the opinion that an initial softening is a more
-common occurrence than hemorrhage.
-
-In the young, apoplectic attacks are usually due to cerebral softening,
-thrombosis following acute disease or embolism resulting from
-endocarditis. Between the ages of twenty and forty apoplexies usually
-mean syphilitic thrombosis. In the later decades of life, either
-hemorrhage, thrombosis, embolism or softening may occur. Thomas[197]
-collected from various hospitals, statistics of 840 cases. Of these,
-499 showed hemorrhages and 341 softenings. He is of the opinion that
-the presence of premonitory symptoms for some days indicate thrombosis,
-while shorter prodromal periods point to a hemorrhage. Rapidly
-developing coma suggests hemorrhage, while a widespread paralysis
-without much disturbance of consciousness is more common in thrombosis.
-A marked fall of temperature and rise of blood pressure as a rule
-means a hemorrhage. Repeated convulsions are more often associated
-with softening or embolism. If the symptoms indicate a capsular lesion
-it favors hemorrhage, and if of a cortical type, softenings are
-more likely. A positive Wassermann reaction suggests thrombosis or
-softening. The presence of endocarditis with heart murmurs points to
-embolism. Thomas finds that, while the patient may recover from either
-of these conditions without apparent intellectual defect, he is liable
-to be petulant, emotional, depressed and tire easily.
-
-In psychoses following hemorrhage, thrombosis and embolism
-Kraepelin[198] as a rule finds very little relation between the nature
-of the lesion in question and the symptoms to be expected. Immediately
-following the seizure the patients become dull, clouded, confused
-and disoriented, and peculiar in their behavior. This is followed by
-an active excitement with loud cries, resistiveness and struggling.
-These acute disturbances usually subside, leaving, however, evidences
-of the arteriosclerosis or syphilitic endarteritis which caused the
-hemorrhage or thrombosis. Embolism may leave an apparently permanent
-mental deterioration with aphasic and paraphasic manifestations which
-often entirely clear up. In lesions of younger persons due to syphilis,
-mental enfeeblement may follow.
-
-Our knowledge of the psychoses accompanying paralysis agitans is very
-inadequate. The disease was first fully described by Parkinson in an
-English publication in 1817, although, according to Camp, similar
-cases were reported by Schwarz in 1766. The etiology of this condition
-is unknown and the pathology is not at all definite. It seems to be
-the rather general opinion of neurologists that mental disturbances
-are quite rare in Parkinson's Disease. Camp,[199] for instance, has
-the following to say on this subject:—"Mental conditions have also
-been described, but usually the patient's mind is entirely clear. In
-the very old the changes incident to senility, such as irritability,
-childishness, etc., insomnia and memory changes, might be expected and
-may require special treatment. Often these patients are emotionally
-unstable and spells of forced weeping or laughter occur." Krafft-Ebing
-refers to mental weakness in paralysis agitans and speaks of the
-frequency of melancholia with hallucinations and suicidal impulses
-occurring intermittently and appearing with exacerbations of the
-disease. He speaks of premature senility as playing the most important
-etiological rôle. McCarthy[200] expresses the opinion that: "Beyond
-a tendency on the part of some patients to adopt a whining and
-complaining manner, the mind remains very clear; in fact, the good
-nature and complaisance of most of the patients, in spite of the
-severity of the symptoms, is a matter of common observation. Dementia
-may, however, complicate a case of the disease." On the other hand,
-Parant, a French writer who made an elaborate study of this subject in
-1883, described three distinct varieties of mental disturbance observed
-by him. In the milder cases he found changes in the personality.
-This is shown by irritability, egotism, restlessness, suspicion,
-undue sensitiveness regarding their disease, mild persecutory ideas,
-tendencies to depression, indifference and apathy. The second class
-of cases described included mental deterioration with difficulty
-of thought, loss of memory, etc. The third group includes definite
-psychoses characterized generally by depressions with or without
-hallucinations and delusions. Hallucinations of sight are said to be
-common. Delusions of persecution are prominent and hypochondriacal
-and somatic ideas frequently occur. Suicidal tendencies are very
-pronounced. According to Ball, these episodes come and go "with the
-aggravation of the sensory symptoms, and they seem to disappear when
-the tremor decreases or ceases entirely." The usual tendency in these
-cases, as shown by Parant, is to terminate in complete deterioration.
-
-Of the inflammatory conditions of the meninges Kraepelin[201] makes
-special reference to mental disturbances associated with tuberculosis.
-The patient is depressed, anxious, irritable and apathetic, often with
-the first appearance of the disease. Dulness and memory disturbances
-become more and more apparent. The patient soon becomes clouded and
-disoriented, confused and delirious. Occasionally hallucinations
-appear. The disturbance of consciousness becomes more and more marked.
-The patient becomes incoherent, restless, noisy and often violent.
-The excitement may reach the stage of an actual mania with delirious
-confusion. Sometimes the symptoms are strongly suggestive of katatonia.
-In alcoholics a condition very similar to delirium tremens develops,
-terminating as a rule in stupor and coma. Speech disturbance, aphasia,
-convulsions, hyperesthesia or muscular weakness may be observed in
-such cases. Other forms of meningitis are quite similar but more rapid
-in development and of shorter duration. In some instances, as after
-epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis, states of mental enfeeblement may
-follow the disease.
-
-It must be admitted that our information on the subject of multiple
-sclerosis is far from being complete. In a discussion of the mental
-symptoms accompanying this condition, Henderson[202] expressed the
-following views:—"Cases of disseminated sclerosis which present
-definite, well marked psychoses are extremely rare. When mental
-symptoms do occur, they usually come on when the condition is well
-advanced, the most common symptoms are mild euphoria, labile mood,
-apathy and dullness, and a slightly defective memory. In some
-cases, however, depression has been described as the outstanding
-feature, while hallucinations of sight and hearing are not uncommon
-accompaniments. In certain cases the mental symptoms may come on
-early, and these are usually of excessive severity and are rapidly
-followed by complete dementia." Dunlap has described cases associated
-with general paresis and showing the characteristic lesions of both
-diseases at autopsy. According to Kraepelin[203] mental disturbances
-sometimes appear before physical symptoms are observed. These take the
-form of depression, anxiety, fear, with occasional deliria, hysterical
-manifestations, emotional dulness, variable moods and a marked
-irritability. Later in the disease more marked euphoric or depressive
-tendencies appear, with excitements and confusional states. Delusions
-of a persecutory nature, or ideas of grandeur may be observed.
-Hallucinations are infrequent. According to Kraepelin, from ten to
-thirty per cent of the cases terminate in a general mental enfeeblement
-which is not usually of an advanced degree. He also describes a lobar
-cortical sclerosis with much more marked mental disturbances suggesting
-dementia praecox.
-
-Various mental conditions have been attributed to tabes. Sachs[204]
-speaks of depressions and neurasthenic conditions with irritability as
-a special symptom. He has observed paranoid states and manic attacks,
-sometimes with periods of "transitory dementia" with or without
-aphasia. He also expresses the opinion that tabetics may develop
-all of the symptoms of general paresis, although he says that the
-coexistence of the two diseases is rare. Kraepelin[205] speaks of
-milder forms of psychoses characterized by uncertainty of memory,
-fatigability and emotional instability. Many cases exhibit a hopeless,
-gloomy attitude with depression and fears, or they may be surly,
-irritable and quarrelsome. Others show a surprisingly good humor.
-The emotional disturbances often suggest general paresis. Kraepelin,
-however, describes the characteristic psychosis of locomotor ataxia
-as assuming a paranoid form and quotes Meyer as reporting paranoic
-conditions in twenty-six tabetics and depressions of various types
-in fourteen. He also speaks of hallucinatory excitements resembling
-alcoholic conditions. These are characterized by a sudden anxiety
-and restlessness with hallucinations of both hearing and vision. The
-patients complain of poisoning and sensations of electricity, but
-are cheerful in mood and well oriented. This condition may last for
-weeks or months, ending in a sudden recovery, often with relapses.
-Shorter hallucinatory delirious states resembling crises are also
-referred to by Kraepelin. More chronic conditions are noted, with
-hallucinations, persecutory delusions and ideas of grandeur. Delirium
-tremens, manic-depressive attacks, katatonia or senile psychoses may be
-associated with tabes.
-
-The literature of medicine contains many references to acute chorea. It
-was referred to, according to Paton, by Plat as early as 1614 and was
-discussed by Sydenham at some length. Wharton Sinkler, in describing
-chorea in Pepper's "System of Medicine" in 1886, made the following
-interesting remarks on the mental changes involved:—"The child is
-irritable and feverish, cries and laughs readily, or is sullen and
-morose. Sometimes he is violent to those about him but this is rare.
-Intellectually the patient suffers somewhat. He is not able to study
-as before, and the memory may be impaired. Sometimes there is a mild
-form of dementia." Burr[206] divides these conditions into four
-groups:—"First (and this includes the vast majority), patients in
-whom there is peevishness, fretfulness, some loss of the power of
-fixing the attention, and a slight loss of the moral sense shown by
-disobedience and selfishness. Second, those showing in addition to
-the above symptoms, night terrors, and transitory, visual, auditory,
-or other hallucinations. Third, those with distinct delirium, wild
-or mild, accompanied with fever. Fourth (and this group is very
-small when we remember how common chorea is), those showing stupor,
-or rather stupidity, and an acute dementia, which may follow the
-condition described under three, or appear without any preceding
-mental symptoms at all severe, and which is usually accompanied with
-trouble on articulation not caused by choreic movements of the lips
-and tongue, but the result of mental hebetude." White[207] refers to
-the irritability and emotional instability of choreics and describes a
-psychosis in "chorea insaniens" characterized by an acute confusion,
-sometimes of a violent type with hallucinations, or a paranoic
-condition with delusions of persecution. This may develop into a
-stuporous state. Kraepelin describes the psychotic manifestations of
-acute chorea as forms of delirium due to infection with characteristic
-states of clouding, confusion, etc. Wechsler has expressed similar
-views.
-
-Encephalitis lethargica is a disease which has received a great deal
-of attention during the last few years. The term was first applied
-by von Economo[208] to a series of cases observed by him in Vienna
-in 1917, although, as he has pointed out, similar epidemics occurred
-as early as in 1712. This condition is characterized particularly by
-lethargy, facial and oculomotor paralyses and a rise of temperature.
-Cases were reported from England and France by various observers
-in 1918 and by Pothier, Neal and others in this country in 1919.
-It has been suggested frequently that the disease is in some way
-associated with influenza. The pathological findings have also been
-confused with the African sleeping sickness due to trypanosomes.
-After such prodromal symptoms as headache, malaise and drowsiness
-with muscular weakness for a few days, a lethargic or stuporous state
-usually develops, interrupted occasionally by delirious attacks.
-Ptosis has been reported, sometimes with immobility of the pupils.
-Paralyses of the facial and eye muscles are very common. Buzzard and
-Greenfield[209] after a review of twenty-two cases suggested the
-following symptomatological classification:—1. Cases characterized by
-hemiplegia, hemianesthesia, hemianopsia, etc.; 2. Cases characterized
-by symptoms resembling those of paralysis agitans:—the basal ganglia
-group; and 3. Cases characterized by a disturbance of the cranial
-nerve functions. In a publication issued recently by the United States
-Public Health Service the various types of the disease were summarized
-as follows:—1. A clinical affection of the third pair of nerves;
-2. Affections of the brain stem and bulb; 3. Affections of the long
-tracts; 4. The ataxic type; 5. Affections of the cerebral cortex; 6.
-Cases with evidence of spinal cord involvement; and 7. The polyneuritic
-type with involvement of the peripheral nerves. The Massachusetts
-Department of Public Health has recently recommended the use of the
-MacNulty classification, which is quite similar in some respects:—
-
- 1. Symptoms of a general nature referable to the central nervous system
- with no localizing signs.
-
- 2. General symptoms with third nerve paralysis.
-
- 3. General symptoms with localizing signs of facial paralysis.
-
- 4. General symptoms with localizing signs extending down to the cord.
-
- 5. General symptoms with polyneuritic involvements.
-
- 6. Mild and abortive cases.
-
-Autopsies have shown meningeal and cortical congestion, degeneration
-of the nerve cells, and thickening of the vessels with endothelial
-proliferation of the glia. Venous thrombosis and multiple hemorrhages
-also occur. In a study of the cerebrospinal fluid Boveri[210] found the
-pressure slightly greater in many cases with an increase in the albumen
-and globulin content and a mild lymphocytosis in occasional cases. The
-findings are not characteristic or of great diagnostic value. Efforts
-to isolate the organism responsible for this disease have so far been
-unsuccessful.
-
-The mental symptoms associated with encephalitis lethargica have been
-studied recently by Abrahamson[211]. He finds that the patient can be
-aroused from the initial lethargy and responds quickly and coherently
-to questions, relapsing again into an apparent sleep. Some irritability
-is shown. The attitude "expresses a desire to be left alone." If the
-somnolence disappears it is usually followed by a period of depression.
-The patient complains of weariness and inability to sleep. Choreic
-manifestations sometimes occur. The somnolence may terminate, on the
-other hand, in a profound stupor resembling a drug intoxication with
-a restless delirium. Even then the patient can be roused momentarily.
-Responses are automatic with no evidences of emotional disturbance.
-Flexibilitas cerea is often present. This condition may be followed by
-a period of confusion, disorientation and amnesia suggesting Korsakow's
-disease. There is usually a period of mental depression with poverty of
-thought. Occasional hallucinations were also observed.
-
-An exceedingly important contribution to the literature of encephalitis
-lethargica is an analysis recently made of the symptoms shown in
-eighteen cases by Kirby and Davis.[212] "The psychic disturbances of
-epidemic encephalitis present the general characteristics of an acute
-organic type of mental reaction, corresponding more specifically to
-a toxic-infectious psychosis. In the acute stages of the disease,
-psychic torpor and delirium are the most frequently observed mental
-disturbances although other clinical pictures may be encountered,
-as the Korsakoff syndrome or more complex mental disorders in which
-various affective and trend reactions give a special cast to the
-psychotic disturbance." They report two types of sleep disturbance,
-hypersomnia and hyposomnia. The former is characterized by drowsiness,
-lethargy, stupor or coma, depending entirely on the degree reached. In
-the latter the patient is sleepless at night and somnolent during the
-daytime. Usually delirium was present at some time in both types of
-the disease. Often there was a brief period showing a mild depression
-or anxiety, following lethargy or delirium. Euphoria was observed
-in a number of instances. In the unrecovered cases they often found
-residuals—"depressive affects, emotional elevations, irritability,
-explosive reactions, stubbornness, apathy, etc." Their findings may be
-summarized perhaps in the statement that "definitely formulated and
-persistent trends are infrequent in epidemic encephalitis ... we have
-found much evidence of persisting emotional alteration with little
-evidence of organic mental defects or dementia."
-
-A review of the statistics of American institutions shows that
-psychoses associated with brain and nervous diseases other than
-Huntington's chorea and brain tumor, which have already been discussed,
-are exceedingly rare. The percentage of cases reported in the New
-York hospitals was .95, in the Massachusetts institutions, 1.02, and
-in twenty-one other hospitals only 1.56. In a total of 70,987 first
-admissions there were only 787 cases (1.1 per cent). The relative
-frequency of the various forms is illustrated by the statistics of the
-admissions to the New York state hospitals during a period of eight
-years. Of 462 cases, 160 were diagnosed as psychoses due to cerebral
-embolism; twelve, to meningitis; twenty, to multiple sclerosis;
-thirty-eight, to tabes; thirty-four, to acute chorea; and 163, to
-other conditions not specified. These figures are astonishing when the
-fact that 49,640 patients were admitted during that time is taken into
-consideration.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE ALCOHOLIC PSYCHOSES
-
-
-According to Tuke,[213] one of the oldest of the Egyptian papyri in the
-British Museum (Papyrus Sallier I) makes the following very interesting
-reference to alcoholism:— "Whereas it has been told me that thou hast
-forsaken books, and devoted thyself to pleasure; that thou goest from
-tavern to tavern, smelling of beer, at the time of evening. If beer
-gets into a man it overcomes his mind.... Thou knowest that wine is an
-abomination, that thou hast taken an oath that thou wouldst not put
-liquor into thee. Hast thou forgotten thy resolution?" It is difficult
-to realize that this refers to one of the earliest periods of recorded
-history. Hebrew, Greek and Roman literature are prolific in equally
-significant testimonials to the antiquity of alcohol as an intoxicant.
-It was referred to at considerable length by Aristotle, Plutarch and
-Hippocrates. That Haslam appreciated the important relation existing
-between alcoholism and mental disorders is shown by the following
-comment on this subject written in 1808:—"Thus a man is permitted
-slowly to poison and destroy himself; to produce a state of irritation,
-which disqualifies him from any of the useful purposes of life; to
-squander his property among the most worthless and abandoned; to
-communicate a loathsome and disgraceful disease to a virtuous wife; to
-leave an innocent and helpless family to the meagre protection of the
-parish. If it be possible the law ought to define the circumstances
-under which it becomes justifiable to restrain a human being from
-effecting his own destruction, and involving his family in misery and
-ruin. When a man suddenly bursts through the barriers of established
-opinion; if he attempts to strangle himself with a cord, to divide his
-large blood vessels with a knife, or swallow a vial full of laudanum,
-no one entertains any doubt about his being a proper subject for the
-superintendence of keepers; but he is allowed, without control, by a
-gradual process, to undermine the fabric of his health and destroy the
-property of his family."
-
-Curiously enough the word alcohol is of Arabic origin and was employed
-originally to describe a powder used in applications to the eyebrows
-for cosmetic purposes. It was subsequently used for centuries as
-referring to a fine powder of any kind, as is shown by the writings
-of Paracelsus and others. The chemical composition of alcohol was not
-known until 1808, when it was described by Lavoisier. On the other
-hand, Salvatori in 1817 and Hufeland in 1818 referred to dipsomania
-as a disorder due to alcoholism. Esquirol, Trélat and other early
-writers included it in the "partial" insanities. Morel described it
-as an impulsive form of "délire émotif" and looked upon it as an
-hereditary condition. It has been classified with the periodical
-insanities and even as a form of melancholia. Magnan saw in it an
-episode of the insanity of degeneracy. Magnus Huss was responsible for
-the introduction of the term "chronic alcoholism" as descriptive of a
-pathological condition in 1852.
-
-It is said that Caelius Aurelianus protested against the use of
-intoxicants in the treatment of the insane. Notwithstanding this early
-reference to a question of such importance, and the inauguration of
-the great temperance crusade which began in 1808, it has been shown
-by Tuke[214] that alcoholic beverages were issued in a routine way to
-patients and employees of the British asylums for the insane less than
-forty years ago. "Thirty superintendents hold that they have observed
-very beneficial results from the course pursued. The improvement
-usually refers not only to the patients, but to the discipline of the
-asylum." The cost of beer supplied to the inmates at the Glamorgan
-Asylum at one time was reported to be as high as two hundred and sixty
-pounds per year (Tuke). Beer was not discontinued as a regular article
-of diet for patients at the Derby Asylum until 1884.
-
-In 1844 Flemming[215] in his classification of psychoses mentioned
-the following forms of alcoholic insanity:— Ferocitas et morositas
-ebriosorum, anoësia e potu, anoësia semisomnis, delirium tremens, and
-mania à potu. Clouston[216] described acute and chronic forms—mania à
-potu, dipsomania, alcoholic dementia and degeneration. Krafft-Ebing[217]
-speaks of hallucinations of the inebriate, delirium tremens, alcoholic
-melancholia, mania gravis potatorum, hallucinatory insanity, alcoholic
-paranoia, alcoholic paralysis and epilepsy. Delirium tremens he
-ascribes either to repeated excesses (à potu nimio), abstinence (à potu
-intermisso), insufficient nourishment, violent emotions, pneumonia and
-other acute diseases, loss of sleep, injuries such as fractures, etc.
-By hallucination of the inebriate (sensuum fallacia ebriosa) he refers
-to the transitory hallucinations of the constant drinker. Meyer[218]
-has described an alcoholic constitution "as shown by the lachrymose,
-prevaricating, jealous deterioration of the drinker."
-
-Stöcker,[219] after an extended study of a considerable number of
-cases, came to the conclusion that alcoholism is the result of a
-constitutional condition but not the cause of characteristic psychoses.
-Often, as was also shown by Bonhöffer, it is to be attributed to
-a psychopathic personality either acquired or congenital. The
-psychoses represented by the group of patients he examined included
-manic-depressive insanity, dementia praecox, hysteria, epilepsy and
-other miscellaneous conditions. He refers to dipsomania as an epileptic
-equivalent. His conclusions in brief were as follows:—"Chronic
-alcoholism in the first place is a symptom of a mental disease. It may,
-however, so exaggerate stationary epilepsy, chronic mania, dementia
-praecox, etc., which hitherto were latent, and perhaps would remain
-still latent without alcoholic abuses, that it may lead to a sudden
-outbreak of a turbulent disease manifestation. It may also give these
-diseases peculiar traits or a peculiar coloring for some time, which
-above all, may appear as the most striking phenomena, and thus cover up
-the symptoms of the fundamental disorder. Furthermore, it may, also,
-on the basis of this constitutional disease give rise to independent
-clinical pictures." Karpas[220] in commenting on this says: "One must
-remember that cravings play important rôles in our mental life. Some
-of our cravings are gratified; others find realization in our dreams;
-still others are repressed and compensated. In fact, our mental
-life is nothing but a readjustment, of complex reactions. The poet
-finds recourse in his phantasies; the philosopher gives vent to his
-theoretical speculations; the scientist resorts to his inventions and
-hypothetical theories; the well balanced, normal individual seeks
-readjustment in healthy activities,—art, literature, science,
-occupations, sport, etc., etc. But the individual with a poorly endowed
-constitution finds refuge in neurosis, psychosis, alcoholism, drugs,
-and other vicious habits. We must recognize that alcoholism is nothing
-but a compensation for a complex, the fulfillment of which was denied
-by reality."
-
-Kraepelin[221] described acute and chronic alcoholism, pathological
-intoxication, alcoholic jealousy, delirium tremens, Korsakow's
-psychosis, alcoholic hallucinoses, paralysis and pseudo-paresis. In
-acute intoxication Kraepelin finds an inhibition of apprehension,
-mental grasp and the elaboration of outer impressions with a
-stimulation of the release of volitional impulses. A clouding of
-consciousness develops, associated with emotional excitement and a
-weakness of will power. Perception and mental reactions are delayed
-and their accuracy decreased on mental tests. The discrimination
-between louder sounds is uncertain, although the sensitiveness to
-lighter sound impressions is increased as in the ether narcosis.
-Busch found a limitation of the field of vision. The preservation of
-memory impressions is imperfect. A solution of mathematical problems
-shows a lowered mental capacity for work. The association of ideas
-and composition of sentences is delayed. There is a tendency to
-new word formation, phrasing and rhyming, with a certain amount of
-distractibility. Goal ideas are often missed, and consistent, orderly
-thought is not possible. Expression is rapid and impulsive, and is
-often characterized by a loud tone of voice.
-
-After larger amounts of alcohol psychomotor activities are interfered
-with as shown by the writing, and ataxia appears. The reflexes show an
-increased muscular tension. Physical strength is markedly lowered,
-although it may be increased for a very short time. Alcohol even in
-small amounts interferes with productive mental processes. Ideas lose
-in clearness and sharpness, fatigue occurs earlier and efficiency and
-judgment are impaired. Still larger amounts retard apprehension and
-comprehension and the intoxicated person no longer knows what is said
-to him. All ability to control his conduct is lost. There is a tendency
-to repetition in speech, rhyming and jargon. Capacity for mental work
-is finally entirely gone and memory becomes confused. Psychomotor
-stimulation and excitement appear early, terminating finally in
-weakness. Emotional trends, at first happy and cheerful, are usually
-irritable, later with outbursts of anger. Sexual excitement often
-appears. Various physical disturbances have been described.
-
-In the pathological or complicated intoxications as described
-by Kraepelin, unusual emotional disturbances such as violent
-excitements occur. Anger or anxiety may develop with a clouding of
-the consciousness, and lead to uncontrollable rages with impulses to
-assault and kill. The most marked excitements occur in epileptics.
-The outburst is usually sudden in these cases and is followed by the
-most senseless and unjustifiable acts. Occasionally suicide is the
-result. In hysterical and psychopathic individuals alcohol may cause
-serious emotional disturbances, with clouding of consciousness or even
-delusion formation. Chronic drinkers are very likely to have abnormal
-symptoms at times. They often show a marked irritability followed
-by a pathetic and tearful mood. Abusive treatment of members of the
-family, jealousy, threats and violence are not uncommon. Delirious or
-anxious states with persecutory ideas and hallucinations are sometimes
-observed. These may exist only during intoxication. Alcohol often
-produces extreme excitements in cases of manic-depressive insanity,
-general paresis and dementia praecox. Pathological changes of various
-kinds have been reported. In acute alcoholism Nissl found a destruction
-of cortical cells in some cases and a disappearance of the stainable
-lumps in others. The nuclei of the neurones were shrunken and sometimes
-displaced.
-
-Various tests have demonstrated the limited mental capacity of the
-chronic alcoholic. Will power is greatly reduced and fatigability
-increased. Memory and attention are affected and falsification of
-the past may occur. The patient learns nothing new and forgets the
-important things. All productive efficiency is gone and interest is
-lost. Weakness of judgment and loss of memory capacity lead to delusion
-formation. These often take the form of ideas of jealousy. Delusions
-of persecution, poisoning or grandeur may appear from time to time.
-Frequently there are genuine hallucinations. Some cases terminate
-finally in mental enfeeblement. Emotional changes are common in the
-chronic drinkers. The alcoholic humor is characteristic. The capacity
-for taking things seriously has been lost and there is a tendency to
-undue levity, often with a marked feeling of self-satisfaction. Some
-individuals, however, become moody, irritable or dull. Occasionally
-anxious states appear, frequently with suicidal attempts. One of the
-common symptoms of this condition is an extraordinary irritability
-after drinking. This leads to quarrels, assaults and violence.
-Consideration for others is completely lost. These attacks are often
-followed by remorse. A prominent and significant feature of the
-disease is the marked moral deterioration. All affection for family
-and children may be lost. Selfishness is pronounced and the patient
-spends all of his money for drink. Sexual excitement is sometimes
-an important symptom. With all of this there is a constant craving
-for alcohol. The patients have no insight into their condition and
-attribute their headache and tremors to overexertion, etc. They always
-deny using much alcohol and are absolutely untruthful on this subject.
-Overwork necessitates drinking, or it only happens after a death in the
-family, etc. Will power deteriorates rapidly. These individuals often
-commit crimes and come into conflict with the law. Gastritis, cirrhosis
-of the liver and numerous other diseases complicate the situation.
-Dizzy spells and headaches are common, as well as tremors of the
-tongue and fingers. Neurotic involvements are noted, with anesthesias,
-hyperesthesias, paresthesias, and muscular atrophies as well as speech
-defects. Epileptiform attacks are not infrequent in chronic alcoholism,
-and were found in ten per cent of Kraepelin's cases. His investigations
-showed that eleven per cent of the beer drinkers in Munich had
-convulsions. Combinations of epilepsy and hysterical manifestations
-with chronic alcoholism are not at all unusual. Rybakoff found a
-hereditary taint in 66.6 per cent of his cases while Moli reported only
-forty-seven per cent. Heredity was found to be a factor in thirty-seven
-per cent of Kraepelin's Heidelberg cases and in seventeen per cent
-of those at Munich. He describes various pathological findings in
-chronic alcoholism. Meningitis with hemorrhagic membranes is common.
-The convolutions are atrophied and the ependyma of the ventricles
-thickened. Pigmentary deposits similar to those of senility are found
-in the cells and vessel walls. There is an increase of both neuroglia
-cells and fibres. Hemorrhages are occasionally found in the central
-gray matter.
-
-When the suspicions of the chronic alcoholic lead to well defined
-delusions Kraepelin speaks of "alcoholic jealousy" as constituting a
-distinct psychosis. The patient sees in almost everything evidences of
-infidelity on the part of his wife and is often inclined to question
-the legitimacy of his own children. Assaults and violence are frequent
-occurrences. Occasionally genuine hallucinations accompany this
-condition. Suicidal and homicidal attempts are not uncommon.
-
-The onset of delirium tremens, first described by Thomas Sutton in
-1813, is characterized by states of anxiety, fear, insomnia with
-disturbing dreams, sensory excitement, hyperesthesias, flashes
-of light, etc. The development usually is sudden, with a loss of
-attention, disturbance of apprehension, restlessness, distractibility,
-numerous hallucinations of the different senses, illusions, clouded
-states with disorientation, tremors and ataxia. Touch, pain and
-temperature sensations, according to Kraepelin, are undisturbed.
-The field of vision is sometimes narrowed. Recognition of colors is
-uncertain. There is a marked disturbance of the equilibrium, suggesting
-some lesion either of the eye muscles or of the labyrinth. A decided
-lengthening of the reaction time in associations has been shown by
-various observers. Sensory hallucinations are common. The ability
-to read correctly is entirely lost and what is read is meaningless.
-A paraphasic form of reading has been described by Bonhöffer. The
-attention cannot be held for any length of time. A dreamy clouded state
-is characteristic. Disorientation is usually complete in the severe
-cases. The hallucinations and illusions are very marked and sometimes
-even suggest moving pictures to the patient. Hallucinations of vision
-are more common than those of hearing. Peculiar skin sensations such as
-feelings of electricity are spoken of. Hallucinations may be induced
-by pressure on the eyeball and sometimes by suggestion. There is
-occasionally a confusional form of speech suggesting dementia praecox,
-with a tendency to coin new words and employ entirely meaningless
-terms. Although consciousness is not always entirely clouded, events
-transpire as in a dream, always confused by innumerable hallucinations.
-An occupation delirium is common, the patient imagining himself busy
-at his customary work. Delusional ideas regarding everything in his
-surroundings are frequent. Ideas of grandeur sometimes occur. Never,
-according to Bonhöffer, is there a complete disorientation as far as
-personality is concerned. The patient always knows who and what he is.
-Complete mental confusion is not the rule. Distractibility is usually
-very well developed. Bonhöffer found an inability to supply omitted
-words and syllables from well known phrases and memory for test words
-and numbers was impaired. Articles read are repeated with many changes
-and omissions. Memory for remote events is usually well preserved.
-Sometimes there is a falsification of the past. The mood is anxious,
-fearful, seldom irritable, at times actually humorous. Cheerfulness and
-fear of death occasionally alternate.
-
-The course of the disease is characterized by great restlessness often
-with a tendency to talkativeness. There is, however, no flight of ideas
-or rhyming. Delusions of persecution occur in some cases. Anesthesias,
-hyperesthesias, paresthesias, hypalgesias and sensitiveness of nerves
-and muscles are noted. Romberg's sign is present in some instances.
-Speech is often ataxic and paraphasic, and in advanced eases entirely
-meaningless. Tremors of the tongue and fingers are very characteristic.
-Writing is very much affected as a result. Epileptiform convulsions
-sometimes occur. Rarely focal symptoms, facial paralysis and hemiplegia
-appear for a short time. Reflexes are increased and ankle clonus
-occasionally appears. Defective papillary reaction and unequal pupils
-may be found, with diplopia and muscular weakness. Sleep is seriously
-interfered with. Bodily weight is reduced and blood pressure lowered.
-The temperature is usually elevated and the pulse accelerated. Albumen
-and sometimes sugar is present in the urine. The delirium often stops
-as suddenly as it begins, terminating in sleep, the patient being
-clear when he wakes. The memory of events is not well retained on
-recovery. The delirium may, however, become chronic and last for
-months. Some cases terminate in a hallucinatory feeblemindedness.
-This is likely to occur in psychopathic individuals. Hallucinations
-of hearing are more common in such conditions. People read their
-thoughts and influence their minds. They are subjected to hypnotism
-and electricity. The delusional ideas may be of a sexual nature or
-grandiose in character. The mood may be anxious or irritable. Suicidal
-tendencies sometimes appear. Later a humorous trend is often noted.
-Tremors and other neurological symptoms sometimes occur. Bonhöffer
-found at autopsy a considerable fibre loss in the central convolutions,
-the cerebellum and the column of Goll. In the large pyramidal and
-motor cells of the anterior central convolution the processes were
-deeply stained. Some nuclear changes were noted and occasional cells
-destroyed. Nissl described a granular degeneration of the neurones
-with a prominence of the "unstainable" substance, together with a
-swelling and crumbling of the cell bodies. Alzheimer often found free
-nuclei near the apical processes. In the glia cells and vessel walls
-granular detritus was observed. Acute and chronic cell alterations
-are more common in old alcoholics. Pachymeningitis hemorrhagica is
-sometimes found. Kraepelin considers it very doubtful whether wine or
-beer drinking ever causes delirium tremens, whisky and gin being the
-etiological factors as a general rule.
-
-Korsakow's psychosis was first described in 1887. This is characterized
-by a loss of memory, and falsification, with a marked tendency
-to disorientation, and is often due to chronic alcoholism. It is
-practically always accompanied by polyneuritic symptoms. According
-to Bonhöffer, it usually follows delirium tremens. This occurred in
-one-fourth of Kraepelin's cases. Occasionally it begins suddenly, but
-as a rule gradually, during the course of a chronic alcoholism. The
-patients frequently complain of dizziness, headaches and fainting
-spells. In the foreground of this affection is the impairment of
-memory. This is one of the characteristic features. The events of a
-few hours ago are completely forgotten. Disorientation appears next.
-This affects time more than anything else. The power of apprehension
-or perception is very markedly impaired (one-sixth of the normal in
-Kraepelin's cases) and the reaction time is greatly increased. He
-also found memory reduced to one-third or one-fourth of the normal on
-actual tests (repetition of words and syllables). Falsification of past
-events is also demonstrable. This often leads to elaborate delusion
-formations. The mood is usually anxious at first, later indifferent,
-dull, suspicious, irritable, in some eases cheerful and even humorous.
-The methods of life are completely changed. The patients neglect
-themselves, lie in bed, etc. The physical signs are those of neuritis.
-Muscular pains in the limbs appear, with evidences of loss of power.
-Paraplegias and weakness of the grip are found. Romberg's sign is
-frequently present. Anesthesias, hyperesthesias or paresthesias are
-noted. The reflexes are usually decreased, rarely increased. Ataxia and
-other difficulties of gait are common. The pulse is usually slower as a
-result of involvement of the vagus. Speech difficulty, writing defects,
-facial paralyses, weakness of the eye muscles, with inequality and
-inactivity of the pupils, are to be expected. There are usually tremors
-of the fingers. Epileptiform convulsions are not infrequent. Aphasia,
-agraphia, apraxia, monoplegia, hemiplegic, etc., are observed in many
-cases. Physical disturbances of various kinds due to chronic alcoholism
-are also present.
-
-At autopsy acute and grave alterations are found in the cells of the
-second and third layers of the cortex. A granular degeneration (Körnig
-Zellerkrankung) of the cells is also referred to by Nissl. There is
-some fibre loss in the central convolutions and the internal capsule,
-as well as in the columns of Goll. Hemorrhages and thromboses are to
-be found. Alzheimer found encephalitic foci with proliferation of the
-cells of the vessel walls sending out fibroblasts in the neighborhood,
-and a destruction of the nerve fibres. These foci are found in the
-central gray matter of the third ventricle, roof of the aqueduct,
-etc. There is a formation of new vessels and an outwandering of cells
-often accompanied by numerous hemorrhages into the gray matter around
-the aqueduct of Sylvius. Wernieke has described this process as an
-"acute hemorrhagic polioencephalitis superior" and finds it very
-commonly associated with Korsakow's psychosis. It occurs, however, in
-other chronic alcoholic conditions. The peripheral nerves also show a
-polyneuritis. Bonhöffer found Korsakow's psychosis in three per cent
-of his delirious cases. Thirty-three per cent of Kraepelin's cases
-were women and only 24.5 per cent were under forty years of age.
-Chotzen found Korsakow's psychosis in three per cent of his male and in
-twenty-one per cent of his female alcoholics.
-
-The acute alcoholic hallucinoses as described by Kraepelin are
-characterized by well defined delusions of persecution and above all by
-hallucinations of hearing, with a clear sensorium. In eighty per cent
-of the cases the symptoms appear suddenly. Sometimes there is first an
-abortive delirious attack. Usually a multiplicity of hallucinations of
-hearing develop early. The patient hears threats and abusive language,
-always directed against himself. Visual hallucinations also occur,
-particularly at night. The other sensory fields are often involved.
-At the same time well marked delusions manifest themselves. These
-suggest every possible variety of persecution. Ideas of grandeur
-are sometimes observed. All of these symptoms are worse at night
-as a rule. Consciousness is usually fairly clear, and there is no
-disorientation. There is often a mixture of anxiety and humor. Some
-cases, however, are irritable and suspicious. Occasionally suicidal
-tendencies appear. Conduct is usually not greatly disturbed and the
-patient continues with his regular occupation. There is considerable
-insomnia and a tendency to run around a great deal and act foolishly
-at times. Physically, evidences of chronic alcoholism are always to be
-found. The customary duration of these acute conditions is from three
-to eight weeks, although they sometimes last for months. In a quarter
-of Kraepelin's cases the termination was in deterioration. There is a
-strong tendency to recurrence. The unrecovered cases are suspicious,
-surly, quarrelsome and have hallucinations of hearing. This condition
-may last for years. There are always occasional persecutory ideas.
-One-fifth of Kraepelin's cases became chronic. Bonhöffer described a
-paranoid type of long duration. The hallucinoses appear usually earlier
-in life than Korsakow's psychosis but later than delirium tremens. In
-Kraepelin's experience delirium tremens is three times as common as are
-hallucinoses. He looks upon these two conditions, however, as different
-clinical manifestations of "one and the same" disease process.
-
-Alcoholic paralysis, so called, is a mixture of chronic alcoholic
-symptoms with those of general paresis. There is a mental deterioration
-with ideas of grandeur, emotional dulness, hallucinations, delusions
-of jealousy, speech defect, tremors and polyneuritis. Epileptiform
-attacks are frequent. Most of these forms according to Kraepelin
-belong to Korsakow's psychosis or polioencephalitis hemorrhagica
-superior. Alcoholic conditions may also be complicated by syphilis or
-arteriosclerosis.
-
-Since the alcoholic psychoses have been generally recognized as
-such, there has been comparatively little difference of opinion as to
-their differentiation. The classification of the American Psychiatric
-Association is as follows:—
-
-"The diagnosis of alcoholic psychosis should be restricted to those
-mental disorders arising, with few exceptions, in connection with
-_chronic_ drinking and presenting fairly well defined symptom-pictures.
-One must guard against making the alcoholic group too inclusive.
-Overindulgence in alcohol is often found to be merely a symptom
-of another psychosis, or at any rate may be incidental to another
-psychosis, such as general paralysis, manic-depressive insanity,
-dementia praecox, epilepsy, etc. The cases to be regarded as alcoholic
-psychoses which do not result from chronic drinking are the episodic
-attacks in some psychopathic personalities, the dipsomanias (the true
-periodic drinkers) and pathological intoxication, any of which may
-develop as the result of a single imbibition or a relatively short
-spree.
-
-"The following alcoholic reactions usually present symptoms distinctive
-enough to allow of clinical differentiation:
-
-"(a) Pathological intoxication: An unusual or abnormal immediate
-reaction to taking a large or small amount of alcohol. Essentially an
-acute mental disturbance of short duration characterized usually by
-an excitement or furor with confusion and hallucinations, followed by
-amnesia.
-
-"(b) Delirium tremens: An hallucinatory delirium with marked general
-tremor and toxic symptoms.
-
-"(c) Korsakow's psychosis: This occurs with or without polyneuritis.
-The delirious type is not readily differentiated in the early stages
-from severe delirium tremens but is more protracted. The non-delirious
-type presents a characteristic retention defect with disorientation,
-fabrication, suggestibility and tendency to misidentify persons.
-Hallucinations are frequent after the acute phase.
-
-"(d) Acute hallucinosis: This is chiefly an auditory hallucinosis of
-rapid development with clearness of the sensorium, marked fears, and a
-more or less systematized persecutory trend.
-
-"(e) Chronic hallucinosis: This is an infrequent type which may be
-regarded as the persistence of the symptoms of the acute hallucinosis
-without change in the character of the symptoms except perhaps
-a gradual lessening of the emotional reaction accompanying the
-hallucinations.
-
-"(f) Acute paranoid type: Suspicions, misinterpretations, and
-persecutory ideas, often a jealous trend, hallucinations usually
-subordinate; clearing up on withdrawal of alcohol.
-
-"(g) Chronic paranoid type: Persistence of symptoms of the acute
-paranoid type with fixed delusions of persecution or jealousy usually
-not influenced by withdrawal of alcohol; difficult to differentiate
-from non-alcoholic paranoid states or dementia praecox.
-
-"(h) Alcoholic deterioration: A slowly developing ethical, volitional
-and emotional change in the habitual drinker; apparently relatively few
-cases are committed, as the mental symptoms are not usually looked upon
-as sufficient to justify the diagnosis of a definite psychosis. The
-chief symptoms are ill humor and irascibility or a jovial, careless,
-flippant, facetious mood; abusiveness to family, unreliability and
-tendency to prevarication; in some cases definite suspicions and
-jealousy; there is a general lessening of efficiency and capacity
-for physical and mental work; memory not seriously impaired. To be
-excluded are residual defects due to Korsakow's psychosis, or mental
-deterioration due to arteriosclerosis or to traumatic lesions.
-
-"(i) Other types, acute or chronic (to be specified)."
-
-Shadwell[222] states that in twenty-six Italian asylums 18.6 per cent
-of their cases were directly or indirectly the result of alcoholism.
-Twenty-one and one-tenth per cent of the males and 4.37 per cent of
-the females admitted to the institutions of Switzerland from 1901 to
-1904 were alcoholics. Twenty-one and thirty-seven hundredths per cent
-of the admissions to the hospitals in Denmark between 1899 and 1903
-were suffering from alcoholic psychoses. He gives the admission rate
-in Austria as fourteen per cent and in France, 12.5 per cent. Clouston
-some years ago estimated the admission rate in Great Britain and
-Ireland to be about twenty per cent.
-
-Pollock[223] has made a most interesting study of 1,739 cases of
-alcoholic psychoses, the total number admitted to the New York state
-hospitals between October 1, 1909, and September 30, 1912. Seventy-six
-and five-tenths per cent of these were men, and 23.5 per cent, women.
-The different conditions represented were as follows: Pathological
-intoxication, .7 per cent; alcoholic deterioration, 7.7 per cent;
-delirium tremens, 4.7 per cent; Korsakow's psychosis, 18.8 per cent;
-acute hallucinosis, 36.7 per cent; chronic hallucinosis, 2.2 per cent;
-paranoid states, 13.7 per cent; and all other forms, 15.5 per cent.
-Among the males, acute hallucinosis predominated, while Korsakow's
-psychosis constituted the largest percentage in the female patients.
-Of the ascertained cases, .4 per cent showed a defective make-up, 10.3
-per cent were inferior and 89.3 per cent were reported as normal. In
-seventy-four per cent of the cases there was no history of insane
-heredity. The father of the patient was insane in 3.7 per cent of the
-series and the mother in four per cent; 25.8 per cent in all had a
-history of insane heredity. Thirty and five-tenths per cent of the
-male and thirty-seven per cent of the female patients had alcoholic
-fathers and three per cent of the men and 8.8 per cent of the women
-had alcoholic mothers. Pollock found the percentage of intemperate
-fathers twice as high in the alcoholic psychoses as in the patients
-suffering from other conditions. In 94.1 per cent of the cases there
-was no family history of nervous diseases. Eighty-one and one-tenth per
-cent of the men and 93.4 per cent of the women came from cities. Of the
-male patients 26.8 per cent were unskilled laborers; 16.1 per cent of
-the women were seamstresses, and 11.7 per cent, the wives of laborers.
-The alcoholic cases constituted fifteen per cent of the male, five per
-cent of the female, and ten per cent of the total first rate admissions
-during the three years in question. The rate of alcoholic psychoses was
-over twice in as great in the foreign born population as in the native.
-
-Three thousand four hundred and sixty-two cases diagnosed as alcoholic
-psychoses were admitted to the New York state hospitals during a
-period of eight years (1912 to 1919 inclusive). Of these, pathological
-intoxication constituted 2.91 per cent, delirium tremens, 5.97 per
-cent, Korsakow's psychosis, 20.94 per cent, acute hallucinosis, 37.31
-per cent, chronic hallucinosis, 3.66 per cent, acute paranoid states,
-5.01 per cent, chronic paranoid states, 3.78 per cent, and alcoholic
-deterioration, 8.34 per cent. The remainder represented miscellaneous
-types variously described. These figures, of course, relate largely
-to a time when there were no restrictions on the sale of alcoholic
-beverages. During 1918 and 1919 the admission rate for alcoholic
-psychoses in New York was only 4.58 per cent. In Massachusetts in 1919
-it was 7.47 per cent, and in twenty-one other hospitals in various
-states it was 5.04 per cent. A study of 34,935 first admissions to
-forty-eight hospitals in sixteen different states during 1917, 1918 and
-1919 showed the alcoholic psychoses to represent 5.07 per cent of the
-total number. With the advent of prohibition the alcoholic psychoses
-as far as this country is concerned have become a matter of little more
-than historical interest. The admission rate in the New York state
-hospitals for 1920 was only 1.9 per cent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE PSYCHOSES DUE TO DRUGS AND OTHER EXOGENOUS TOXINS
-
-
-Opium is a drug which has been in quite common use for many centuries.
-According to E. M. Holmes of London, it was known to Theophrastus
-nearly three hundred years before the Christian era and two different
-forms were described by Dioscorides in the neighborhood of 77 A.D.
-Nicander (185 to 135 B.C.) discussed at some length the effects of a
-"drink prepared from the tears which exude from poppy heads." Pliny in
-the first century A.D. recorded several cases of suicide by means of
-opium, which he spoke of as not being a rare occurrence. The drug is
-said to have been introduced into China by the Arabs in the thirteenth
-century. An edict prohibiting opium smoking was issued by the emperor
-Yung Cheng in 1729. It was not until 1909 that the British government
-agreed to completely prohibit the importation of morphine into China.
-The sale and use of narcotics has, however, been regulated in India
-for many years. Morphine, the first alkaloid ever discovered, was
-isolated and named by Sertürner, a German apothecary, in 1805. Over
-twenty derivatives of opium have been reported since that time. The
-real history of morphinomania, according to Erlenmeyer, began in 1864.
-As far as can be determined, opium was not grown in America until 1865.
-In 1906 it was estimated that over thirteen millions of people were
-addicted to opium smoking in China alone.
-
-The literature of medicine contains numerous references to the mental
-disturbances due to opium and morphine. Krafft-Ebing[224] says of
-the habitual user that "Intelligence, it is true, is practically
-spared, but the highest mental functions—character, ethic feeling,
-self-control, mental energy, and force—always suffer.... In severe
-cases we find, in addition, weakness of memory, especially defect in
-the power of exact reproduction, difficulty of intellectual activity
-that may reach the degree of torpor, occasionally psychic depression
-reaching even marked dysthymia and taedium vitae, great emotionality,
-and, in general, profound deficiency of resistive power to affects; and
-besides, there may be episodically nervous restlessness, excitement,
-even attacks of fear due to vasomotor causes, and occasionally
-visual hallucinations." He also describes hallucinatory delirious
-conditions due to abstinence which strongly suggest alcoholism. In
-addition to clouded states of the same kind, Paton[225] speaks of the
-early occurrence, in chronic cases, of marked symptoms of hysteria.
-Apprehension and anxiety develop with mild suspicions and a moral
-deterioration very similar to that induced by alcohol. There may be
-considerable irritability and egotism, with a suggestion of flight
-of ideas and motor restlessness. Hallucinations and delusions are
-sometimes present, particularly if alcoholism is a complicating factor.
-Hyperesthesias, paresthesias and anesthesias are common. Barker[226]
-also speaks of a degeneration of character evidenced by ethical
-defects, lying, egotism and loss of memory. Under abstinence symptoms
-he includes restlessness, anxiety, despair, vomiting and delirium.
-White[227] regards the neuropathic diathesis as the most important
-cause of the morphine or opium habit. In habitual users he has noted
-hallucinated states with a paranoid coloring or a definite delirium.
-He has also observed delusions of persecution and poisoning, but
-emphasizes the importance of the gradual mental deterioration.
-
-One of the most elaborate studies ever made of morphinism was that of
-Erlenmeyer,[228] whose work on this subject reached nearly five hundred
-pages in its third edition. The mental disturbances associated with
-intoxication he divides into two groups—transitory and permanent.
-The former includes anxious states, hallucinations of vision and
-stuporous attacks; the latter, the intellectual and emotional
-deteriorations already described. There is a definite character
-change strongly suggesting "moral insanity," an artificial "senium
-praecox" being induced. He also refers to distinct psychoses resulting
-from chronic morphinism, the most common one being of the paranoid
-variety. Abstinence symptoms of sudden development include collapse
-and delirium. Restless anxiety and insomnia may usher in a mild
-delirious condition. Of these he described two forms,—one, a quiet,
-partially clouded dream state and another, with excitement, elation
-and hallucinations. The first form is the more common. The second
-is usually of short duration but may last for several weeks or even
-months, often manifesting paranoid ideas.
-
-Kraepelin[229] calls attention to the important fact that morphine
-stimulates mental activities as well as inhibiting psychomotor
-processes, and is not therefore a logical drug for the production of
-sleep. The habitué feels himself capable of much greater exertions
-but is handicapped by an inhibition of will power. This psychological
-mechanism determines the difference between the intoxication of
-morphine and that of alcohol. Nissl found the cortical cells of dogs
-poisoned with morphine decreased in size but not destroyed. The
-stainable substance was rarefied and weakly stained, the achromatic
-substance, on the other hand, being unusually prominent. In chronic
-morphinism Kraepelin found memory uncertain, mental capacity
-diminished and fatigability increased. There are alternating periods
-of comparatively good health and dull somnolence with exhaustion or
-nervous restlessness. The mood is variable,—depressed, discouraged,
-hypochondriacal, irritable, or even confident and overbearing. Anxious
-states occasionally occur at night and suicidal attempts may be made.
-Character changes are also described by Kraepelin. The patients
-become complaining, oversensitive to pain and to opposition, are
-indolent, irresolute, irresponsible and neglect their work. Their
-interest is more and more confined to the drug. Their untruthfulness
-and deceitfulness are well known. Sleep is much disturbed, often by
-visual hallucinations. Phantastic delusional ideas are also manifested.
-Paresthesias and hyperesthesias are common. The reflexes are active
-and usually increased. The gait is unsteady or even ataxic. Speech
-disturbances, paralysis of the muscles of the eye, diplopia and loss
-of accommodation have been noted. A typical Korsakow's complex was
-observed by Heymann. Appetite is lost, bodily weakness and loss of
-weight appear and sugar is often present in the urine. Perspiration,
-dizzy spells, confusion and stupor may be caused by circulatory
-disturbances. Sexual power is diminished, and menstrual disturbances
-are frequent. These symptoms may appear early or may not develop for
-years, depending on the individual case. Kraepelin also describes
-forms similar to dipsomania in alcoholics. He attributes these to
-epileptic or hysterical constitutions. Many of his cases were decidedly
-psychopathic with tendencies to abuse the use of alcohol, tobacco and
-coffee. Of thirty-eight patients observed by him, nineteen used only
-one drug, ten of them were addicted to two, eight others to three, and
-one patient to as many as five. Under abstinence symptoms he includes
-exhaustion, restlessness, yawning, sneezing, anxiety, chilliness,
-oppression, sense deceptions and pains in various parts of the body.
-The patient is sleepless and sometimes goes into an excitement with
-suicidal inclinations. In some cases a condition develops which
-markedly resembles delirium tremens. In others, hallucinatory symptoms
-are more marked. These manifestations may last for several days or for
-a few weeks. Hysterical dream states with hallucinations and convulsive
-seizures may also occur.
-
-Cocaine was first isolated by Gardeka in 1855, but was given the name
-it now bears by Niemann. It did not come into extensive use until many
-years later and was not employed generally in ophthalmological practice
-until about 1884. Freud in 1885 called attention to the fact that small
-doses of cocaine produced a stimulation of the mental activities with
-euphoria and an increased capacity for both mental and physical work.
-Mannheim,[230] who reviewed ninety-nine cases of cocaine poisoning in
-1891, found that the first symptoms were drowsiness and deep sleep,
-occasionally followed by coma and collapse. He observed that some
-patients became restless and excited, dizzy, laughing and crying
-alternately, while others were very talkative and uneasy, walking up
-and down with a drunken gait. Usually he found a complete amnesia
-afterwards.
-
-The first study of psychoses due to cocaine was made by Erlenmeyer[231]
-in 1886. As he afterwards modestly observed, "This first report on
-cocomania, which was founded on thirteen cases, completely exhausted
-the subject, and nothing essential has been added to the symptomatology
-then published." He found that it was almost always combined with the
-morphine habit. This was probably due to the fact that cocaine, at one
-time, was used extensively in the treatment of morphinism. Although the
-assimilation of food is not affected and gastritis was not a symptom,
-Erlenmeyer usually found a great decrease in bodily weight, as much as
-twenty to thirty per cent in some cases within a few weeks. Sleep is
-much disturbed and insomnia the rule. The most common form of mental
-disturbance he found to consist of attacks of violent excitement
-accompanied by delusions of persecution. Dangerous, impulsive assaults
-may occur. Very often, however, there were transitory confusional
-states with hallucinations of hearing and vision, succeeded by a mental
-deterioration and loss of memory. Visual hallucinations usually appear
-early. A common and peculiar symptom is the appearance of dark spots
-and points on a white background, attributed by Erlenmeyer to multiple
-scotomata. Auditory hallucinations he also found to be frequent.
-Sensory deceptions give rise to peculiar ideas such as the presence of
-the "cocaine bug" which the patient often tries to catch. Volubility
-is another characteristic feature of the disease which he refers to.
-As abstinence symptoms he describes forms of depression, with weakness
-of will power. Barker refers to psychoses of an acute hallucinatory
-confusional type as a result of cocainism.
-
-Krafft-Ebing speaks of episodic toxic deliria with visual and auditory
-hallucinations resembling those of alcohol and accompanied by delusions
-of persecution or jealousy with visions of multitudes of small animals,
-etc. He has not observed delirious conditions due to abstinence.
-
-In acute cocainism Kraepelin[232] finds an increased pulse rate, a
-lowering of blood pressure and the appearance of an excitement of
-the intoxication type with an agreeable sensation of warmth and
-well-being. There is an initial motor excitement followed eventually
-by weakness. This is a somewhat similar reaction to that caused by
-alcohol, but it is more marked. Small doses cause the habitué to feel
-elated, talkative and inclined to prolific writings. He feels a greatly
-increased efficiency but does not show a corresponding productivity.
-Larger doses cause delirious excitement with a tendency to sudden
-collapse. After a prolonged use of the drug a condition of nervous
-excitement ensues, with an increasing susceptibility to intoxication, a
-mild flight of ideas, a diminished capacity for mental exertion, loss
-of will power and failure of memory. The patient is busy with entirely
-useless activities, quite voluble, and writes incessantly. He becomes
-unreliable, forgetful, disorderly and careless in his conduct. The mood
-alternates between one of well-being, irritability, suspicious anxiety
-and emotional dulness. Kraepelin speaks of the great loss of weight,
-increased reflexes, dilated pupils, rapid pulse, etc. Insomnia is a
-common symptom. The characteristic psychosis of cocaine, however, in
-his opinion is a paranoid condition somewhat resembling the alcoholic
-forms. The onset is usually sudden, with irritability, suspicion
-and anxious restlessness, together with the sudden development
-of hallucinations of various kinds. Auditory hallucinations are
-particularly numerous and are very active. The patient's surroundings
-appear strange and unreal. He sees all kinds of pictures of the most
-realistic type. Tactile hallucinations are very common. The patient
-often shoots at his imaginary persecutors or attempts suicide to escape
-them. A typical symptom is the appearance of delusions of jealousy.
-With all of this the patient is usually well oriented. Only
-occasionally is there a clouding of consciousness and confusion.
-Insight is, however, always lacking. Even with a clear sensorium
-the delusional ideas are firmly retained. The mood is excited,
-irritable, sometimes angry and exasperated, but most frequently
-depressed and suspicious. The conduct is characterized by restlessness
-and uncertainty. There is usually a marked volubility suggesting a
-conscious delirium at times. The whole development of these conditions
-is rapid, often within a few weeks. They disappear as quickly in many
-instances.
-
-Chronic cocainism is very similar to the alcoholic conditions. From
-a symptomatic point of view, however, the paranoid cocaine psychoses
-occupy relatively an intermediate position between alcoholic delirium
-and the paranoid states.
-
-In experiments on dogs Nissl found a stainability of the achromatic
-substance in the neurones, a beginning shrinkage of the cell nuclei and
-a slight increase of leucocytes in the pia and vessels.
-
-Chloral-hydrate, which has been employed medicinally since 1869, is
-much less frequently a cause of mental disturbance than morphine or
-cocaine. Krafft-Ebing describes its use combined usually with other
-drugs as causing moroseness, depression and mental dulness. He speaks,
-too, of a delirium due to sudden withdrawal. This condition, he says,
-may also be caused by paraldehyde. The craving for chloral, on the
-part of those who have acquired the habit, is much less intense than
-that for morphine or cocaine. Other drugs are very readily substituted
-for that reason. A prolonged use leads to digestive disturbances,
-constipation alternating with diarrhea, jaundice, flushing of the face,
-congestion of the conjunctiva, fulness of the head, palpitations, weak
-pulse, dyspnea and general malnutrition with erythematous, urticareous
-or pustular skin eruptions, etc. Hyperesthesias, anesthesias,
-paresthesias, pains in the limbs, sensations of heat and cold, tremors,
-occasional loss of muscular power and sometimes ataxia appear. The
-reflexes are usually decreased. Epileptiform convulsions have been
-observed although they are infrequent. The mental disturbances of
-chloral have been studied by Wilson.[233] He describes the habitué as
-"dull, apathetic, somnolent, disposed to neglect his ordinary duties
-and affairs. He passes much of his time in a state of dreamy lethargy
-or in deep and prolonged sleep, from which he awakes unrefreshed and
-in pain." Headache is an almost constant symptom. It is associated
-with "confusion of thought, inability to converse intelligently or to
-articulate distinctly, and other evidences of cerebral congestion."
-Vertigo is also common. The mental state is characterized by dulness,
-apathy and confusion, alternating with periods of irritability and
-restlessness. The depression is not so marked as in morphinism.
-Inability to concentrate the mind, loss of memory, and intellectual
-enfeeblement are terminal conditions. Occasionally in the worst cases
-hallucinations, delusions, clouding and states of excitement are
-observed. Abstinence symptoms are headache, insomnia, neuralgia, pains
-in the limbs, nervousness, restlessness and formication. A delirium
-similar to that of alcoholism has been referred to by various writers.
-
-Casamajor[234] has described two types of mental disturbance due to the
-use of bromides,—a condition of apathy with dulness and an active
-delirium. The first is characterized by apathy, dulness, somnolence,
-weakness and failing memory, and is often observed in epileptics who
-have been subjected to protracted periods of bromide treatment. He
-has also reported toxic deliria showing marked hallucinations with
-psychomotor unrest, fabrications and paraphasia. This may be associated
-with unequal, sluggish pupils, increased or unequal patellar reflexes,
-tremors, ankle clonus and an unsteady gait—a general condition
-suggesting paresis. Hoch[235] also reported cases showing
-hallucinations, clouding, disorientation, amnesia, fabrications and
-aphasic disturbances, together with physical signs simulating general
-paresis. O'Malley and Franz[236] described somewhat similar symptoms
-in a case showing dilated sluggish pupils, exaggerated knee-jerks,
-ankle clonus, tremors and unsteady gait, etc. The mental disturbance
-was characterized by a confused dreamlike state, with hallucinations,
-memory defect, a disturbance of attention, and a marked tendency to
-fabrication. The fabrication in their opinion suggested a delirious
-origin rather than the Korsakow complex.
-
-The first references to the psychoses caused by lead intoxication were
-apparently those of Dehäne in 1771. Tanquerel des Planches published
-his "Encephalopathia Saturnina" in 1836. He recognized three forms
-of this condition,—the delirious, the comatose and the convulsive.
-Edsall[237] describes as encephalopathies all of the cerebral symptoms
-due to chronic lead poisoning. In addition to transitory hemiplegias,
-aphasia and choreiform movements, he refers to the occurrence of
-hysterical manifestations, such as hemianesthesias associated with
-outbursts of excitement. Coma and clouded states often occur. These
-may be accompanied by convulsions. In the delirious form there may
-be a marked excitement with psychomotor activity. Hallucinations are
-common, particularly in alcoholic cases. Delusions of persecution are
-not infrequent. There is usually a rise of temperature throughout
-the attack. The delirium may last from a few days to several weeks.
-Symptom complexes strongly suggesting general paresis have been
-reported. Krafft-Ebing speaks of psychoses characterized by mental
-depression, feelings of oppression, irritability, mild delusions of
-persecution and terrifying hallucinations. Epileptiform attacks,
-paralyses and tremors are also mentioned. He refers to deliria which
-may arise spontaneously or follow an initial stupor, and speaks of the
-chronic lead psychoses as toxic hallucinatory confusional conditions.
-Six cases of this nature were reported by Bartens in 1887. Oppenheim
-has occasionally found hysterical symptoms associated with chronic
-lead poisoning. Rayner[238] found mental disturbances preceded by
-such premonitory symptoms as headache, restlessness, disturbed sleep,
-terrifying dreams, tinnitus aurium, flashes of light, difficulty of
-thought, and depression. This terminated in a few days in a delirium
-characterized by anxiety and visual hallucinations. Other cases showed
-a more marked depression and stupor, sometimes alternating with
-delirium and violent excitement, accompanied by hallucinations and
-speech defects. Amaurosis and convulsions are spoken of frequently as
-common symptoms. Conditions similar to general paresis have been noted
-by various observers.
-
-There have been very few contributions to medical literature on
-the subject of psychoses caused by arsenic. In discussing forms of
-poisoning due to that drug Edsall expressed the opinion that "marked
-psychic symptoms are unusual." Casamajor makes the statement that "in
-very severe cases memory disturbances have been noted, and in some the
-typical Korsakow polyneuritic psychosis." According to Oppenheim a
-rise of temperature associated with a delirium may be observed at the
-onset of arsenical poisoning and may also occur later in the disease.
-Psychoses due to arsenic were not referred to by Krafft-Ebing, Arndt,
-Schüle, Ziehen or Kraepelin.
-
-Edsall[239] mentions as the symptoms of chronic mercurial poisoning,
-headache, restlessness, mental depression and weakness. Most striking
-features are tremors and a peculiar emotional disturbance referred to
-as "erythism." Tremors of the lips and facial muscles are common and
-speech disturbance and choreiform movements have been noted. Symptoms
-suggesting neurasthenia and hysteria have also been reported. Naunyn
-has described excitements due to mercury characterized by anxiety and
-fears with hallucinations and sleeplessness. He also speaks of manic
-attacks, depressions and mental deterioration as associated conditions.
-
-Argyria or chronic silver poisoning is said to be accompanied often by
-a marked sensitiveness and occasional episodes of actual depression due
-to the discoloration and pigmentation of the face.
-
-Psychoses due to various gases are occasionally encountered.
-Illuminating gas is a rather common means of suicide, as is shown by
-the newspapers. It has been found that the cause of death in these
-cases is carbon monoxide, which is also often reported as responsible
-for the asphyxiation of workmen in garages and other places where
-gasoline motors are used. This occasionally results from the improper
-ventilation of laundries, engine rooms, gas plants, iron foundries,
-etc. These conditions have been very fully studied by O'Malley.[240]
-The mental disorders due to carbon monoxide are described as being
-characterized by a sudden attack of confusion and clouding associated
-with a period of complete amnesia. There may be disturbances of
-attention and Korsakow's psychosis is sometimes strongly suggested,
-with memory impairment and tendencies towards fabrication. This
-condition may be transitory or last for many months. On recovery
-the patient usually has no recollection of any events taking place
-after the time of the poisoning. Immediately following the initial
-unconsciousness there may be excited periods or delirious states
-with aphasic disturbances. In chronic cases delusions of persecution
-are often observed. The psychosis frequently does not develop until
-several weeks or months after the actual poisoning. Several observers
-have referred to a mask-like expression of the face, with emotional
-indifference, apathy and outbursts of laughter. The mood has been
-described as characterized by emotional instability. O'Malley calls
-attention to the important fact that the mental disturbance may have
-been the cause of suicidal attempts rather than a result of the gas
-poisoning. Confused delirious states due to carbon monoxide poisoning,
-also conditions resembling Korsakow's disease, have been described by
-Kraepelin. Several cases somewhat similar to that described by O'Malley
-have been observed at the Boston State Hospital.
-
-An analysis of the statistics of American institutions shows that
-psychoses due to drugs and other exogenous poisons are quite rare in
-this country. They represented only .39 per cent of the admissions to
-the New York state hospitals during a period of eight years. The number
-admitted to Massachusetts hospitals is still less. In a total of 70,987
-first admissions to forty-eight hospitals in sixteen different states
-there were only 324 cases due to exogenous poisons. This constituted
-.65 per cent of the total number admitted. It is interesting to note
-that during a period of eight years, when 49,640 cases were admitted to
-the New York state hospitals, 154 cases of psychosis due to opium or
-morphine were reported, five due to metallic poisons, eighteen caused
-by gases, and nine of types unspecified. No case of uncomplicated
-cocainism was reported during that period of time.
-
-The 314 drug habitués in the state hospitals of the entire country as
-shown by the census of January 1, 1920, and reported by the National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene, represented .15 per cent of the mental
-cases under treatment in those institutions on the same date. The 808
-drug addicts shown by the same census in all of the institutions of the
-United States, both public and private, represented .34 per cent of
-the mental cases reported by them. The fact that the private hospitals
-showed 4.5 per cent of drug cases in the same census is significant.
-It indicates that these cases are largely cared for in institutions of
-that type, and furthermore, that their number is very small.
-
-The result of the investigations made in 1919 by a committee appointed
-by the Secretary of the United States Treasury is of great interest in
-view of the number of drug psychoses treated in our state hospitals.
-The committee's report[241] shows an estimated annual per capita use
-of opium in Italy of 1.25 grains; Germany, two grains; France, three;
-Holland, 3.5; and the United States, thirty-three grains. More opium
-is consumed here than in any other country in the world. The committee
-was of the opinion that ninety per cent of it was used for other than
-medicinal purposes. The estimated number of habitués in New York
-City at that time as reported by the City Commissioner of Health was
-103,000. The questionnaire sent out by the committee to physicians
-registered under the Harrison Act showed that the number of cases
-under treatment for morphinism in various parts of the country was as
-follows:—California, 3,338; Connecticut, 11,740; Illinois, 8,218;
-Indiana, 8,438; Massachusetts, 14,770; New Jersey, 5,900; New York,
-37,095; Pennsylvania, 10,202, etc. The estimated number of drug users
-in the United States was given at one million, and the amount of money
-expended by them annually was said to approximate sixty-one million
-dollars. In view of these statements the number of psychoses reported
-in the hospitals is astonishing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE PSYCHOSES WITH PELLAGRA
-
-
-The origin of pellagra is shrouded in mystery. Although first described
-by Casal, the name now attached to the disease was suggested by
-Frappoli in 1771. He referred to it as of ancient origin at that time
-and probably identical with the "pellarella" reported in Milan in
-1578. Niles[242] is of the opinion that the peculiar malady existing
-among the American Indians and mentioned by Baruino in 1600 was almost
-certainly pellagra. It is interesting to note that he attributed it
-to the use of corn. The disease was observed in Spain by Gaspar Casal
-in 1735 and appeared in Italy about twenty-five years later. Of the
-4,404 admissions to the St. Clement's Hospital at Venice between 1873
-and 1880 over thirty per cent showed symptoms of pellagra. In 1912,
-according to Niles, the number of cases in Italy was estimated at
-approximately one hundred thousand. The disease was apparently first
-reported in France in 1818. It has been common in Egypt since 1892 at
-least and is said to have occurred there as early as 1847. Cases were
-reported in this country by John P. Gray at the Utica State Hospital
-and by Tyler at the McLean Hospital, in Somerville, Massachusetts, in
-1863. It is now thought to have been very common in the Andersonville
-and Libby prisons during the civil war, although not diagnosed as such
-at the time.
-
-Few cases were reported in this country prior to 1907, when it was
-found to be present at the Columbia, South Carolina, State Hospital
-by Babcock. Pellagra constituted seven per cent of the admissions to
-that institution in 1908, fifteen per cent in 1909, twenty in 1910,
-over twenty-seven in 1911 and twenty-six per cent in 1915. Sixty-one
-per cent of the deaths in the hospital during the latter year were
-due to that disease. The health officer of the state reported four
-hundred cases in South Carolina in 1909 and six thousand in 1914.
-Babcock is now of the opinion that pellagra undoubtedly existed for
-twenty years or more at Columbia before its significance was known.
-In 1910 the disease was found to be present in thirty different
-states and represented about three thousand cases.[243] Of these the
-largest numbers were in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
-Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, and Illinois. The
-importance of this question had already been recognized and a national
-conference was held on the subject at Columbia in 1909. During the
-same year the governor of Illinois appointed a commission to make a
-thorough study of pellagra in that state. The disease has been made
-the subject of elaborate investigation and study by the United States
-Public Health Service and several publications have been issued by that
-department.[244]
-
-Notwithstanding the extended discussion and scientific research of the
-last few years, the question as to the definite etiology of pellagra
-has not as yet been positively settled. The maize or Indian corn theory
-was first advocated by Mazari in 1810. He believed the symptoms to be
-due to a deficiency in gluten. Sette in 1826 attributed the disease to
-a fungus (scimelpige) growing on corn and producing a poison from the
-oil in the grain. The smut of corn, "Ustilago Maydis," was suggested
-as a possible factor by Pari in 1860. In 1872 Lombroso formulated his
-toxic theory: "In pellagra we are dealing with an intoxication produced
-by poisons developed in spoiled corn through the action of certain
-microorganisms, in themselves harmless to man." He also announced the
-discovery of "pellagrosein," a toxic substance extracted from spoiled
-corn. In 1902 Ceni advanced the theory that the disease was caused
-by the action of certain moulds such as the aspergillus fumigatus
-and flavescens. The Illinois Pellagra Commission in 1911 came to the
-conclusion after an elaborate investigation of the subject that the
-primary etiological factor involved was a living microorganism of
-unknown nature, that the probable source of infection was through the
-intestinal tract and that a deficient amount of animal protein in the
-diet probably acted as a predisposing cause. Funk in 1914 suggested
-a vitamin deficiency in the diet brought about by the consumption of
-overmilled corn. Voegtlin[245] in the same year expressed the opinion
-that the disease was essentially a chronic intoxication,—"While the
-agents at work in this intoxication are as yet unknown, I am inclined
-to believe that toxic substances exist in certain vegetable foods, not
-necessarily spoiled, which, if consumed by man over a long period of
-time, may produce an injurious effect on certain organs of the body....
-It is probably more than a mere coincidence that the population of
-that part of the world in which pellagra is endemic lives on a mainly
-vegetable diet."
-
-In 1916 a study was made by Koch and Voegtlin[246] of the chemical
-changes found in the nervous system in pellagra which was very
-significant in its results. They found an increase in water with a
-decrease in proteins and lipoids, the latter reaction being attributed
-to a degeneration in the white matter. There was also a relative
-increase in the cholesterol content, looked upon as a compensatory
-protective function tending to replace the loss in lipoids. The most
-marked chemical alterations were found in the cord. On feeding monkeys
-and rats with an exclusive vegetable diet, changes in the chemical
-reaction of the brain and cord of almost exactly the same type were
-brought about experimentally.
-
-Goldberger[247] in 1916 made an interesting report of a series of
-investigations carried on by the United States Public Health Service
-at Jackson, Mississippi. A large number of cases of pellagra were
-treated by largely supplementing the dietary with fresh meats, milk
-and leguminous vegetables. The carbohydrate content was reduced at
-the same time but corn was not entirely discontinued. Of 209 cases
-studied, 172 remained under continuous observation with a recurrence of
-symptoms in only one case. In a similar experiment made at the Georgia
-State Sanitarium seventy-two patients, all of whom had shown attacks
-previously, were treated for a year without symptoms. A number of
-volunteers at the Mississippi State Penitentiary were given a test diet
-consisting of wheat flour, corn meal, grits, cornstarch, white polished
-rice, granulated sugar, cane syrup, sweet potatoes, pork fat, cabbage,
-collards, turnip greens and coffee. Of the eleven convicts receiving
-this diet, six developed a typical dermatitis with slight nervous and
-gastrointestinal symptoms. The results of these investigations were not
-offered by the United States Public Health Service as being conclusive
-and incontrovertible evidence as to the etiology of pellagra, which
-must still be looked upon as being somewhat in doubt. The dietetic
-factors concerned in the production of the disease have been under
-serious consideration for a century or more.
-
-This information was supplemented by a study of pellagra in the general
-population of the cotton mill communities in South Carolina.[248] In
-comparing the dietaries of pellagrous households with those of the
-families escaping infection it was found that the former consumed
-less meat, milk, butter, cheese and eggs. The value of their diet in
-calories and proteins was lower. The proteins contributed, moreover,
-were more largely from cereals, peas, beans, etc. The carbohydrate
-content was also lower. They concluded that the particular points
-involved were:
-
-"1. A physiologically defective protein supply,
-
-"2. A low or inadequate supply of fat-soluble vitamin,
-
-"3. A low or inadequate supply of water-soluble vitamin, and
-
-"4. A defective mineral supply."
-
-They were also of the opinion that the disease could be prevented by
-"including in the diet an adequate supply of animal protein foods
-(particularly milk, including butter, and lean meat)."
-
-Roberts[249] in 1920 made a study of twenty-five cases of pellagra
-encountered in private practice. In every instance the disease
-developed in families provided with an abundance of food of all kinds.
-An analysis of the actual consumption, however, showed that "not one
-of the patients ate a well rounded, balanced diet of meat, milk, eggs
-or wholesome vegetables." Either they were suffering from a lack of
-nourishment in every case or they were eating practically the same
-diet that Goldberger used experimentally in producing pellagra.
-
-As defined by Barker[250] pellagra "is a disease characterized by
-peculiar cutaneous, digestive, nervous and mental disturbances, usually
-running a chronic course, with periodic exacerbation, but sometimes
-developing acutely and proceeding quickly to a fatal termination."
-He speaks of the disease as developing during the winter months
-usually with neurasthenic manifestations—fatigability, insomnia,
-slight vertigo, and feelings of apprehension, followed by digestive
-disturbances later in the spring. The parts of the skin surface exposed
-to the sun develop an erythema followed by a dermatitis. Nervous and
-mental symptoms may appear later. In some cases the disease tends
-to recur every spring. The skin lesions have been described as a
-characteristic "mask" shown on the face, the pellagrous collar, a
-bandlike eruption on the neck, Casal's "necklace" extending downwards
-over the sternum, the pellagrous "butterfly," "gauntlets," etc. The
-more common digestive disorders are stomatitis and glossitis, gastric
-disturbances and diarrhea. Neurological symptoms observed include
-hyperesthesia, paresthesia, anesthesia, tremors, paralyses, muscular
-pains, increased reflexes and occasional convulsions.
-
-The literature of pellagra and its associated mental disturbances has
-been elaborately reviewed by Babcock.[251] The following references
-appear in a comprehensive study of this subject made by him in 1910.
-Griesinger[252] described the pellagrous psychoses as characterized by a
-vague, incoherent delirium, accompanied by loquacity and loss of memory
-without any violent excitement or special disorder of the intelligence.
-The depression gradually develops into a torpor of all the mental
-powers together with muscular weakness, a condition resembling general
-paresis. Mongeri[253] states that the psychoses usually begin with a
-period of depression accompanied by hypochondriacal ideas. This is
-followed by confusion and hallucinations of hearing. Delusions of
-persecution appear, with a marked tendency to suicide by drowning.
-Crimes of various kinds may be caused by the paranoid condition which
-usually terminates in deterioration. In speaking of chronic and acute
-forms Bianchi[254] says: "The former is characterized by general
-depression, melancholia, confusion, slow dementia, paresthesias and
-ataxic gait. Contractures and subsulti are absent, although in most
-instances the reflexes are exaggerated. In the acute form we have
-rapid elevation of temperature, 39° to 41° C.; intense neuro-muscular
-excitement, subsulti, contractures, muscular rigidity, exaggerated
-reflexes and confusion with phases of exaltation. There are numerous
-intermediate forms in which we observe a great variety of psychical
-phenomena, and also alternations of excitement and depression. Phases
-of remission and of apparent recovery are observed, especially at
-certain seasons." Régis[255] is quoted as follows: "It is recognized
-that the most common form of psychosis in pellagra is mental confusion
-with melancholy or dreamy delirium. This occurs more or less markedly
-in most of the cases. It is manifested by inertia, a passivity, an
-indifference, a considerable torpor; by insomnia, hallucinations often
-terrifying, both of sight and hearing; by delirious conceptions
-with fixed ideas of hopelessness, of damnation, of fear, anxiety,
-persecution, poisoning; of possession by devils and witches, of refusal
-of food, and so marked a tendency to suicide, and to suicide by
-drowning, that Strombio gave it the name hydromania. This melancholy
-depression, which can reach, in certain cases, even to stupor, is
-always based upon a foundation of obtusion, of intellectual hebetude,
-and of considerable general debility, which becomes permanent and
-terminates by degrees in dementia, in proportion as the pellagrous
-cachexia makes new progress. It is accompanied sometimes by a
-polyneuritis. The mental confusion of pellagrins can, in place of
-changing directly into dementia, turn to a chronic mental confusion.
-One may observe in pellagra, as in every grave intoxication, a
-morbid state resembling general paresis (pellagrous pseudo-general
-paresis). This occurs especially in the cases where instead of habitual
-melancholy ideas, the patients present ideas of satisfaction and of
-wealth." Procopiu[256] found his patients "sad, apathetic, silent;
-in the more advanced stage they are melancholy, and fall sometimes
-into an absolute mutism, or respond with difficulty, and have the air
-of not understanding what is said to them. Sometimes this melancholy
-is accompanied with stupor, and leads the poor pellagrins into
-dementia." He also speaks of the occurrence of sudden outbursts of
-manic excitement. Tanzi[257] refers to the existence of both pellagrous
-mania and melancholia but speaks of a characteristic amentia "which
-manifests itself acutely in loss of time and place, loss of memory,
-confusion, hallucinations, and paresthesias, from which there arise
-morbid impulses and delusions. Pellagrous amentia, often assumes a
-depressive form, which simulates melancholia, and in some cases either
-from time to time, or throughout the whole course of the psychosis, it
-is accompanied by exaltation, which gives it some resemblance to mania."
-
-Gregor[258] in 1907 made a careful analysis of seventy-two cases. He
-classified these in seven groups: 1. Neurasthenia; 2. Acute stuporous
-dementia; 3. Amentia (acute confusional insanity); 4. Acute delirium;
-5. Katatonia; 6. Anxiety psychoses; and 7. Manic-depressive insanity.
-The neurasthenic cases (9.72 per cent) exhibited headache, pain in the
-gastric region, vertigo, paresthesia and lassitude, with a sense of
-unrest and anxiety as well as ill-defined apprehensions. There was a
-sense of mental incapacity and feeling of illness, together with a mild
-depression and hypochondriacal tendencies. The cases diagnosed as acute
-dementia (13.88 per cent) were of the same general type but with more
-advanced symptoms. These showed a decided stupor, tending to remission,
-deep mental depression, a sense of insufficiency and "peculiar
-subjective troubles." The tendency to suicide was prominent and caused
-this group to be called melancholia by some. Many cases showed the
-gradual development of an affectless stupor. Catatonic symptoms and
-stereotypies occasionally occurred. Memory disturbances were well
-marked in this form. The psychoses disappeared invariably with the
-symptoms of the pellagra. The Amentia group (44.44 per cent) included
-long-continued cases with remission and intermissions. Terrifying
-hallucinations and violent motor excitement appeared frequently,
-followed by a stupor which was sometimes interrupted by delirium.
-Hallucinations were usually present and some had dream states. These
-cases often terminate unfavorably. Acute delirium constituted 2.7 per
-cent of the seventy-two cases, and katatonia occurred in 13.8 per cent.
-These cases passed rapidly into dementia. Anxiety psychoses (4.16
-per cent) were diagnosed in a few instances, but were complicated
-by occasional stupors. Two and seven-tenths per cent of the cases
-were classified as manic-depressive insanity. Mobley, according to
-Babcock, found the following types represented at the Georgia State
-Sanitarium:—1. Acute intoxication psychosis, with psychomotor
-suspension; 2. Infective exhaustive psychosis, with psychomotor
-retardation or excitation; 3. Symptomatic melancholia with psychomotor
-retardation; and 4. Manic-depressive psychoses.
-
-Singer[259] in 1915 suggested the following classification of the
-psychoses associated with pellagra:—
-
- 1. Disorders directly due to the pellagra toxin:
- (a) Symptomatic depression; (b) Delirious pictures.
- 2. Disorders based on peculiarities in personal make-up, the attack of
- "insanity" being precipitated by pellagra;
- (a) Manic-depressive disorders; (b) Hysteria; (c) Psychasthenia; (d)
- Dementia praecox; (e) Paranoic developments; and
- 3. Disorders due to definite brain changes with pellagra merely as a
- complication:
- (a) Arteriosclerotic dementia; (b) Senile dementia; (c) Presenile
- psychoses; (d) General paralysis of the insane.
-
-He found mental disturbances of some kind in about forty per cent of
-the cases examined. As a general rule they appeared after the patient
-had shown evidence of several attacks of the disease. The psychoses
-occurred in men between the ages of twenty-one and forty and in women
-between forty-one and sixty. About ninety-five per cent of the mental
-disorders were to be attributed directly to the effect of the toxin.
-The remaining five per cent represented individuals with a defective
-nervous organization or were purely incidental complications.
-Singer found peculiarities in make-up associated frequently with a
-predisposition to pellagra. He also expressed the opinion that chronic
-forms of "insanity" are very rarely caused by the diseases.
-
-Sandy[260] made a study of 160 cases at the state hospital at Columbia,
-South Carolina, in 1916 based on a classification of psychoses quite
-similar to the one now in use. He found that thirty-five per cent
-of these belonged to the infective exhaustive group. As a matter of
-fact, this is the conclusion almost anyone would reach from reading
-the observations of the earlier writers. These cases were usually
-characterized by "more or less marked delirium, being accompanied
-by some confusion and disorientation, there frequently being also
-hallucinations accompanied by more or less agitation and restlessness."
-Physically he found, besides well marked symptoms of pellagra,
-evidences of severe exhaustion, loss of weight, emaciation, fever,
-sordes, anorexia, and typhoid facies. "In the milder forms of these
-'delirious pictures,' as Singer calls them in his contribution to the
-report of the Thompson-McFadden Pellagra Commission, and as he pointed
-out, the periods of clouding (of consciousness) may be quite brief
-and episodic. In such cases in the intervals when the consciousness
-is practically clear, the general attitude is one of symptomatic
-depression." Sandy found characteristic manic-depressive forms in
-eleven per cent of the series reviewed. The depressed types were more
-common. Here he found retardation of speech and action with a dearth
-of ideas. In these cases he looks upon pellagra as being merely an
-exciting etiological factor. The prognosis was not so favorable,
-however, as it usually is in manic-depressive psychoses, death often
-being due to the development of central neuritis. In three per cent
-of the total he found what could only be described as symptomatic
-depressions, the emotional condition not being so marked as one would
-expect in the manic-depressive group. In twelve per cent a diagnosis of
-dementia praecox was made. In these the pellagra was merely an incident
-and not an etiological factor.
-
-In several patients Sandy found a symptom complex strongly suggestive
-of general paresis, thus confirming the findings of other observers.
-These showed speech and writing defects, absent or sluggish pupillary
-reaction, swaying in the Romberg position, altered deep reflexes,
-disorientation, memory disorders and other evidences of deterioration.
-The Wassermann reactions were negative in both the blood and spinal
-fluid tests and no lymphocytosis was shown on cell counts. These
-cases he thinks belong in the infective exhaustive group, and
-usually die of central neuritis, a condition already referred to and
-described originally by Turner and Meyer. Sandy also found pellagra
-associated with various senile psychoses. This group constituted ten
-per cent of those studied. Fourteen per cent of the series he left
-unclassified owing to lack of history, etc. Some of these showed
-simple deterioration, others suggested neurasthenia, and some, general
-paresis. Of the remaining cases three were epileptic imbeciles,
-three, constitutional inferiority with episodes of some kind, and
-three were not insane. Cases associated with chorea and hysteria
-were also observed. On analyzing these most important findings the
-assumption would seem to be warranted that pellagra is an incident
-in certain psychoses—(senility and dementia praecox), that it is a
-precipitating factor in certain cases (manic-depressive), and that the
-characteristic conditions due to the disease are toxic and assume the
-infective-exhaustive form, occasionally simulating general paresis.
-
-The policy of the Association's committee on statistics in the
-differentiation of these conditions is shown by the following quotation
-on this subject from the last edition of the manual:—
-
-"The relation which various mental disturbances bear to the disease
-pellagra is not yet settled. Cases of pellagra occurring during the
-course of a well established mental disease such as dementia praecox,
-manic-depressive insanity, senile dementia, etc., should not be
-included in this group. The mental disturbances which are apparently
-most intimately connected with pellagra are certain delirious or
-confused states (toxic-organ-like reactions) arising during the course
-of a severe pellagra. These are the cases which for the present should
-be placed in the group of psychoses with pellagra."
-
-A study of recent statistics would tend to show that pellagra is not at
-this time a factor of importance in our institutions. In Massachusetts
-in 1919 the admission rate for this disease was .33 per cent. In New
-York state hospitals during a period of eight years it was only .03
-per cent. In twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other states it amounted
-to only 1.28 per cent. This includes a number of institutions in the
-south. There were 263 cases (.37 per cent) in 70,987 first admissions
-to forty-eight hospitals in sixteen different states. The admissions
-reported from the southern institutions indicate that pellagrous
-psychoses are comparatively infrequent as a rule. During the year 1918
-pellagra constituted 10.7 per cent of the admissions to the Columbia
-State Hospital. During the biennial period of 1917 and 1918 the
-admission rate at the Arkansas State Hospital for Nervous Diseases was
-8.31 per cent. None were admitted to the Spring Grove State Hospital
-at Catonsville, Maryland. In 1919 the admission rate at the Western
-State Hospital at Staunton, Virginia, was 1.14 per cent, at the Central
-State Hospital, Petersburg, Virginia, 1.39 per cent, and at the Georgia
-State Sanitarium at Milledgeville, 2.49 per cent. One and sixty-one
-hundredths per cent of the admissions to the Louisiana State Hospital
-during 1920 were diagnosed as psychoses due to pellagra. Very few cases
-are reported in the northern institutions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE PSYCHOSES WITH OTHER SOMATIC DISEASES
-
-
-Mental disturbances of various types associated with somatic
-conditions and not sufficiently characteristic or circumscribed in
-their symptomatology to constitute definite and separate psychoses
-have long been recognized. That delirium is a complicating factor in
-certain acute febrile diseases has been known for centuries. Aristotle
-called attention to the occurrence of hallucinations and illusions
-during the course of fevers. Hippocrates referred frequently, not only
-to excitements, but to delirium and phrenitis. The word "delirus"
-appears in several places in the works of Horace and many of the
-early authors apparently used this term as synonymous with both mania
-and melancholia. That was probably true of Sennert. Flemming in 1844
-mentioned fever delirium, hallucinatory and delusional clouded states
-and an encephalitic form in addition to the various alcoholic types.
-Sydenham referred to the mental symptoms associated with malaria and
-Bright in his original "Reports" described other delirious conditions
-at some length. Sir Thomas Watson showed that the brain was uninvolved
-at autopsy in the acute rheumatic affections with apparent cerebral
-complications. Mental symptoms have, of course, been associated
-for hundreds of years with meningitic processes. Diabetic coma was
-also recognized long since. Griesinger is said by some to have been
-the first to call attention to the psychoses caused by the acute
-infections. Post febrile mental disturbances were, however, referred
-to by Sydenham, Baillarger, Westphal, Greenfield, Gubler and many
-others. Delasiauve very elaborately described the psychoses associated
-with typhoid fever in 1849. The mental disorders accompanying gout were
-discussed at considerable length by Sydenham and were referred to as
-early as 1699 by Philander Misaurus.
-
-According to Bucknill and Tuke[261], Misaurus made the following
-very interesting suggestions in an article entitled "The Honour of
-the Gout": "It would be worth inquiry, whether the gout is not as
-effectual against madness; and we may reasonably believe that it is
-so, if upon examination, it should be found that there are no gouty
-people in Bedlam; and then for the recovery of these poor creatures to
-their wits again, it will not need much consideration, whether they
-ought not to be excused the hard blows which their barbarous keepers
-deal them, and the Therapeutic method of Purging, Bleeding, Cupping,
-Fluxing, Vomiting, Clystering, Juleps, Apozemes, Powders, Confections,
-Epithemes, Cataplasms, with which the more barbarous Doctors torment
-them, and instead of their learned Torture, indulged for a time only,
-a little intemperance as to wine, or women, or so; or the scholar's
-delight of feeding worthily, and sleeping heartily, whereby they might
-get the Gout, and then their madness were cured." Clouston described
-a very definite form of phthisical insanity. Van der Kolk made the
-surprising statement that phthisis and mania often alternated in
-regular cycles. Nasse classified the mental conditions associated with
-fevers as either resulting directly from the febrile disturbance,
-constituting a prolongation of the delirium after the temperature
-subsided, or developing during convalescence.
-
-The German psychiatrists during the first part of the nineteenth
-century were divided into two quite separate groups. One of these
-insisted that all mental diseases were purely psychic in origin, and
-the other, that they were in all instances directly attributable to
-somatic disease processes. The former school was ably represented by
-Heinroth and Ideler and the latter by Jacobi, Nasse and Friedreich.
-This led to a controversy which lasted for many years. Heinroth's views
-were illustrated by his statement[262] that "Insanity is the loss of
-moral liberty. It never depends upon a physical cause; it is not a
-disease of the body but of the mind—a sin.... The man who has during
-his whole life before his eyes and in his heart the image of God, has
-no reason to fear that he will ever lose his reason.... Man possesses
-a certain moral power which cannot be conquered by any physical power,
-and which only falls under the weight of his own faults.... From wrong
-doing springs all misfortune, including the disorders of the mind."
-His principal work was a "Lehrbuch der Seelenkunde," published in
-Leipsic in 1818. The teachings of the psychic school were summarized by
-von Feuchtersleben[263] as follows:—"The mind is the immediate seat
-of the disease, the bodily suffering is secondary. Mental disorders
-may be clearly traced to their origin, Sin, Error, Passion. Diseases
-of the brain, on the contrary, and of all the organs, occur, even in
-their greatest intensity, without mental disturbance, as also the
-latter without the former. The psychical mode of cure is that which is
-properly efficient; the somatic remedies in reality act psychically;
-for instance through pain, diversion of the thoughts, stupefaction,
-terror. Pathological anatomy has not discovered any decided relation
-between disorganization of the brain and mental disorders." In 1836
-Friedreich[264]in opposing Heinroth's views outlined thirteen reasons
-for believing that all psychic disorders were somatic in origin:—"1.
-Because the mind cannot become diseased; 2. because the greater part
-of the causes producing those conditions is somatic; 3. because in all
-mental disorders there are somatic symptoms in addition; 4. because
-they are too permanent for pure conditions of the mind; 5. because
-they are subject to cosmical and telluric states; 6. because their
-crises always take place in a material way; 7. because they are not
-infrequently removed by strong material influences; 8. because the
-somatic mode of cure alone has a direct sanatory effect, the psychical
-at most an indirect effect on the body; 9. because the occurrence of
-psychical indisposition on one side only, must arise from the duality
-of the brain; 10. because the return of reason before death occurs in
-cases not only of psychical, but likewise of somatic diseases, and may
-be physically accounted for; 11. because mental disorders correspond
-with the temperaments; 12. because it may be proved that there are
-psychical conditions which depend on organic causes, and are therefore
-very analogous to psychical disorders; 13. because chronic delirium
-(mania) can be no other than febrile." Absurd as such discussions may
-seem at this time, they are no worse than the theological debates
-of that day. As a matter of fact, they were no more futile than the
-efforts still being made to classify the various psychoses on some one
-common ground, for any other than purely statistical purposes.
-
-Kraepelin[265] divides the psychoses due to infection into febrile
-delirium, infection delirium, acute confusional states (amentia) and
-exhaustions. The result of the infectious process, as he says, may be
-merely to precipitate a manic-depressive psychosis, or an attack of
-dementia praecox, general paresis or delirium tremens. It may also
-be manifested in the form of a neuritis, myelitis, encephalitis, or a
-meningitis. Bonhöffer in 1910 described several forms of "symptomatic
-psychoses" due to infections and divided them into three main groups:
-deliria, confusions and mental enfeeblements. He also referred to
-epileptiform excitements, dream states, hallucinoses, manic types and
-amentias either hallucinatory, catatonic or incoherent in character.
-
-Kraepelin speaks of several definite stages or forms of febrile
-delirium. In the mildest of these there is a feeling of discomfort
-with a sensation of fulness in the head and a marked sensitiveness to
-external impressions. In the second stage a suggestion of clouding
-becomes apparent and perception is distorted by hallucinations and
-illusions. There is an increased activity of the mental processes
-and consciousness soon assumes a dreamlike form. Hallucinations and
-illusions are mixed with realities. The restlessness increases and
-excitements or depressive moods may precede the appearance of the third
-stage. In this there is a more pronounced disturbance of consciousness
-with disorientation, confusion, flight of ideas, and variable emotional
-reactions, sometimes with actual manic manifestations. Evidences of
-stuporous tendencies may appear at times. In the fourth stage a state
-of weakness develops, with picking at the bed clothes, tremulous
-movements and a senseless muttering of words and syllables. This
-terminates in complete coma. In smallpox, scarlet fever, erysipelas,
-articular rheumatism and pneumonia there are often sudden confused
-excited states, while in typhoid fever stuporous delirium is the
-rule. Hendriks found the mental symptoms in typhoid greater during
-convalescence and not closely related to the febrile reaction. He
-describes a marked disturbance of attention with little involvement
-of apprehension or comprehension, but marked loss of mental capacity
-and sometimes a tendency to confabulation. Visual hallucinations
-and loss of sleep are common symptoms. Often there is restlessness,
-talkativeness, indifference, carelessness and disturbances of
-volition. In articular rheumatism and scarlet fever, according to
-Kraepelin, delirium sometimes develops with sudden rise of temperature.
-Restlessness, talking in the sleep, volubility or dulness precede an
-unusually violent delirium, sometimes terminating in stupor and death.
-The basis of these conditions in all cases is the toxic infection
-causing the fever, changes in metabolism, circulatory disturbances
-and an involvement of various organs, particularly the brain. A rapid
-and considerable rise of temperature usually causes delirium in
-typhoid, smallpox and erysipelas while it has no such effect usually
-in tuberculosis. This disturbance is a direct result of the influence
-of the toxins on the cortex. Alcoholism constitutes another well-known
-and common cause. In seventy per cent of the cases the duration was
-less than one week and the delirium disappeared with the fall in
-temperature. Some cases terminate in infection delirium or they may
-precipitate genuine attacks of manic-depressive insanity, dementia
-praecox or general paresis.
-
-The so-called acute alteration of Nissl was a very common change found
-in the cortical cells at autopsy. This very generally involved the
-entire cortex. Kraepelin describes another characteristic alteration
-observed in cases of typhoid delirium. The Nissl bodies are clumped
-together in the periphery, and are deeply stained, the processes also
-being unusually dark. Some cells show a shrunken nucleus with swollen,
-lightly stained bodies. Around these neurones there are usually large
-accumulations of elongated glia cells.
-
-In the infection delirium, so called, the mental disturbance develops
-in a case where there is no hyperpyrexia or where at least there is
-no relation between the psychosis and the temperature. A restless
-excitement ushers in the attack. Pressure in the head, mental
-dulness, depressed or sometimes cheerful moods, uneasiness, disturbed
-sleep and anxious dreams are common symptoms. Later a disturbance of
-consciousness appears and a special type known as "initial delirium"
-may develop. This is a common occurrence in typhoid fever.
-
-Aschaffenburg described two forms of initial delirium. The first is a
-restless condition of clouding with hallucinations and delusions. The
-second form, which may develop from the first, shows active mental
-excitement. Mild in its onset, a confusional delirious state soon
-develops with flight of ideas, hallucinations, delusions, and marked
-anxiety. An initial delirium of this type often occurs in smallpox.
-This assumes a particularly severe form with a tendency to suicide
-and violence, strongly resembling epileptic dream states. Seizures
-and epileptiform convulsions may occur. The delirium usually develops
-from the third to the fifth day of the disease and mental enfeeblement
-sometimes follows. The attack usually lasts from several days to a
-week. It may continue as a fever delirium. About forty or fifty per
-cent die. Nissl in one case found a marked congestion of the vessels
-of the cortex, with an increase in the number of leucocytes, and a
-widespread destruction of the neurones. The cell bodies were swollen
-and the chromatin lumps destroyed. Karyokinetic changes were noted in
-the glia cells.
-
-More or less similar delirious states occur in the course of
-intermittent malarial fevers. These usually take the form of a marked
-anxious excitement, often with stupor or a tendency to violence.
-The attacks begin suddenly, last only a few hours and end in
-sleep. Convulsions are frequently observed. These conditions occur
-in the quotidian or tertian types but rarely in the quartan. The
-delirium precedes a febrile disturbance or may take its place. It
-is apparently due to an accumulation of plasmodia in the cerebral
-vessels. In influenza, restlessness, confusion, anxious excitement
-or hallucinatory deliria may be associated with a low temperature.
-Polyneuritic manifestations have also been observed. The disturbance
-is undoubtedly caused by the influenza bacillus or the action of its
-toxins on the cortex. Abscesses are found in some instances. Deliria
-with phthisis are rare unless there is a tubercular meningitis. In
-the septic infections, conditions with marked clouding are often
-observed, and are to be attributed to embolism, metastases, etc.
-Muscular weakness, aphasia, perseveration and convulsions may be
-present in these cases. Infection delirium also occurs in chorea.
-This takes the form of a clouded dreamlike state with confusion of
-thought at times, hallucinations, delusions, and emotional excitement
-accompanied by characteristic choreiform movements. Apprehension, as a
-rule, is unimpaired, but attention is disturbed and the patients are
-forgetful and distractible. They do not have a clear grasp on their
-surroundings. Occasional hallucinations appear. The mood is anxious,
-excited, fearful or irritable, sometimes with outbursts of anger or
-threats of suicide. The choreiform attacks are aggravated and speech is
-affected. The reflexes are decreased and muscular weakness develops.
-The pupils are dilated and sleep is interfered with to a marked degree.
-This excitement lasts for a short time only, but often recurs. In nine
-per cent of the cases (Kleist) death results from heart failure, septic
-infection or other intercurrent diseases. Wassermann and Westphal
-demonstrated streptococci in the brain in several cases of chorea.
-Others have reported staphylococci in the blood. Choreic delirium is
-usually associated with endocarditis or rheumatic infections, and
-occurs in the acute type but not in the Huntington variety of the
-disease.
-
-Delirious excitements, according to Kraepelin, also occur in acute
-cerebrospinal inflammatory processes and may be due to furunculosis
-or caused by infections from the mouth or the intestinal _tract_.
-There is nothing particularly characteristic in such conditions aside
-from their severity. They have been collectively described under the
-designation of "acute delirium." Their differentiation depends entirely
-on the demonstration of the source of infection. The anatomical basis
-for these disturbances is always found in the cerebral cortex. The pia
-is infiltrated with lymphocytes and plasma cells and leucocytes are
-found in the perivascular spaces. There is also a proliferation of the
-glia. The "grave" alteration of Nissl is often demonstrable. After
-the infectious process passes its maximum intensity and the delirium
-disappears, "residual" delusions may remain with a clear sensorium.
-These may last for several days or even weeks. They frequently follow
-typhoid fever. Occasionally hallucinations of sight and hearing persist
-in the same way.
-
-"Collapse delirium" was first described by Hermann Weber in 1866. It
-takes the form of a stuporous state with confusion of thought, dreamy
-hallucinations, flight of ideas, an unstable emotional condition and
-an active motor excitement. The onset is usually sudden, following a
-period of sleeplessness and restlessness. Disorientation occurs early
-and consciousness is markedly clouded. Phantastic hallucinations and
-illusions are frequent. Excitement and confusion are also prominent
-symptoms. Flight of ideas is common and the patient often sings or
-expresses himself exclusively in verse or rhymes. Senseless and rapidly
-changing delusions are noted. The mood is elated, erotic, anxious or
-irritable, with outbursts of anger. Motor excitement is conspicuous
-and there is no sleep. Usually food is refused and nutrition disturbed
-with a great reduction of bodily weight. This condition is of short
-duration, usually not more than a few days, often terminating in sleep
-in favorable cases. Only a confused recollection of events remains
-on recovery. Collapse delirium, according to Kraepelin, is purely
-an infectious process and often occurs in pneumonia, erysipelas and
-influenza, following the subsidence of the active symptoms of the
-disease. It occasionally complicates articular rheumatism and scarlet
-fever. The characteristic features in erysipelas are hallucinations
-and delusions of a delirious type, while clouded states, confusional
-excitements and flight of ideas are more common after pneumonia.
-The symptoms usually develop after the temperature falls and other
-evidences of weakness are present. Kraepelin, however, recognizes
-infection as the only cause at this time, although he previously
-described these as exhaustive conditions.
-
-Acute confusional states or amentia were described by Meynert in 1881.
-These are characterized by a clouding of consciousness with multiform
-manifestations of excitement both sensory and motor. Amentia is one of
-the sequelae of infectious diseases. It takes the form of a subacute
-development of a dreamlike confusion with hallucinations, illusions and
-motor excitement lasting usually for several months. It is very closely
-related to collapse delirium and the hallucinatory insanity of Hoche,
-Fürstner and others. The early symptoms are sleeplessness and unrest.
-The patients become anxious, forgetful, develop a fear of death, and
-cannot control their thoughts, complaining of dulness and confusion
-of mind. A difficult comprehension of external impressions develops.
-They may be attentive and seriously troubled at not being able properly
-to grasp their surroundings. A decided uncertainty and restlessness
-results. Everything seems changed or false. There is at first a feeling
-of inadequacy and a profound disturbance of thought which develops
-into a well defined confusional condition. A dreamlike state follows,
-sometimes with a tendency to fabrications. Rhymes, phrases and words
-may be repeated frequently. There is a tendency towards distractibility
-and flight of ideas with vague thoughts of persecution. Hallucinations
-sometimes become apparent, and illusions appear. The mood is usually
-one of irritable anxiety, suspicion and mistrust, seldom with complete
-dulness. Occasional outbursts of anger take place. A restless behavior
-is noted as a rule. Sometimes suicidal tendencies occur and mild
-stuporous states follow.
-
-In another group of cases depression is an especially prominent
-feature as occasionally happens after typhoid fever; or states of
-excitement may exist with a flight of ideas and delusions of grandeur.
-Before the febrile disturbance has disappeared signs of restlessness
-are noted. Orientation is soon lost, apprehension is disturbed, the
-patient becomes distractible and begins to show hallucinations. Ideas
-of grandeur develop and fabrications are conspicuous and extravagant.
-The mood is angry and irritable, sometimes cheerful or elated, but
-very changeable. Restlessness, volubility, flight of ideas, senseless
-rhyming, confused writing and tendencies to sing, etc., soon appear.
-The sleep is very much disturbed. Very little nourishment is taken or
-it is refused entirely. Bodily weight is greatly reduced. The reflexes
-are usually increased, the pulse slow and the temperature subnormal.
-The duration of the disease is usually not more than from two to
-six months. Amentia usually follows typhoid, articular rheumatism,
-smallpox and cholera, and occasionally occurs after pneumonia. Symptoms
-invariably develop after the fever has subsided. After typhoid the
-characteristic features are excitement with hallucinations, delusions
-and variable moods; after articular rheumatism, disturbance of
-apprehension, restlessness, depression or even stupor; and after
-phthisis, hallucinations with preservation of consciousness and slight
-confusion.
-
-Light forms of the infectious exhaustions, according to Kraepelin, may
-appear after convalescence from the more severe illnesses. The patient
-does not make a good recovery, is exhausted, cannot think clearly,
-tires easily and is not able to read or write letters. Mental activity
-is weakened and the patient remains in bed, apathetic and indifferent.
-Consciousness, orientation and perception are undisturbed, although
-hallucinations may appear when the eyes are closed or noises in the
-ears may be noticed. The mood is gloomy, hopeless, and sometimes
-irritable, with sudden attacks of anxiety at night. The patient becomes
-suspicious and has fears of death or poisoning. Hypochondriacal
-feelings with self-accusation may develop. Food may be refused and
-suicidal attempts occur. Some cases are reserved and quiet, even
-stuporous, expressing only a few delusional ideas at times. Sleep and
-appetite are affected and weight lost as a consequence. These lighter
-forms usually follow influenza, articular rheumatism, whooping cough,
-tuberculosis or chorea. The duration is ordinarily brief—a few weeks
-or months, followed by recovery. In some instances the disease may
-progress to a complete enfeeblement of the mental processes.
-
-The exhaustive conditions in a large group of more severe cases are
-ushered in by a delirium or confusional state with a depressed mood.
-There is first a slight anxiety. Self-accusation and persecutory
-ideas appear early. Hallucinations of hearing and vision develop.
-The patients soon become clouded, inattentive, show difficulty of
-thought and loss of memory, with mental dulness. All grasp upon their
-surroundings is lost, they fail to recognize members of the family,
-and answer questions unintelligently. They have no appreciation of
-their condition and no memory for events. The mood is indifferent,
-apathetic or whining. It may be irritable, quarrelsome or violent.
-Usually they lie in bed and are entirely apathetic. Sometimes they
-show automatic movements and have to be fed. The conversation is
-often incoherent and meaningless. They are inclined to be emotional.
-Sleep is usually interfered with and they are restless at night. The
-appetite is lost. Occasionally evidences of brain lesions appear with
-paralyses, speech disturbance or epileptiform seizures. The duration
-is usually a matter of a number of months. At autopsy grave cell
-alterations and glia reactions are common. Rod cells are also found.
-Endothelial proliferation is frequently observed in the vessel walls.
-Some cases terminate in a chronic condition which may improve somewhat
-in time. There may be a persistent emotional and mental enfeeblement
-with indifference, loss of memory, lack of judgment and impairment
-of will. These "acute dementias" represent the terminal stages of
-cortical infectious processes. They have been observed after typhoid,
-rheumatism, erysipelas, cholera, smallpox and malaria. Usually after
-tubercular peritonitis or articular rheumatism there is a simple
-mental enfeeblement, while erysipelas is usually accompanied by mild
-excitements and an elated mood. The typhoid cases usually showed
-irritability, with outbursts of anger and confusional states with
-hallucinations and delusions. They occasionally terminate in more
-chronic conditions with permanent deterioration.
-
-After typhoid, influenza and septic infections, Korsakow's
-"cerebropathica psychica toxaemica" sometimes occurs. This is the
-polyneuritic psychosis similar to that caused by alcohol. There is,
-however, a delirium or stupor at the same time.
-
-The post-rheumatic psychoses have been studied exhaustively by
-Knauer.[266] Stuporous attacks were found in ninety-three per cent of his
-cases, following acute infections. He describes four groups showing
-psychotic manifestations:—
-
- 1. Anxious delirious excitements followed by stupor.
- 2. Excitements alternating with stupor.
- 3. Stuporous depression throughout.
- 4. Amentia-like excitements throughout.
-
-The essential feature of Knauer's study was an analysis of
-post-rheumatic stupors. He describes these as clouded or dream
-states "not different from physiological sleep and the ordinary
-artificial narcoses." In them he sees a disturbance of apprehension,
-an interference with intellectual processes, a retention defect, and a
-loss of the power of attention. Catalepsy was found to be present in
-the majority of his cases. The loss of affect was described as being
-more complete than in manic-depressive psychoses. He speaks of the mood
-as sad, depressed, anxious, but above all, changeable.
-
-Generally speaking this group of psychoses due to somatic disease
-is one which requires further study. We have comparatively little
-statistical information on the subject as yet. The differentiation of
-these conditions as outlined in the Association's statistical manual is
-as follows:—
-
-"Under this heading are brought together those mental disorders which
-appear to depend directly upon some physical disturbance or somatic
-disease not already provided for in the foregoing groups.
-
-"In the types designated below under (a) to (e) inclusive, we have
-essentially deliria or states of confusion arising during the course
-of an infectious disease or in association with a condition of
-exhaustion or a toxaemia. The mental disturbance is apparently the
-result of interference with brain nutrition or the unfavorable action
-of certain deleterious substances, poisons or toxins, on the central
-nervous system. The clinical pictures met with are extremely varied.
-The delirium may be marked by severe motor excitement and incoherence
-of utterance, or by multiform hallucinations with deep confusion or
-a dazed, bewildered condition; epileptiform attacks, catatonic-like
-symptoms, stupor, etc., may occur. In classifying these psychoses
-a difficult problem arises in many cases if attempts are made to
-distinguish between infection and exhaustion as etiological factors.
-For statistical reports the following differentiations should be made:
-
-"Under (a) 'Delirium with infectious diseases' place the _initial
-deliria_ which develop during the prodromal or incubation period or
-before the febrile stage as in some cases of typhoid, small-pox,
-malaria, etc.; the _febrile deliria_ which seem to bear a definite
-relation to the rise in temperature; the _post-febrile deliria_ of the
-period of defervescence including the so-called 'collapse delirium.'
-
-"Under (b) 'Post-infectious psychoses' are to be grouped deliria,
-the mild forms of mental confusion, or the depressive, irritable,
-suspicious reactions which occur during the period of convalescence
-from infectious diseases. Physical asthenia and prostration are
-undoubtedly important factors in these conditions and differentiation
-from 'exhaustion deliria' must depend chiefly on the history and
-obvious close relationship to the preceding infectious disease. (Some
-cases which fail to recover show a peculiar mental enfeeblement.) In
-this group should be classed the 'cerebropathica psychica toxaemica'
-or the non-alcoholic polyneuritic psychoses following an infectious
-disease as typhoid, influenza, septicaemia, etc.
-
-"Under (c) 'Exhaustion deliria' are to be classed psychoses in which
-physical exhaustion, not associated with or the result of an infectious
-disease, is the chief precipitating cause of the mental disorder,
-_e.g._, hemorrhage, severe physical over-exertion, deprivation of food,
-prolonged insomnia, debility from wasting disease, etc.
-
-"Of the psychoses which occur with diseases of the ductless glands, the
-best known are the thyroigenous mental disorders. Disturbance of the
-pituitary or of the adrenal function is often associated with mental
-symptoms.
-
-"According to the etiology and symptoms the following types should
-therefore be specified under 'Psychoses with Other Somatic Diseases':
-
- "(a) Delirium with infectious disease (specify)
- "(b) Post-infectious psychosis (specify)
- "(c) Exhaustion delirium
- "(d) Delirium of unknown origin
- "(e) Cardio-renal disease
- "(f) Diseases of the ductless glands (specify)
- "(g) Other diseases or conditions (to be specified)."
-
-A study of 480 cases of psychoses with other somatic diseases reported
-from the New York state hospitals during 1918 and 1919 shows the
-following types represented:—
-
- _Number_ _Percentage_
- Delirium with infectious diseases 68 14.16
- Post-infectious psychoses 102 21.25
- Exhaustion delirium 94 19.58
- Delirium of unknown origin 36 7.50
- Cardio-renal diseases 69 14.37
- Diseases of the ductless glands 20 4.16
- Other conditions 91 18.90
-
-An analysis of 140 cases from the Massachusetts state hospitals in 1919
-shows the following:—
-
- _Number_ _Percentage_
- Delirium with infectious diseases 48 34.28
- Post-infectious psychoses 25 17.85
- Exhaustion delirium 26 18.57
- Delirium of unknown origin 6 4.28
- Cardio-renal diseases 16 11.42
- Diseases of the ductless glands 1 .71
- Other conditions 18 12.85
-
-Three hundred and sixteen cases from hospitals in nineteen other states
-were reported as follows:—
-
- _Number_ _Percentage_
- Delirium with infectious diseases 69 21.83
- Post-infectious psychoses 30 9.49
- Exhaustion delirium 75 23.73
- Delirium of unknown origin 33 10.44
- Cardio-renal diseases 45 14.24
- Diseases of the ductless glands 15 4.74
- Other conditions 49 15.50
-
-We have, thus, a total of 936 cases distributed as follows:—Delirium
-with infectious diseases, 19.76 per cent; post-infectious psychoses,
-16.77; exhaustion delirium, 20.83; delirium of unknown origin, 8.01;
-cardio-renal diseases, 13.88; diseases of the ductless glands, 3.84;
-and other conditions, 16.88 per cent. Four and one hundredth per cent
-of the first admissions in Massachusetts, 3.45 per cent of the New
-York admissions, and 2.07 per cent of admissions to twenty-one other
-institutions during the same period of time were cases of psychoses due
-to other somatic diseases. They constituted 2.81 per cent of 34,935
-admissions to all of the institutions above noted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE MANIC-DEPRESSIVE PSYCHOSES
-
-
-The manic-depressive psychoses as first described by Kraepelin are
-of comparatively recent origin. The history of the clinical entities
-included in this new grouping, however, may be easily traced back to
-the earliest days of psychiatry. Although these terms were not used
-perhaps as they came to be later, mania and melancholia were, as has
-already been shown, known in the Hippocratic era, over four hundred
-years before the time of Christ. They were referred to again in the
-works of Aretaeus in the first century A. D. and were recognized by
-Celsus, Caelius Aurelianus and Galen. Daniel Sennert[267] of Wittenberg
-(1572-1637) defined melancholia as a "delirium or deprival of
-imagination and reason, without fever, with fear and sadness, arising
-from dark and melancholy animal spirits, and occasioning corresponding
-phantoms." Mania he described as a "delirium or deprival of imagination
-and reason without fear, but, on the contrary, with audacity, temerity,
-anger, and ferocity, without fever, arising from a fervent and fiery
-disposition."
-
-Sydenham[268] recommended bleeding, followed by purgation, as the
-treatment indicated for mania:—"Thus the humours, which in mania would
-invade the citadel of the brain, are gradually drawn off towards the
-lower parts, a fresh bias being given to them."
-
-Thomas Willis[269] made some very significant references to the
-relation existing between mania and melancholia, in the seventeenth
-century:—"After melancholia we have to treat of mania, which has so
-many relations to the former, that the two disorders often follow
-each other, the former changing into the latter, and inversely. The
-melancholic diathesis, indeed, carried to its highest degree, causes
-frenzy, and frenzy subsiding changes frequently into melancholia
-(atrabiliar diathesis). These two disorders, like fire and smoke, often
-mask and replace each other, and if we may say that in melancholia
-the brain and the animal spirit are obscured by smoke and black
-darkness, mania may be compared to a great fire destined to disperse
-and to illuminate it." Morgagni,[270] "the father of pathology," also
-saw a close relation between these two conditions as is shown by the
-following quotation from his "De Sedibus et Causis Morborum;" etc.,
-in 1761. "Melancholia," he says, "is so nearly allied to mania, that
-the diseases frequently alternate, and pass into one another; so that
-you frequently see physicians in doubt whether they should call a
-patient a melancholiac or a maniac, taciturnity and fear alternating
-with audacity in the same patient; on which account, when I have
-asked under what kind of delirium the insane persons have laboured
-whose heads I was about to dissect, I have had the more patience
-in receiving answers which were frequently ambiguous and sometimes
-antagonistic to each other, yet, which were, perhaps, true in the long
-course of the insanity." Flemming[271] in 1844 described a "dysthymia
-atra" (melancholia), a "dysthymia candida" (cheerful dysthymia) or
-"melancholia hilaris" characterized by elation with playfulness and a
-"tendency to see everything in the most pleasant and cheerful light" as
-well as a "dysthymia mutabilis," an alternating variety involving both
-of the above forms. He also spoke of a "dysthymia sparsa" (apathica)
-or "melancholia attonita," and a "vesania maniaca" or mania which
-he divided into the acute, delirious, alcoholic, affective, and
-puerperal types, together with an "occult amentia" embracing all of
-these forms. Griesinger[272] in 1845 called attention to the fact
-that "the transition of melancholia into mania, and the alternation
-of these two forms, are very common." In 1851 Falret, senior, first
-described circular insanity in his lectures at the Salpêtrière, quoted
-by Tuke[273] as follows:—"We have also to mention another case of
-intermittence observed between the periods of remission and excitement
-in the forme circulaire des maladies mentales." "It is a special
-form which we call 'circular' and which consists, not as has been
-frequently said, in a change of mania into melancholia separated by a
-more or less prolonged lucid interval, but in the change from maniacal
-excitement—simple overactivity of all the faculties—into mental
-torpor."
-
-In 1854 at the Academy of Medicine in Paris Falret presented his
-"Mémoire sur la folie circulaire, forme de maladie mentale caractérisée
-par la reproduction successive et régulière de l'état maniaque, de
-l'état mélancolique, et d'un intervalle lucide plus ou moins prolongé."
-In the same year Baillarger described his "Folie à double forme,"
-summarized by him in a Bulletin of the Academy of Medicine as follows:—
-
- "(1) Besides monomania, melancholia, and mania, there exists a
- special form of insanity characterized by two regular periods, one of
- depression, the other of excitement.
- (2) This form of insanity: (1) presents itself in isolated attacks;
- (2) reproduces itself in intermissions; (3) the attacks may follow
- each other without interruption.
- (3) The duration of the attacks varies from two days to one year.
- (4) When the attacks are short, the transition from the first to the
- second period takes place suddenly, and generally during sleep. It
- takes place slowly and gradually when the attacks are prolonged.
- (5) In the latter case, the patients seem to enter into a state of
- convalescence at the end of the first period, but this return to
- health is incomplete; after a fortnight, a month, six weeks or more,
- the second period breaks out."
-
-This was described as "Folie à double phase" by Bellod, "Folie à formes
-alternés" by Delaye, "Délire à formes alternés" by Legrand du Saulle,
-"Die cyclische Psychose" by Ludwig Kirn and "Das circuläre Irresein" by
-Krafft-Ebing.
-
-At a meeting of the American Association in 1886 the classification
-of the British Medico-Psychological Association was adopted with the
-omission of moral insanity and the addition of toxic insanity. This
-included the following types of mania:—Recent, chronic, recurrent,
-à potu, puerperal and senile, and classified melancholia as recent,
-chronic, recurrent, puerperal and senile. In his "Clinical Lectures
-on Mental Disease" Clouston in 1898 described eight varieties of
-melancholia and six of mania, not including alternating forms. Kahlbaum
-in 1882, reverting apparently to the phraseology of Flemming, spoke
-of dysthymia, hyperthymia and mixed or circular forms—cyclothymia.
-Many of the conditions afterwards classified under dementia praecox he
-described as "vesania typica."
-
-It will be observed that, based somewhat on the conceptions of
-Griesinger, states of mental excitement were generally characterized
-as mania and all depressions as melancholia. As has been shown, the
-view that there was some definite relation between these two conditions
-had been gaining ground for many years and culminated in the "circular
-insanity" concept. In the meanwhile over fifty varieties of mania and
-thirty forms of melancholia were described by various authors. Aside
-from an emotional exaltation and increased psychomotor activity, few
-definite characteristics were insisted upon in a consideration of
-mania. There was almost invariably a disturbance of sleep but always
-with a sense of well-being and no feeling of exhaustion. The milder
-type of the disease was often referred to as "hypomania." In the more
-severe forms varying grades of violence developed. There was at times
-a clouding of the sensorium, a temporary appearance of hallucinations
-of sight and hearing, delusions of a persecutory or grandiose nature
-and incoherence of speech. Impulsive acts occasionally were noted
-during the height of the excitement. These attacks were frequently
-preceded by brief periods of depression. Many cases made rather early
-recoveries—others, however, were spoken of as having reached a
-chronic stage. Many terminated in dementia. These very often showed
-stereotypies, verbigeration, impulsive excitements, mannerisms and
-other symptoms now held to be characteristic of dementia praecox.
-Melancholia was looked upon as including all emotional depressions
-with hallucinations and delusions as the prominent symptoms. The
-mental state was essentially one of sadness but with fear, agitation
-and anxiety appearing at times. There was, however, no attempt at any
-differentiation between psychomotor retardation with genuine depression
-and apathetic states or actual mental dulness. Mutism and resistiveness
-were common. A refusal of food was rather to be expected. Stuporous
-states with muscular rigidity frequently occurred. Various physical
-changes were described. Cyanosis of the extremities was emphasized,
-with loss of weight and a lowered temperature. Many of the cases
-were untidy in their habits. Brief initial attacks of excitement
-were mentioned as usually ushering in the disease. These depressions
-recovered, became chronic, lasting for years, or terminated in a
-partial or complete dementia. These were in substance the views of
-practically all of the earlier writers on insanity.
-
-Sankey[274] in 1884 included in his idiopathic psychoses due to
-pathological conditions, general paresis and "ordinary insanity." "This
-is the disease which in its course presents such varying phenomena,
-and has thus given occasion for multiplying the names." Prominent
-in this group were the various forms of mania and melancholia and
-it undoubtedly included dementia praecox. "Like other diseases it
-may be artificially divided into separate stages, and this is useful
-for facilitating description, but such artificial divisions must not
-be looked upon as different species of disease." ... "Thus, a case
-in the primary attack commences by symptoms of melancholy; these
-may, when successfully treated, pass off, and the patient recover,
-or the melancholic stage may be aggravated, and the patient die in
-this stage;—the disease may exhibit symptoms of violence and become
-acutely maniacal. There is no ground on this account to say, that the
-patient has a new disease, any more than the appearance of an eruption
-in an eruptive disease would be the inauguration of a different kind
-of malady." Although obviously he had no idea as to the fundamental
-differences between manic-depressive insanity and dementia praecox, he
-unquestionably was one of the first to emphasize the fact that mania
-and melancholia were often definite stages of one disease process.
-
-In 1896 Kraepelin described melancholia as essentially an involutional
-condition. Under the heading of periodic constitutional disorders he
-included mania, circular and depressive forms, the mania, melancholia,
-and circular insanity of other writers. Schüle[275] in 1886 described
-circular, periodical and alternating psychoses. In 1894 Ziehen[276]
-included in his classification under the heading of combined psychoses
-a "melancholisch-maniakalisches" form in addition to mania and
-melancholia, which he spoke of as affective psychoses.
-
-It was not until 1899 that these conditions were clearly differentiated
-by Kraepelin[277] and the purely emotional and recoverable forms
-separated clinically from the deteriorative processes which he
-has associated with dementia praecox. The former he described as
-manic-depressive psychoses, which included mania, melancholia
-and a majority of the circular and alternating types previously
-described. This delimitation had a prognostic as well as an important
-symptomatic significance. The emotional excitements were characterized
-by an increased psychomotor activity, with a flight of ideas and
-distractibility, usually associated with a clear sensorium. Graver
-forms were, however, recognized, with a clouding of consciousness, and
-disorientation, occasionally terminating in stupor. Hallucinations and
-delusions when present were not prominent symptoms. The depressions
-were characterized by an emotional disturbance in the form of sadness
-with difficulty in thinking, associated with marked retardation in
-speech and a motor inhibition. More advanced stages showed clouding,
-disorientation, stuporous phases and hallucinations. He also recognized
-alternating or circular as well as mixed types. The prognostic
-importance of this clinical grouping was the tendency towards a
-complete recovery from the individual attack, with, however, an
-extreme probability later of a recurrence, the subsequent attacks
-assuming either form of the disease. As a rule Kraepelin found that the
-unfavorable types formerly included in the manias and melancholiac,
-together with the hebephrenia and katatonia of his fifth edition,
-presented the definite characteristics of the disease which he
-described as dementia praecox. His views have been modified from time
-to time. For instance, he at one time excluded the involutional and
-anxiety psychoses from his manic-depressive group. Later these were
-included. In his last edition he has described depressed and agitated
-forms of dementia praecox, which would strongly suggest that his lines
-of demarcation were not so clear as he believed them to be in 1899. Of
-the manic-depressive psychoses he says, "Manic depressive insanity as
-described in this chapter includes on the one hand the entire domain of
-the so-called periodic and circular insanities, on the other, simple
-mania, the larger part of the disease process described as melancholia
-and also a not inconsiderable number of cases of Amentia. Finally
-we include certain mild morbid emotional states, some periodical,
-some continuous, which heretofore have been looked upon either as
-introductory to more severe disturbances or as belonging, without being
-sharply circumscribed, to the domain of individual makeup. As years
-go by I have become more and more convinced that these all represent
-manifestations of one disease process." The following classification
-of manic-depressive psychoses was shown in Kraepelin's last edition
-(1913):—
-
- Manic types:
- Hypomania, Acute mania, Delusional and Delirious forms.
-
- Depressive types:
- Melancholia simplex, Melancholia gravis, Stupor, Paranoid, Phantastic
- and Delirious forms.
-
- Mixed types:
- Depressive mania.
- Excited depressions.
- Mania with poverty of thought.
- Manic stupor.
- Depression with flight of ideas.
- Retarded mania.
-
-The mixed and atypical forms are of special importance, as they occupy
-the middle ground between the classical types of manic-depressive
-insanity and dementia praecox. It is here that difficulties arise and
-errors in diagnosis are made. They have never received sufficient
-attention until recently. In practice many of these have undoubtedly
-been classed with the dementia praecox group. The first of these as
-described by Kraepelin is depressive or anxious mania—characterized by
-a depressive mood with anxiety and excitement and, at the same time, a
-flight of ideas. The patients are distractible, observant of everything
-in their surroundings, and complain that thoughts obtrude themselves
-upon them. Some have a mania for scribbling. Often there are delusions
-of persecution, sin, and hypochondriacal ideas. The mood is one of
-anxiety or despair. Impulsive acts are occasionally observed. They are
-inclined to weep, wring their hands, pull out their hair and throw
-themselves on the ground.
-
-Instead of a flight of ideas there may be poverty of thought and
-retardation with excitement—an "excited depression." The patients
-may be very wordy and monotonous in expression but are entirely clear
-as to their surroundings. The mood is anxious and tearful, often with
-delusions. There is a considerable excitement, but not of such a
-stormy character as in the depressive or anxious mania.
-
-Mania with poverty of thought, an "unproductive" form, shows a more
-cheerful mood but without a flight of ideas. This form Kraepelin speaks
-of as a common one. Speech is monotonous and expressionless. The
-patients present almost an appearance of feeblemindedness, although
-exceedingly variable and changeable. The mood is cheerful and sometimes
-irritable. The excitement is shown by jumping around, making faces,
-etc., but without any occupational activity. This alternates with
-periods of quiet when but little is said. They show no desire to occupy
-themselves in anything useful. Sudden outbursts of violence often occur.
-
-Stuporous, almost cataleptic forms with occasional delusions of a
-hypochondriacal type, fairly well oriented and with a clear sensorium,
-are spoken of as "manic stupor." This is interrupted by excitement and
-violence, with laughter, witty remarks and even eroticism. They often
-have a clear memory of all occurrences. This stuporous type may appear
-suddenly in an ordinary manic attack, or take place between excitements
-and depressions.
-
-In the course of an ordinary depression a flight of ideas may also
-replace the usual retardation—"depression with flight of ideas." The
-delusions are interspersed with cheerful thoughts and the patients show
-certain activities and an interest in their surroundings, although
-still depressed and hopeless. When they begin to talk they complain
-of an inability to control their thoughts. There is an inhibition of
-speech but not of thought. They may be quite prolific in writing, and
-may show a characteristic flight of ideas. This condition often merges
-into genuine excitement.
-
-Kraepelin also speaks of an inhibited or "retarded mania," showing
-a cheerful mood with flight of ideas and psychomotor retardation.
-These eases are excited, distractible, inclined to witticisms with
-"klang associations," but lie quietly in bed. He believes that there
-is an inner tension manifesting itself at times in acts of violence.
-Kraepelin also speaks of various other mixtures of depression,
-anxiety and excitement. Specht has described an "irascible mania"
-(Zorntobsucht) and Stransky a bashful mania (verschämte Manie). Dreyfus
-has described a partial inhibition or retardation (partiellen Hemmung).
-Hecker is responsible for a "grumbling" or faultfinding variety
-of mania (nörgelnden Formen der Manie). In any event, Kraepelin's
-conceptions constitute a distinct advance and have materially clarified
-a much involved confusion of entities which seem to warrant complete
-differentiation. His views have, of course, not been universally
-accepted. The English school of psychiatrists has been slow in
-expressing its approval of his theories. No textbook of late years
-has appeared, however, in this country that has failed to recognize
-the manic-depressive psychoses practically as Kraepelin originally
-described them.
-
-The psychological mechanisms of manic-depressive insanity have been
-studied exhaustively by Karl Abraham and other psychoanalysts. He
-looks upon retardation as a symbol of death and interprets it as a
-defensive reaction, the patient taking refuge in a retarded state to
-avoid contact with the outer world. The ideas of poverty associated
-with depressions he considered as symbolic of an inability to love and
-occurring in individuals who have not obtained sexual gratification in
-a normal way. When repression is no longer possible mania ensues and
-the patient enters upon a new existence, all instinctive inhibition
-being lost. The flight of ideas he looks upon as a reestablishment
-of infantilism. He suggests these views, however, as tentative. The
-delusions of the manic-depressive psychoses have been interpreted as
-an expression of repressed complexes. White[278] would explain these
-mechanisms as follows:—"Manic-depressive psychosis is the type of
-extroversion reaction. That is, the patients instead of turning within
-themselves (introversion) try to escape their difficulties (conflict)
-by a 'flight into reality.' This flight into reality is the manic
-phase of the psychosis with its flight of ideas, distractibility and
-increased psychomotor activity during which the patient seems to be
-at the mercy almost of his environment having his attention diverted
-by every passing stimulus. The great activity can be understood as
-a defense mechanism. The patient appears, by his constant activity
-to be covering every possible avenue of approach which might by any
-possibility touch his sore point (complex) and so he rushes wildly
-from this possible source of danger to that meanwhile keeping up a
-stream of diverting activities. He is at once running away from his
-conflict—into reality—and trying to adequately defend every possible
-approach.... This method I have described as a 'flight into reality'
-which is the characteristic of the manic phase, while the failure to
-deal adequately with the difficulty is manifested by the depression
-of the depressive phase. In the depression the defenses have broken
-down and the patient is overwhelmed by a sense of his moral turpitude
-(self-accusatory delusions). This sense of being sinful is the
-conscious appreciation of tendencies which should have been left behind
-to become a part of the historical past (the unconscious) in the course
-of the development of the psyche but which still demand expression....
-The benign character of the manic-depressive group of psychoses is
-explained because of their extroverted mechanism. Reality is the normal
-direction for the libido and because the direction is normal they more
-readily result in recovery."
-
-The American Psychiatric Association, in its manual designed for
-the assistance of hospitals for mental diseases in the compilation
-of statistical data, makes the following suggestions as to the
-delimitation of the manic-depressive psychoses:—
-
-"This group comprises the essentially benign affective psychoses,
-mental disorders which fundamentally are marked by emotional
-oscillations and a tendency to recurrence. Various psychotic trends,
-delusions, illusions and hallucinations, clouded states, stupor, etc.,
-may be added. To be distinguished are:
-
-"The _manic_ reaction with its feeling of well-being (or
-irascibility), flight of ideas and over-activity.
-
-"The _depressive_ reaction with its feeling of mental and physical
-insufficiency, a despondent, sad or hopeless mood and in severe
-depressions, retardation and inhibition; in some cases the mood is one
-of uneasiness and anxiety, accompanied by restlessness.
-
-"The _mixed_ reaction, a combination of manic and depressive symptoms.
-
-"The _stupor_ reaction with its marked reduction in activity,
-depression, ideas of death, and often dream-like hallucinations;
-sometimes mutism, drooling and muscular symptoms suggestive of the
-catatonic manifestations of dementia praecox, from which, however,
-these manic-depressive stupors are to be differentiated.
-
-"An attack is called _circular_ when, as is often the case, one phase
-is followed immediately by another phase, e.g., a manic reaction
-passes over into a depressive reaction or vice versa.
-
-"Cases formerly classed as allied to manic-depressive should be placed
-here rather than in the undiagnosed group.
-
-"In the statistical reports the following should be specified:—(a)
-Manic type; (b) Depressive type; (c) Stuporous type; (d) Mixed
-type; (e) Circular type; (f) Other types."
-
-Diefendorf[279] states that manic-depressive insanity comprises from
-twelve to twenty per cent of the admissions to hospitals for mental
-diseases. He reports defective heredity as being shown in from seventy
-to eighty per cent of the cases. He also found about seventy-five per
-cent of the patients suffering from this disease to be of the female
-sex. Buckley[280] states that sixty per cent of the cases give positive
-histories of "familial neuropathy and psychopathy." Paton[281] is of
-the opinion that heredity is a factor in from eighty to ninety per
-cent of all cases. Hoch has called attention to the constitutional
-makeup of individuals subject to manic-depressive attacks and suggests
-that they are usually of a moody, morose type, unduly optimistic or
-temperamentally unstable. Kraepelin[282] found suicidal tendencies in
-14.7 per cent of the female patients, and in 20.4 per cent of the men.
-Nine per cent of his cases showed a manic makeup; 12.1 per cent, a
-depressive temperament; 12.4 per cent were irascible or nervous; and
-from three to four per cent exhibited cyclothymic tendencies. Of the
-cases admitted to his clinic 48.9 per cent were depressive forms; 16.6
-per cent, manic; and 34.5 per cent represented both types in various
-combinations. Melancholia simplex and gravis constituted 23.5 per cent
-of the simple forms, 13.5 per cent showed phantastic delusions and 6.1
-per cent anxieties. Hypomanias made up four per cent, and acute mania,
-9.8 per cent of the cases. Confused and stuporous states constituted
-8.2 per cent and compulsions, one per cent. Lighter forms constituted
-ten per cent, and more severe types, nine per cent of the admissions.
-Stupors and clouding were found in 4.9 per cent and delusional states
-in 4.9 per cent of the total. He quotes Walker as reporting, in a
-study of 674 cases, that excitements contributed eleven per cent;
-depressions, 55.7 per cent; and circular forms 33.3 per cent of the
-male cases; and excitements, 6.2 per cent; depressions, 70.2 per cent;
-and circular types, 23.6 per cent of the female admissions. In from
-sixty to seventy per cent of Kraepelin's cases the first attack was a
-depression. In two-thirds of them, after the first mild attack there
-was a remission. In one-third of the cases, the depression terminated
-in an excitement followed by recovery. When the disease begins with
-a manic attack, two-thirds of the cases are followed by a remission.
-He reports excitements with a duration of ten years and depressions
-of fourteen years standing. In a study of 703 remissions he found
-ninety-six lasting from ten to nineteen years; thirty-four, from
-twenty to twenty-nine years; eight, from thirty to thirty-nine years;
-and one of forty-four years. He is of the opinion that the length of
-remission bears no relation to the duration of the attack. Of the
-depressions, 167 had a remission of six years; forty-six of 2.8 years;
-and twenty-seven of two years or more. Of the manic forms, fifty-three
-had remissions of 3.3 years; twenty-four of 4.5 years; and twenty of
-two years or more. Manic-depressive psychoses constitute from ten to
-fifteen per cent of the admissions at Kraepelin's clinic. He found
-hereditary taint in eighty per cent of his Heidelberg cases and quotes
-Walker as reporting 73.4 per cent; Saiz 84.7 per cent; Weygandt, ninety
-per cent; and Albrecht, 80.6 per cent. A history of alcoholism was
-found in twenty-five per cent and syphilis in eight per cent of the
-male patients.
-
-Rehm made an interesting study of the offspring of manic-depressives.
-Of forty-four children in nineteen families, fifty-two per cent showed
-evidences of psychic degenerations, twenty-nine per cent of which
-consisted in an abnormal emotional makeup usually of the depressive
-types. In 157 cases from fifty-nine families, Bergamasco found that 109
-showed manic-depressive psychoses. Kraepelin noted that the highest
-percentage of the first attacks occurred between the ages of fifteen
-and twenty. Reiss made a very significant analysis of the various
-forms of the disease manifested by individuals possessing definite
-predisposition. Thus, of the cases with a depressive makeup 64.2 per
-cent had depressive attacks, 8.3 per cent, manic, and 27.5 per cent,
-combined forms. Of those with manic temperaments, 35.6 per cent had
-depressive attacks, 23.3 per cent, manic, and 41.1 per cent, combined
-forms. Of the irritable individuals, 45.5 per cent had depressive
-attacks, 24.4 per cent, manic, and 30.1 per cent, combined forms. Of
-the cyclothymic persons, 35.3 per cent had depressions, 11.7 per cent,
-excitements, and fifty-three per cent, combined forms.
-
-An analysis of the number of cases of manic-depressive insanity
-admitted to American institutions is exceedingly interesting in
-view of the opinions expressed by Kraepelin. From 1912 to 1919
-there were 49,640 first admissions to the thirteen New York state
-hospitals. Of these, 7,499, or 15.1 per cent, were diagnosed as having
-manic-depressive psychoses or allied conditions. During the years
-1918 and 1919, when the Association's classification was officially
-used throughout, the percentage of manic-depressive psychoses was
-14.57. In the fourteen state hospitals of Massachusetts in 1919 there
-were 3,011 first admissions. Two hundred and eighty-three, or 9.39
-per cent, of these were manic-depressive psychoses. In twenty-one
-state hospitals in fourteen other states, practically all in 1917,
-1918 and 1919, there were 18,336 first admissions. Of these 3,409,
-or 18.59 per cent, were cases of manic-depressive insanity. Thus, of
-the 70,987 first admissions reported from forty-eight hospitals in
-sixteen different states there were 11,191 cases of manic-depressive
-insanity, a percentage of 15.76. This may probably be looked upon as
-fairly representative of the incidence of manic-depressive psychoses in
-American institutions.
-
-When it comes to an analysis of the various forms of manic-depressive
-psychoses reported, the indications are not so clear. In New York
-during 1918 and 1919 there were 1,980 cases distributed as follows:—
-
- _Type_ _Number_ _Percentage_
- Manic 905 45.71
- Depressive 729 36.82
- Stuporous 53 2.68
- Mixed 245 12.37
- Circular 48 2.42
-
-During the eight-year period referred to above in the New York
-hospitals there were 6,091 cases of manic-depressive and allied
-conditions, classified as follows:—
-
- _Type_ _Number_ _Percentage_
- Manic 2952 48.46
- Depressive 2014 33.06
- Stuporous 76 1.24
- Mixed 773 12.69
- Circular 199 3.26
-
-The fourteen Massachusetts hospitals reported 672 cases in 1917 and
-1918, classified as follows:—
-
- _Type_ _Number_ _Percentage_
- Manic 222 33.03
- Depressive 373 55.50
- Stuporous 4 .59
- Mixed 66 9.82
- Circular 7 1.04
-
-In the twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other states there were 3,409
-cases of manic-depressive psychoses as follows:—
-
- _Type_ _Number_ _Percentage_
- Manic 1401 41.09
- Depressive 1365 46.04
- Stuporous 62 1.82
- Mixed 228 6.69
- Circular 94 2.76
-
-The total from all of these institutions, of 12,152 cases, was
-classified as follows:—
-
- _Type_ _Number_ _Percentage_
- Manic 5480 45.09
- Depressive 4481 36.87
- Stuporous 195 1.60
- Mixed 1312 10.79
- Circular 348 2.87
-
-It will be noted that manic cases are more common than the depressive
-in New York, the number of the former being fifteen per cent greater
-than the latter. In Massachusetts the number of depressive forms is
-twenty-two per cent higher than the manic. In the other states the
-depressive types are less than five per cent higher than the manic.
-In all institutions the mixed forms are more common than the circular
-or stuporous. The stuporous forms constitute the smallest percentage
-reported in all hospitals, except in 1918 and 1919 in New York. We
-would be warranted, apparently, in the conclusion that in this country
-manic forms are the more common, the depressive being second in
-frequency, followed by the circular and stuporous types in the order
-mentioned.
-
-The statement is, I think, also warranted that there is a considerable
-difference of opinion as to the classification of the different forms
-of manic-depressive insanity and that diagnostic procedure is far
-from being standardized. Many of these discrepancies are doubtless
-due to difficulties in differentiating between certain cases of
-manic-depressive psychoses and dementia praecox. The hospitals
-reporting lower percentages of the former usually show a much higher
-rate of the latter. Certainly there is room for an honest difference
-of opinion in many instances. It must be admitted, moreover, that our
-fundamental conceptions of these two great groups do not permit of a
-hard and fast line of demarcation between them in all cases.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-INVOLUTION MELANCHOLIA
-
-
-In 1896 Kraepelin first definitely outlined his views on dementia
-praecox, to which he assigned hebephrenia, although he did not at
-the time include katatonia in his delimitation of that disease. He
-also described melancholia in his fifth edition, classifying it as
-an involutional or retrograde presenile process (Das Irresein des
-Rückbildungsalters). He had not as yet formulated his theory of the
-manic-depressive psychoses although he described manic and depressive
-forms of periodical constitutional disorders. In 1899 he discarded the
-mania and melancholia of other writers altogether or rather included
-them in his new manic-depressive group, but still retained melancholia
-as a distinct entity occurring in the involutional period of life only.
-As has already been shown, melancholia is a term which had been used
-for centuries and in a general way applied to depressions of any and
-all types. Kraepelin's manic-depressive psychoses and dementia praecox
-very largely destroyed the integrity of this old-time conception. It
-has been shown, furthermore, that depressive states often constitute
-an integral part of the picture of general paresis. Symptomatic
-depressions more or less distinct in character have been associated
-with a number of somatic diseases. Senile psychoses, epilepsy,
-various organic conditions, the psychoneuroses and the psychopathic
-personalities have depressive manifestations well recognized and
-readily classifiable.
-
-Kraepelin, however, pointed out the fact that there was another group
-still unaccounted for—the anxious depressions of later life, which
-he included under the designation of involution melancholia and which
-did not belong to the manic-depressive group. This he described as
-being preeminently a depression associated almost always with anxiety
-and fear as prominent symptoms. Accompanying this condition there
-are usually ideas of poverty, sin, or impending danger of some kind.
-Delusions of self-accusation are quite common. Anxious restlessness
-or agitated excitement is to be expected in a majority of the cases.
-There is usually no clouding of the consciousness, although, as Hoch
-expresses it, "the mental horizon may be more or less narrowed to the
-depressive ideas." The memory as a rule is not impaired. Hallucinations
-of sight and hearing are often present. Somatic delusions of a
-hypochondriacal nature occur. Insomnia is usually marked. The tendency
-of the disease is towards deterioration. Retardation and psychomotor
-inactivity are not to be expected. Melancholia is to be differentiated
-from manic-depressive insanity by the prominence of anxiety and
-apprehension, the absence of any retardation or psychomotor inhibition,
-the unusual frequency of self-accusation with ideas of sinfulness, the
-clearness of the sensorium, the comparatively unfavorable prognosis and
-the great frequency of suicidal impulses. The age, and the absence of
-previous attacks, is, of course, exceedingly important in arriving at
-a diagnosis. The onset of the disease is usually between the ages of
-forty and sixty, but not infrequently it begins with the menopause in
-women, and Kraepelin states that sixty per cent of the cases occur in
-the female sex. He found a history of defective heredity very common.
-The precipitating factor is often some mental shock, the illness
-or death of friends, or disasters of various kinds. No distinctive
-pathology of the disease has been described by Kraepelin. He was
-uncertain as to the rôle played by arteriosclerosis in its etiology.
-Diefendorf[283] reported that about one-third of the cases made complete
-recoveries; twenty-three per cent were able to return to their previous
-surroundings; twenty-six per cent terminated in an advanced state of
-deterioration and nineteen per cent died within a period of two or
-three years.
-
-In 1907 Dreyfus,[284] at that time an assistant of Kraepelin's, made
-an elaborate study of the cases previously diagnosed as involution
-melancholia in the Heidelberg clinic. During a period of fourteen
-years, a total of seventy-nine were reported. A thorough investigation
-by Dreyfus showed that two-thirds of these had made complete recoveries
-or improved to such an extent as to be able to go home. Only eight per
-cent showed a marked mental deterioration. He also found that over
-half of the series had more than one attack, usually depressions.
-One-third of the patients died and were thus eliminated from further
-consideration. The duration of the attack was over three years in
-one-third of the cases reviewed. Fifteen per cent recovered in from
-three to five years, nine per cent in from six to eight years, and
-eight per cent in from ten to fourteen years. He was of the opinion
-that after a careful study of the hospital records the symptoms found
-could all be explained on the basis of manic-depressive insanity,
-usually of a mixed form. Kraepelin had reported that forty-nine per
-cent of his cases deteriorated mentally. Dreyfus reduced this on
-further observation to only eight per cent. On analysis he found, in
-many instances, brief periods of manic elation, sometimes only a matter
-of hours or a few days, evidences of excitability, manic suggestion in
-the eagerness of the patient to communicate his troubles to others,
-and inhibitory processes indicated by a lack of interest, loss of
-affection or even difficulty of thinking. Dreyfus concluded that the
-depressions of late years were not so common as had been supposed and
-that a sufficient knowledge of their history showed that they had
-usually exhibited previous attacks. He thought that the long duration
-of the disease probably led to erroneous ideas as to its termination in
-deterioration.
-
-Kirby[285] is of the opinion that Dreyfus based some of his findings on
-insufficient evidence, as shown by his published case records:—"In
-a considerable number of other cases the author's conclusion that
-manic-depressive symptoms were present is based on extremely meagre
-data. As an illustration one case may be referred to briefly. A man
-fifty-three years old had an agitated depression lasting over two and
-one-half years and terminating in recovery. The case record contains
-no statement of any objective inhibition or feeling of subjective
-insufficiency, neither are there any statements regarding flight
-of ideas, or unusual loquacity. The diagnosis, however, is made of
-manic-depressive insanity, with partial psychomotor inhibition and
-flight of ideas. The assumption that these symptoms existed is based
-entirely on the retrospective account from the patient, obtained three
-years after recovery from the psychosis. He then declared that during
-the attack he could not think calmly; it seemed that one thought
-"knocked the other down," one thought "hunted after the other." He also
-described a feeling as if there were a cap on his head, as if he were
-nailed down. These retrospective statements are interpreted to mean
-that there was partial psychomotor inhibition and flight of ideas. In
-many other cases the reasoning is just as forced and the deductions
-based on equally insufficient grounds.... The author's aim was to see
-if the symptoms present fitted into certain schematic formula and thus
-the analysis became rather a search for diagnostic signs supposed to
-characterize a definite form of disease. Such a method leads away from
-consideration of the mental disorder as a whole; a few minor features
-are emphasized in the picture and because the patient recovers these
-are raised to diagnostic importance—a little feeling of insufficiency
-or a slight change of mood in a disorder which ends in recovery are
-seized upon as evidence that a special kind of disease exists; as a
-matter of fact, we would hardly miss just such symptoms in many other
-psychoses. There is no attempt to get below the surface, to understand
-the evolution of the disorder, or to use the facts in the development
-in formulating the prognosis."
-
-In the introduction to the book written by Dreyfus in 1907, Kraepelin
-nevertheless expressed the opinion that "These results show that
-for the most of these disorders which have been designated as
-melancholia there now exists no sufficient reason to separate them
-from manic-depressive insanity." This at the time was looked upon as
-definitely settling the fate of the melancholia concept and it was
-abandoned by some. As a general rule, however, the psychiatrists of
-this country seem to have accepted Kraepelin's original description
-of the disease as being thoroughly justified. To use White's words,
-"Many psychiatrists still believe, although Kraepelin himself accepts
-Dreyfus' conclusions, that there is still a place for involution
-melancholia distinct from the manic-depressive group."
-
-In his eighth edition Kraepelin[286] discusses melancholia as a
-presenile condition and reviews the whole situation in considerable
-detail. He shows that symptomatic considerations alone did not guide
-him in his original conception of the disease. A great deal of weight
-was attached to prognosis and certain forms were separated out and
-differentiated from manic-depressive because they tended towards
-mental enfeeblement. He calls attention to the fact that Thalbitzer
-disputed the integrity of melancholia in 1905, classifying it as a
-manic-depressive reaction. After reviewing the findings of Dreyfus he
-admits that the conclusions of the latter are in the main correct and
-that involution melancholia as originally described cannot be retained
-as a definite entity. "The significant fact still remains," he says,
-"that single attacks of depression are disproportionately common in
-the involution period." Hübner, for instance, found twenty-one single
-attacks of melancholia after the fiftieth year of age to only two
-single attacks of mania. "The appearance of depressions, therefore,
-through the revolutions of this period of life seems to be favored
-to a special degree." He again states that he is unable to determine
-what rôle is played in the involutional depressions by beginning
-arteriosclerosis or the onset of senile conditions. He concludes,
-however, that a form of depression, earlier described as melancholia,
-is still to be separated from the manic-depressive psychoses although
-not entirely clear as to its significance or exact delimitation.[287]
-
-These are the most severe and rapidly fatal forms of anxious
-excitements, as a rule developing suddenly and included now in his
-presenile group. "These cases are anxious, restless, sleepless,
-self-accusatory and show delusions of persecution." The delusional
-ideas are depressive, extravagant and hypochondriacal. "They have
-offended everybody; are eternally damned; Satan is coming and will take
-them; he is out there. Nature has changed, everything is different, no
-mercy can come from heaven; there are ghosts in the house; the patients
-find themselves in the infernal regions, are surrounded by hostile
-powers, are in a bewitched castle. They will be carried away, thrown
-into a fiery furnace, their arms and legs cut off, have their throats
-cut in the presence of a thousand students, and be buried alive. They
-have a cancer in the stomach, the husband is insane or has had a
-stroke." Suicidal attempts are frequent. Sometimes grandiose ideas are
-expressed, accompanied by hallucinations. Apprehension and orientation
-are usually not disturbed. This is ordinarily followed by a period of
-violent excitement with agitated wringing of the hands, striking the
-breast, tearing the hair, etc. Confusional conditions with clouding may
-appear, often terminating shortly in a pneumonia, erysipelas or heart
-failure. According to Nissl, widespread and well marked changes are to
-be found in the brain at autopsy. There is an extensive destruction
-of ganglion cells, although that cannot be definitely associated with
-the symptoms of the disease. Kraepelin leaves the question open as to
-whether this should be looked upon as some form of "acute delirium"
-such as manifests itself in the course of various psychoses. The
-disease is usually one of the sixth decade of life, much more common in
-the female sex, and cannot without further information be definitely
-excluded from the involutional processes. He concludes his discussion
-by saying that these conditions probably "have some relation to the
-similar delirious senile forms to be discussed later." This is, of
-course, a decided modification of his original views, although it
-is quite clear that he still feels that there is an involutional
-depression, now included, however, in the presenile group.
-
-In his chapter on manic-depressive insanity three years later
-Kraepelin[288] referred to this question again as follows:—"Under these
-circumstances I thought at first that the involutional depressions
-described as special clinical forms, melancholia in the narrower sense,
- which seemed to show essential differences in its general
-characteristics, course, and to a certain extent in the history of its
-development, should be separated from manic-depressive insanity. At the
-same time I was aware of the fact that in a considerable number of the
-involutional depressions, both on account of their clinical form and
-their association sooner or later with manic states, their connection
-with manic-depressive insanity could not be questioned. I therefore
-made an effort to establish a practical differentiation, entirely
-without satisfactory results. Further experience has demonstrated, as
-was shown in the discussion of the presenile psychoses, that they do
-not constitute grounds for the separation of melancholia. Deterioration
-is explained by the development of senile or arteriosclerotic changes.
-Some cases were of long duration, showing manic symptoms before
-recovery. The frequency of depressions in advanced years we have
-learned to be a legitimate development of the involutional period of
-life. The substitution of anxious excitement for volitional inhibition
-has proved to be an occurrence which is found in advancing years in
-those cases which had an attack of the ordinary form in the decade
-before (as shown in our cases 1 and 2). Hübner has, moreover, made
-the observation that melancholia may show retardation in one attack
-and not in the next. There remains, therefore, no adequate reason for
-differentiating the involutional depressions heretofore described as
-melancholia from manic-depressive insanity."
-
-Kehrer[289] has made a careful analysis of the facts brought out
-by Kraepelin's statistical diagram showing the various age groups
-represented by his manic-depressive cases. "From the fifteenth year
-of life, at which age manic and melancholic attacks are most frequent
-(about twenty-five per cent), the curve of the manic attacks falls
-steadily (with only two important rises at the thirty-fifth and the
-forty-fifth years) until it becomes less than five per cent at the
-seventieth year, while the curve of the melancholic conditions with
-equal constancy increases (with the exception of the fifty-fifth
-year only), especially between the forty-fifth and fiftieth years,
-from fifty-two to seventy-four per cent and finally to eighty per
-cent. On the other hand, the curve of the manic first attacks falls
-steadily from 28.5 per cent at the twentieth year to 3.5 per cent at
-the sixtieth, with a slight increase at fifty from 12.7 per cent to
-13.4 per cent, while in the male sex the same curve shows no further
-increase after the thirtieth year, when it reaches its maximum (33.8
-per cent) and even shows a particularly sharp fall, from 22.2 per
-cent to 5.9 per cent, between the fiftieth and sixtieth year....
-Based on this diagram Kraepelin concluded that the depressions of the
-involutional period, which did not show special symptoms of some other
-disease entity, could not be differentiated from those of the earlier
-periods of life."
-
-Specht,[290] Hübner and Stransky have subscribed to these views.
-Stransky expressed the opinion that "there is nothing in the form
-of these depressions, either with or without anxiety, by which they
-can be distinguished from those recognized as manic-depressive
-insanity and that neither the course nor the age of onset offer any
-convincing argument for their clinical independence." Rehm, on the
-other hand, held that there were depressions of the involutional
-period of life corresponding to Kraepelin's melancholia and not
-belonging to manic-depressive insanity. He described these as lacking
-the constitutional taint and characterized by a slow onset, without
-previous attacks, fatigability, outspoken egocentric conduct,
-hypochondriacal delusions of the deteriorative type and the appearance
-of hallucinations. Bleuler,[291] Bumke, Seelert, Albrecht and others
-still hold to the integrity of involution melancholia as a distinct
-entity. "These forms," as Bleuler expresses it, "have as a rule a much
-more protracted course. They progress slowly for one or two years,
-continue to be mild, reaching their height in several years, and
-decline slowly to their final conclusion. The inhibition is obscured
-by great restlessness, genuine agitated forms are common, they tend to
-recidivism much less than the others and show also much less heredity."
-Albrecht, in 138 cases of functional psychoses of the involutional
-period, only thirty-two of which were in men, diagnosed eighty-two as
-genuine involution melancholia. In none of his cases did he find an
-isolated attack of mania in that period of life. He differentiates this
-condition from agitated melancholia, leaving the question open as to
-whether this constitutes a pernicious form or is a presenile disease.
-According to Bumke, psychic causes are more prominent in involution
-melancholia than in the manic-depressive psychoses, the duration is
-longer and they do not make such complete recoveries, the most common
-termination being a depressive mental enfeeblement, with despondency
-and an anxious hypochondriacal mood. For the genetic interpretation of
-climacteric melancholia as well as the other involutional forms the
-intimate association, according to Bumke, of endogenous with exogenous
-factors is the point of greatest importance. "Involution only brings
-the barrel to an overflow; it only adds exogenous to the individual
-endogenous momentum so that the sum total leads to the outbreak of a
-manifest psychosis." Seelert goes still further with the endogenous
-exogenous theory of Bumke. "It depends on the type of the association
-whether the organic anxiety psychosis, a melancholia or the depression
-of a manic-depressive insanity develops in the later period of life.
-In one the endogenous factors predominate, in the other the exogenous
-and in melancholia (in its narrower sense) the two maintain a balance."
-
-Although, as has been noted, no characteristic pathological changes
-have been associated with involutional melancholia, a condition to
-which attention was called by Adolf Meyer should be referred to here.
-In 1901, in an article in "Brain" on "The Parenchymatous Systemic
-Degenerations mainly in the Central Nervous System" he proposed the
-name "Central Neuritis" for a terminal affection previously described
-by Turner in 1899 and occurring more frequently perhaps in involutional
-melancholia than in any other psychosis:—"This alteration has
-been found to occur in peculiar forms of end stages of depressive
-disorders, near or after the climacteric period, alcoholic-senile
-and alcoholico-phthisical cachectic states, idiocy, and perhaps also
-general paralysis (Turner's case). Ordinary infectious and cachectic
-states do not, however, appear to form an important link in the
-causes."[292] The mental condition is usually anxious, agitated and
-apprehensive, often terminating in a delirium followed by a stupor.
-The disease may last for a few days ending in death or may recover
-after several weeks. It is accompanied by progressive weakness, loss
-of weight and wasting, a slight rise of temperature, and in many cases
-attacks of diarrhea. Characteristic are muscular tension with rigidity,
-twitching movements, incoordination and jactitation of the limbs.
-The reflexes are usually increased. The onset is often quite sudden,
-usually in the fourth, fifth or sixth decade of life. At autopsy a
-striking condition, described as axonal alteration, is found in the
-"Betz" and other large ganglion cells generally. The cell body
-is somewhat swollen, the stainable substance is reduced to a
-structureless powder and the nucleus is dislocated and appears
-conspicuously in the periphery. There is also some "Marchi"
-degeneration of the fibre tracts in the motor areas. The regions
-involved, according to Meyer,[293] are "the cortico-thalmic connections
-of the motor areas, the auditory radiation, the forceps, the pyramids,
-the fillet, the restiform body, and to a lesser degree, the posterior
-column of the cord, the intersegmental elements, and the segmental
-efferent motor elements."
-
-In view of the attitude of the psychiatrists of this country as shown
-by numerous expressions of opinion, the statistical committee of the
-Association felt justified in retaining involution melancholia in its
-classification of psychoses for the present and collecting data for
-further consideration. The following suggestions were offered as to its
-delimitation:—
-
-"These depressions are probably related to the manic-depressive group;
-nevertheless the symptoms and the course of the involution cases are
-sufficiently characteristic to justify us in keeping them apart as
-special forms of emotional reaction.
-
-"To be included here are the slowly developing depressions of _middle
-life and later years_ which come on with worry, insomnia, uneasiness,
-anxiety and agitation, showing usually the unreality and sensory
-complex, but little or no evidence of any difficulty in thinking. The
-tendency is for the course to be a prolonged one. Arteriosclerotic
-depressions should be excluded.
-
-"When agitated depressions of the involution period are clearly
-superimposed on a manic-depressive foundation with previous attacks
-(depression or excitement) they should for statistical purposes be
-classed in the manic-depressive group."
-
-In view of the history of the development of the conception of this
-psychosis an analysis of the hospital statistics on this subject is
-of unusual interest. We now have reports of over seventy thousand
-first admissions based almost entirely on the classification at
-present used by the Association. In 49,640 first admissions to the
-New York hospitals during a period of eight years there were 1,351
-cases diagnosed as involution melancholia—2.72 per cent of the
-total. During 1918 and 1919, when the Association's classification
-was followed in detail, these hospitals showed 480 cases, or 3.45 per
-cent of 13,588 first admissions. Twenty-one public institutions in
-fourteen other states reported 378 cases, or 2.06 per cent of 18,336
-admissions. Two and twenty-five hundredths per cent of the admissions
-to the Massachusetts state hospitals in 1919 were cases of involution
-melancholia. Reports from forty-eight different state hospitals show
-that involution melancholia constituted 2.53 per cent of over seventy
-thousand admissions. This shows a remarkable similarity in standards of
-diagnosis as far as this psychosis is concerned.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-DEMENTIA PRAECOX
-
-
-The dementia praecox of today, notwithstanding the numerous theories
-which have been advanced as to its etiology and pathology and the
-various fundamental conceptions which have been evolved in the
-interpretation of its mental mechanisms, is essentially the disease
-described by Kraepelin in 1899. The designation which he applied to
-this psychosis or group of psychoses was not new, having been used by
-Morel as early as 1860 and again by Pick in 1891. His views as to the
-delimitation of the disease were, however, altogether different from
-those of earlier writers and were destined to inaugurate a new era in
-psychiatry. The grouping which he proposed would include certain types
-of mania and melancholia and the psychoses of puberty and adolescence
-described by Hecker and Kahlbaum together with various paranoid states
-previously associated with paranoia, chronic delusional insanity, etc.
-
-Kraepelin thus at one blow destroyed the integrity of mania,
-melancholia, terminal dementia and paranoia, entities which had been
-practically unquestioned for centuries. This radical departure from
-established psychiatric procedure was based on his observation that
-various definite characteristics were common to certain cases in all of
-these clinical groups and that they were of vital significance from a
-symptomatic as well as a prognostic point of view. He called attention
-to the fact that excitements and depressions often recurred or
-alternated in the same individual without any tendency towards mental
-enfeeblement. An analysis of the mental mechanisms and symptomatology
-of these cases led to his well-known conception of the manic-depressive
-psychoses. Other clinical groups equally well-defined, although not so
-sharply circumscribed, showed consistent and progressive tendencies
-towards mental deterioration. These were brought together and described
-as dementia praecox. This may be looked upon as a logical development
-of the progress made by the German school of psychiatrists. The first
-step in this direction perhaps was the recognition of hebephrenia by
-Hecker in 1871. He particularly emphasized the occurrence of this
-condition at the time of puberty or during the adolescent period. This
-has often been referred to as "silly dementia." The preliminary stage
-or onset in many instances was characterized by a gradual change in
-personality. This was evidenced by foolish behavior, silly actions
-and a failure of adjustment to the patient's surroundings often
-resulting in an abandonment of his usual occupation, with an evident
-gradual intellectual deterioration. Initial attacks of depression
-were frequent, usually with hypochondriacal ideas and only occasional
-hallucinations or delusions. Transitory periods of excitement were
-common sequelae. The emotional reactions were characterized by their
-shallowness, the train of thought by incoherence, the conduct by
-foolish and senseless acts and the intellectual reactions by an
-advancing deterioration. "The weakminded silliness of the disease
-picture," in the words of Krafft-Ebing, "is partly to be explained by
-the original weakmindedness of the patient, which Hecker emphasizes in
-the etiology of his cases."
-
-A more decided step in the development of the dementia praecox concept
-was the description by Kahlbaum of katatonia in 1874. This may be
-ushered in by an early stage strongly suggesting hebephrenia but
-terminating usually in a depression followed by states of excitement,
-stupor and dementia. The characteristic features of the disease are
-the peculiar catatonic stupor so-called, and forms of excitement
-differing materially from those exhibited in the manic-depressive
-psychoses. Hallucinations and delusions are almost invariably present.
-The delusions are likely to be of a most absurd and extravagant type,
-accompanied by self-accusation in some instances but oftener by
-feelings of influence referred to others or somatic ideas. States of
-muscular tension appear early, with constrained attitudes and peculiar
-mannerisms. The stupor which is such a prominent feature in the picture
-is characterized by negativism shown by a resistance to all external
-influences, mutism and a refusal to accept food. This may be associated
-with rigidity due to extreme muscular tension which is often so marked
-as to be described as cataleptic. Automatism may manifest itself in the
-form of echolalia or echopraxia. The excitements are characterized by
-impulsive acts of violence. Verbigeration and stereotypy are frequent
-symptoms. Remissions are rather to be expected but the tendency of the
-disease is towards a marked mental deterioration in the great majority
-of cases.
-
-Schüle in 1886 suggested the term dementia praecox as one applicable
-to the psychoses of adolescence. It remained for Kraepelin, however,
-to establish the entity of these disease processes by including still
-another type, the paranoid forms, which were left entirely unaccounted
-for in the conceptions of Hecker, Kahlbaum, Schüle, Morel, Pick, or
-any of the earlier writers. In this group he included cases with
-persistent hallucinations, more or less loosely systematized delusions
-of persecution and gradually increasing deterioration but with little
-or no clouding of consciousness.
-
-In the last edition of his book Kraepelin[294] defines dementia praecox
-as including "a group of clinical pictures having the common symptom of
-a characteristic destruction of the internal associations of the psychic
-personality affecting particularly the emotional and volitional
-spheres".... "Although wide differences of opinion still exist on
-many points, the conviction seems to be gaining ground more and more
-that dementia praecox on the whole represents a well-defined disease
-entity, and that we are justified in regarding the majority at least
-of the apparently dissimilar clinical types here described as the
-manifestations of a single disease process." Many objections have been
-raised to the name applied to this psychosis by Kraepelin. It has been
-pointed out that complete deterioration is not always the termination
-to be expected in this group and that it is not always a disease of
-adolescence. All of this was conceded by Kraepelin. He employed the
-term as one answering the purpose "until a more thorough understanding
-would suggest an appropriate designation." His conception of the
-psychosis as described in the sixth edition of his book may, I think,
-be said to have received the rather general approval of the psychiatric
-world. While there has been no serious attack on his delimitation of
-the disease entity itself, there has been a decided controversy as to
-the psychological mechanisms involved and the fundamental principles
-upon which his conceptions were based. Certainly no textbook of recent
-years has failed to give a very serious consideration to the question
-of dementia praecox.
-
-Stransky (1909) looked upon dementia praecox as the result of a lack
-of coordination of the intellect, the emotions and volition, which
-he expresses as an intrapsychic ataxia. This is illustrated by the
-displacement of the affect so common in dementia praecox and its
-association with an entirely incongruous idea. Thus, the patient laughs
-while expressing an exceedingly depressing delusional belief or cries
-while telling a joke. No emotion is displayed at the statement that
-he is being buried alive or torn apart by some outside agency. This
-would possibly explain the unprovoked rages of the catatonic and the
-discrepancy between the catalepsy and mutism of a patient who is found
-to be perfectly oriented as to his surroundings and the curious fact
-that he is often thoroughly clear as to the exact day and date.
-
-Wernicke's theories regarding the elaboration of mental mechanisms
-have already been referred to. He saw in dementia praecox and other
-deteriorative processes the possibility of a dissociation of psychical
-reflexes due to an interruption or disturbance located in the
-psychomotor projection field, preventing its proper coordination with
-the intrapsychic elaboration mechanisms.
-
-The psychological processes involved in schizophrenia as outlined by
-Bleuler[295] (1911) have a very important bearing on the interpretation
-of the symptoms of dementia praecox. The group which he described
-under this designation is a very broad one, including "many atypical
-melancholias and manias of other schools (as well as hysterical
-melancholias and manias), the most of the hallucinatory confusions,
-many of the amentias described by others (our conception of amentia
-is much narrower), some of the forms belonging to acute delirium,
-Wernicke's motility psychoses, primary and secondary dementias without
-special designations, the most of the paranoias of other schools,
-especially the hysterical paranoias and almost all of the incurable
-hypochondrias, nervousness, compulsions and impulsions." To these he
-adds the various "juvenile and masturbation forms," a large part of the
-degenerative psychoses of Magnan, many prison psychoses and the Ganser
-symptom complex. In view of the fact, as Bleuler[296] expresses it, that
-"The name dementia praecox, which neither leads to dementia nor
-is precocious in its origin, necessarily, gave rise to many
-misunderstandings," he suggested the designation schizophrenia as more
-appropriate. "Even if we cannot make a natural grouping, it would
-appear that schizophrenia is not a disease in the narrower sense but
-a group of diseases somewhat analogous to the organic group, which
-includes paralysis, the senile forms, etc. Schizophrenia should
-therefore be spoken of really in the plural. The disease pursues a
-chronic course or progresses in attacks and may come to a standstill
-at any stage or may even regress but never to a complete restitutio
-ad integrum. It is characterized by a specific type of alteration in
-thinking, feeling and relation to the outer world encountered nowhere
-else. Accessory symptoms of a characteristic type are particularly
-common.... Dementia praecox in any stage may come to a stop, and
-many of its symptoms partially or entirely disappear but when it
-progresses further it leads to dementia and dementia of a definite
-type." A fundamental symptom, according to Bleuler, is the disturbance
-of association of ideas. "The normal association of ideas loses its
-stability; others enter at will and take their place. Thus the ideas
-lose their relation to each other and thought becomes incoherent."
-As Hoch[297] says of this disturbance, "Bleuler described it very
-extensively, and yet somehow it is not so very easy to grasp the nature
-of this disorder; it is evidently not so very different from Wernicke's
-sejunction, though free from all localizing anatomical bywork. It is
-conceived of as a more or less widespread primary interruption of
-the associative connection of ideas. Actual or latent associations,
-which, in the normal, determine the train of thought or combinations
-of such ideas may remain without influence upon it in an apparently
-aimless fashion, whereas other ideas which have no connection may
-intrude themselves. Hence the train of thought is scattered, bizarre,
-illogical, abrupt. This may be so slight that it is difficult to
-discover, and in his description of mild conditions he says it may not
-be found, or only after a thorough search; it accounts for much of the
-scattering of ideas in chronic states, and, as we have said, it is
-supposed to be the explanatory principle in acute incoherence. On the
-other hand, similar phenomena may be due to the action of complexes,
-and have to be explained psychogenically. But the psychogenic
-explanation does not appear to him sufficient. It is somewhat difficult
-to see, especially when we consider the extensive symbolization and
-substitution, the indifference, the negativism, etc., why something
-beyond these psychogenically explicable disorders is required." An
-essential feature of Bleuler's[298] concept is "autismus." "The
-schizophrenics lose their contact with reality, the mild cases
-inconspicuously here and there, the severe cases, completely".... "When
-we allow our fancies free reign in mythology, in dreams and in many
-of the morbid states, thought will not or cannot concern itself with
-realities; it follows the dictates of instincts and emotions. This
-disregarding of the inconsistency with reality is characteristic of
-autistic thinking."
-
-In his excellent review of Bleuler's schizophrenia already referred to,
-Hoch[299] makes the following comments on this subject:—"A difficult
-subject is autism. By autism Bleuler means that which we have called
-the shut in tendency, the more or less complete shutting out of the
-environment, or at any rate, all that which does not correspond to the
-wishes. It may be so marked that the patients even shut out all sensory
-impressions, close their eyes and ears, make their body as small as
-possible by crouching. Bleuler regards this autism as a secondary
-phenomenon, and looks upon it as one of the results of his association
-disorder, whereas the autistic thinking is the day-dreaming, the
-thinking without reference to reality. This autistic thinking
-flourishes in schizophrenia—Bleuler thinks that the schizophrenic
-defect in logic makes the exclusion of a great many external and
-internal facts possible, and thus gives sway to a tendency which we
-all have, namely, to live in fancies which suit us, something which we
-indulge in but do not allow to influence our conduct, but which in the
-schizophrenic assumes the value of reality." An outline of Bleuler's
-views would not be complete without his definition of blocking,[300]
-an important symptom. "Blocking is a sudden emotional inhibition of
-the psychic processes and in itself not pathological." He found it in
-normal individuals in nervousness and in hysteria. "Where it is not
-based on adequate psychological grounds, is generalized or of long
-duration, its presence warrants the diagnosis of schizophrenia."
-
-A study of the psychogenic factors concerned in dementia praecox
-led Meyer[301] to the conclusion that the psychological processes
-of the disease were due to abnormal mental mechanisms developing
-in individuals unable to adjust themselves to their surroundings.
-"The general principle is that many individuals cannot afford to
-count on unlimited elasticity in the habitual use of certain habits
-of adjustment, that instincts will be undermined by persistent
-misapplication, and the delicate balance of mental adjustment and of
-its material substratum must largely depend on a maintenance of sound
-instinct and reaction type." This theory is supported somewhat by the
-"shut in personality" found by Hoch[302] in his studies of the history
-of a large number of cases developing dementia praecox.
-
-Elaborate analyses of the psychological mechanisms involved in dementia
-praecox have been made by Jung and others. Freud believed hysteria to
-be the result of a psychic trauma. The unpleasant idea associated with
-this trauma is repressed into the subconscious because the individual
-is unable to react to it in a normal way and it is forgotten, but not
-until it is compensated for by a hysterical symbol or symptom which
-takes its place. By means of psychoanalysis, the association test and
-the study of dreams the nature of the psychic trauma can often be
-determined. Jung[303] adapted these methods of study to a consideration
-of dementia praecox. His investigations showed that many of the
-seemingly meaningless manifestations of that disease are symbols or
-substitutes for buried complexes. In some instances these remain in
-their original form without transformation. Complexes associated with
-a feeling of deficiency and injured pride may lead to suspicion and
-delusions of persecution. Unfulfilled longings may be actualized in a
-delirium or delusion of grandeur. Symbols and substitutes generally
-are said to represent complexes which are antagonistic to the ego and
-are therefore transformed and become unrecognizable. The peculiar
-symptoms of dementia praecox as a rule are a result of the individual's
-inability to make compensatory readjustments. In the paranoid forms the
-patient entirely reconstructs his psychical life. White[304] attempts
-to explain the meaning of some of these delusional formations in his
-"Outlines of Psychiatry":—"The relation of the delusion to the complex
-is often obvious if one is familiar with the more important of the
-infantile material. A man believes himself pregnant, that a child
-is in his stomach. This is obviously a regression to the period when
-as an infant he had not understood that gestation was a particular
-function of the female. Another patient enucleated his eye (castration
-symbol); a colored man of about forty years of age invented a
-perpetual motion machine (compensation for impotence); a man tries
-to invent the greatest cannon on earth (compensation for small penis
-complex); a homosexual man of the "sissy" type made wild claims of
-physical prowess, fighting ability, and incessantly swore and used
-vulgar language to demonstrate his toughness (over-compensation of
-homosexuality); a woman complains that her sister's husband follows
-her through underground passageways and shoots electricity into her
-genitalia and anus (anal erotism); an oral erotic woman starves
-herself in order to be tube fed; oral erotic patients often cut their
-throats while under the erotic pressure; patients frequently say that
-God talks with them or go to Washington to see the President (father
-complex); in severe grades of introversion they sit in a dark corner,
-head on breast, arms folded and legs and thighs flexed (intra-uterine
-position); a young woman says her real parents are the King and Queen
-of Norway (Œdipus phantasy); etc. Of course much of the delusional
-material is not so obviously related to infantile material and must
-be worked out at length with the individual to determine its meaning.
-It must not be forgotten that a praecox may have, however, complex
-reactions exactly like that of hysteria and the psychoneuroses. To that
-extent such a patient is hysterical or psychoneurotic."
-
-The appearance of the last edition of his textbook showed that
-Kraepelin has somewhat revised his views on the subject of dementia
-praecox. He now speaks of a series of morbid pictures "brought together
-under the designation endogenous dementias for the purpose of a
-preliminary understanding." This embraces not only dementia praecox
-but a new entity described as "paraphrenia."[305] This includes forms
-"which, contrary to the usual manifestations of dementia praecox, are
-characterized throughout their entire course by the marked prominence
-of a characteristic intellectual disturbance while an independent
-impairment of volition and particularly an emotional alteration are
-lacking or only present in a mild form. For this differentiation it
-seems to me that no more suitable expression than "paraphrenia" could
-be employed for the designation of the disease processes experimentally
-brought together here." He speaks of the following types:—systematica,
-expansiva, confabulans and phantastica.
-
-The clinical forms of dementia praecox shown in his last edition are as
-follows:—dementia simplex, hebephrenia, simple depressive or stuporous
-dementia, depressive delusional dementia, circular, agitated and
-periodic forms, katatonia, paranoid types (dementia paranoides gravis
-and mitis, hallucinatory and paranoid feeblemindedness) and confusional
-speech or schizophasia.
-
-His views as to the delimitation of these different types should be
-expressed perhaps in his own words:[306]
-
-"Simple progressive deterioration as described by Diem under the
-designation of 'Dementia Simplex,' consists in an imperceptible and
-complete impoverishment and breaking down of the entire mental life."
-
-Of hebephrenia or silly dementia he says, "In this disease picture
-there stands out particularly with the progressive deterioration of the
-mental life, an incoherence of thought, feeling, and conduct."
-
-"As the third group of dementia praecox I should like to group
-together, under the designation of simple depressive or stuporous
-dementia, those cases in which, after an initial depression, with or
-without the appearance of stupor, a terminal mental deterioration
-gradually develops."
-
-"Those cases which progress to the marked development of phantastic
-delusions we group together in the fourth form of dementia
-praecox—depressive delusional dementia."
-
-"The next large group includes those cases in which severe and
-protracted excitements develop."
-
-"The first sub group which on account of its course we may designate as
-the circular form shows the nearest relationship to the disease picture
-just described in that it also begins with a depression and usually
-manifests active delusions."
-
-"As a second sub group, the agitated form, we bring together those
-cases in which the disease begins with an excitement and then
-immediately or after more or less frequent remissions and relapse
-passes into the terminal stage."
-
-"In close relation to the cases brought together here we have to
-consider a small group which either in the initial stages of the
-disease or throughout its entire duration follows an outspoken periodic
-course; these amount to less than 2 per cent of all cases."
-
-"The excitements of dementia praecox constitute an important part of
-the clinical form—Katatonia—which we must now consider. Under this
-designation Kahlbaum described a disease picture which in turn presents
-the symptoms of melancholia, mania and stupor, the unfavorable cases
-being accompanied by confusion and deterioration and is furthermore
-characterized by the appearance of certain motor seizures and
-inhibitions—in other words, the catatonic disorders."
-
-"In many respects a dissimilar picture is shown by those cases in
-which the essential symptoms are delusions and hallucinations; these
-we characterize as paranoid forms. The justification for including
-them with dementia praecox I get from the fact that in them sooner or
-later the delusion formation is invariably associated with a series of
-disturbances which we find everywhere in the other forms of dementia
-praecox."
-
-Cases "which do begin with a simple delusion formation but which in
-the further course exhibit still more clearly the peculiar destruction
-of the mental life and particularly the emotional and volitional
-disturbances which characterize dementia praecox may be grouped
-together under the name 'dementia paranoides gravis'."
-
-"As a fourth form of paranoid dementia praecox, I believe still
-another group should be added, those which on the one hand show a
-similar development and the same delusion formation as the paranoid
-disorders just described but which on the other hand terminate in a
-characteristic mental enfeeblement." These he would call 'dementia
-paranoides mitis'."
-
-"A last very characteristic group of cases the discussion of which must
-be included here, is formed by the patients with confusional speech."
-These are the Schizophasias of Bleuler.
-
-It must be admitted that in view of Kraepelin's former contributions
-on this subject this classification must be looked upon as somewhat
-involved and confusing. It suggests an unnecessary complication of
-an already difficult subject to no great advantage. These varying
-conceptions are difficult to understand. Perhaps, as Meyer[307]
-expresses it, "the symptomatology in its first formulation in 1895,
-and later, emphasized too many things which prevail also in other
-conditions, so that altogether too many errors occurred. In four
-hundred and sixty-eight of Kraepelin's Munich diagnoses even between
-1904 and 1906, 28.8 per cent were cases subsequently considered
-to be manic-depressive (Zendig)—altogether too broad a margin of
-uncertainty."
-
-In summarizing the whole situation the conclusion reached by
-Buckley[308] would appear to be thoroughly established:—"Most
-authorities agree, however, that the term dementia praecox includes
-the psychoses which appear prior to mental maturity (early in some and
-much later in others), with a tendency to permanent mental defect in
-the long run, but which may follow a chronic course, may be divided
-into attacks, or may improve or stop at any stage, but never with
-restoration to absolute normal health."
-
-Notwithstanding the elaborate investigations of Alzheimer, Sioli,
-Klippel, Lhermitte, Moriyasu, Goldstein, Nissl and many others,
-no definite pathological basis for dementia praecox has ever been
-established.
-
-For purposes of statistical study in the collection of data relative to
-this disease entity, as in all other cases, the American Psychiatric
-Association has endeavored to adhere to fundamental conceptions
-generally accepted by the profession and has avoided as far as possible
-adherence to the tenets of any one school. For purposes of uniformity
-the following suggestions were made in the "statistical manual" as to
-the classification of psychoses to be reported under the designation of
-dementia praecox.
-
-"This group cannot be satisfactorily defined at the present time as
-there are still too many points at issue as to what constitute the
-essential clinical features of dementia praecox. A large majority of
-the cases which should go into this group may, however, be recognized
-without special difficulty, although there is an important smaller
-group of doubtful, atypical, allied or transitional cases which from
-the standpoint of symptoms or prognosis occupy an uncertain clinical
-position.
-
-"Cases formerly classed as allied to dementia praecox should be placed
-here rather than in the undiagnosed group. The term "schizophrenia" is
-now used by many writers instead of dementia praecox.
-
-"The following mentioned features are sufficiently well established
-to be considered most characteristic of the dementia praecox type of
-reaction:
-
-"A seclusive type of personality or one showing other evidences of
-abnormality in the development of the instincts and feelings.
-
-"Appearance of defects of interest and discrepancies between thought on
-the one hand and the behavior-emotional reactions on the other.
-
-"A gradual blunting of the emotions, indifference or silliness with
-serious defects of judgment and often hypochondriacal complaints,
-suspicions or ideas of reference.
-
-"Development of peculiar trends, often fantastic ideas, with odd,
-impulsive or negativistic conduct not accounted for by any acute
-emotional disturbance or impairment of the sensorium.
-
-"Appearance of autistic thinking and dream-like ideas, peculiar
-feelings of being forced, of interference with the mind, of physical or
-mystical influences, but with retention of clearness in other fields
-(orientation, memory, etc.).
-
-"According to the prominence of certain symptoms in individual
-cases the following four clinical forms of dementia praecox may be
-specified, but it should be borne in mind that these are only relative
-distinctions and that transitions from one clinical form to another are
-common:
-
-"(a) Paranoid type: Cases characterized by a prominence of delusions,
-particularly ideas of persecution or grandeur, often connectedly
-elaborated, and hallucinations in various fields.
-
-"(b) Catatonic type: Cases in which there is a prominence of
-negativistic reactions or various peculiarities of conduct with phases
-of stupor or excitement, the latter characterized by impulsive, queer
-or stereotyped behavior and usually hallucinations.
-
-"(c) Hebephrenic type: Cases showing prominently a tendency to
-silliness, smiling, laughter, grimacing, mannerisms in speech and
-action, and numerous peculiar ideas usually absurd, grotesque and
-changeable in form.
-
-"(d) Simple type: Cases characterized by defects of interest, gradual
-development of an apathetic state, often with peculiar behavior, but
-without expression of delusions or hallucinations.
-
-"(e) Other types."
-
-A sufficient number of reports has been received from hospitals using
-this classification to warrant a preliminary survey of the information
-available at this time on the subject of dementia praecox. Perhaps it
-would be well to summarize first such information as is to be obtained
-from other sources. Diefendorf[309] states that dementia praecox
-constitutes from fourteen to thirty per cent of all admissions to
-institutions, fifty-eight per cent of the total number being of the
-hebephrenic, eighteen per cent, of the catatonic, and twenty-two per
-cent, of the paranoid variety. Kraepelin[310] (1913) found that dementia
-praecox constituted ten per cent of all admissions, classified as to
-types as follows:—Silly dementia, thirteen per cent; simple depressive
-dementia, ten per cent; delusional depressive dementia, thirteen per
-cent; circular dementia, nine per cent; agitated dementia, fourteen
-per cent; periodic dementia, two per cent; and katatonia, 19.5 per
-cent. He reported a history of hereditary taint in seventy per cent of
-his cases. Diefendorf found the onset of the disease in sixty per cent
-of all cases before the twenty-fifth year, Kraepelin, in fifty-seven
-per cent. Kraepelin[311] states that seizures occurred in twenty-one
-per cent of his cases of silly dementia and in the other types as
-follows:—simple depressive dementia, seventeen per cent; delusional
-depressive dementia, twenty-seven per cent; circular dementia, twenty
-per cent; agitated dementia, twenty per cent; katatonia, seventeen per
-cent; paranoid dementia gravis, three per cent and paranoid dementia
-mitis, five per cent. Unfortunately a survey of the other literature of
-the day throws little additional light on these subjects.
-
-A study of the statistical reports made by Pollock for the State
-Hospital Commission shows that during the five years ending on June
-30, 1919, dementia praecox constituted 14.42 per cent of the 2,024
-voluntary cases admitted to the thirteen New York state hospitals.
-During a period of eight years ending on June 30, 1919, there were
-49,640 first admissions to the New York state hospitals; 12,199,
-or 24.57 per cent, of these were diagnosed as dementia praecox or
-conditions allied thereto. The "allied" conditions have not been shown
-in the New York reports since 1917. In 1918 and 1919 there were 13,588
-first admissions, 3,753, or 27.61 per cent, of which were cases of
-dementia praecox. This would indicate an increase in the incidence of
-that disease in New York during recent years. The Massachusetts first
-admissions for 1918 and 1919 show a total of 7,582 cases, 1900, or
-25.05 per cent, of which were dementia praecox. It will be noted that
-the percentage is practically the same as that of New York for the same
-years. In a group of twenty-one other state hospitals, representing
-fourteen different states using the Association's classification,
-18,336 first admissions have been reported, 3,856, or 21.03 per cent,
-of which were cases of dementia praecox. This represents a variation
-from the New York and Massachusetts findings which can be explained on
-various grounds, largely by the fact that these institutions represent
-a rural population. We have thus in all 70,987 first admissions to
-state hospitals, with 16,920 cases of dementia praecox, representing
-23.84 per cent of the total number.
-
-A consideration of the different types of this disease as represented
-by the various state institutions shows somewhat different results.
-In New York during the years 1916-17-18-19 there were 6,135 cases of
-dementia praecox shown in the first admissions, classified as follows:—
-
- _Type_ _Number of Cases_ _Percentage_
-
- Paranoid 3579 58.34
- Catatonic 468 7.63
- Hebephrenic 1463 23.84
- Simple 625 10.19
-
-In Massachusetts in 1917-18-19 there were 2,921 cases, distributed as
-follows:—
-
- Paranoid 1248 42.72
- Catatonic 678 23.21
- Hebephrenic 828 28.34
- Simple 165 5.64
-
-In a group of nineteen other institutions there were 3,184 cases, as
-follows:—
-
- Paranoid 800 25.12
- Catatonic 438 10.61
- Hebephrenic 1666 52.32
- Simple 230 7.22
-
-We have thus a total of 12,240 cases, a composite group classified
-according to types as follows:—
-
- Paranoid 5627 45.97
- Catatonic 1584 12.12
- Hebephrenic 3957 32.32
- Simple 1020 8.33
-
-Although this is probably the largest group of cases of dementia
-praecox recorded we are, unfortunately, not warranted as yet in
-attempting any final conclusions. The Massachusetts and New York
-statistics of late years would, I think, justify the tentative
-statement, at least, that dementia praecox admissions represent
-approximately twenty-eight per cent of all cases coming into our
-hospitals.
-
-When we attempt to analyze the types of the disease as reported, it
-at once becomes evident that there are very divergent standards of
-diagnosis. There is a radical difference shown in the consideration
-of the so-called simple dementia praecox with a general average of
-8.33 per cent. In Massachusetts there is a much higher percentage of
-the catatonic forms, with a predominance in New York of the paranoid
-variety. The proportion of hebephrenic types in the other nineteen
-institutions is at wide variance with the reports of Massachusetts
-and New York. In all probability the percentage shown in the analysis
-of the total number from forty-six state hospitals is not far from
-representing conditions existing in American institutions. A careful
-study of more complete reports extending over a number of years should
-settle this question to what may be spoken of as almost a mathematical
-certainty.
-
-Pollock and Nolan[312] have made a study of 9,124 admissions of
-dementia praecox to the New York hospitals during a period of six and
-three-quarters years. Of these cases 52.2 per cent were men and 47.8
-per cent, women. The distribution shown by age groups is interesting
-and significant, as is shown by the following table:—
-
- _Age Group_ _Percentage_
- Under 15 years .2
- 15 to 19 " 7.8
- 20 " 24 " 20.1
- 25 " 29 " 22.0
- 30 " 34 " 16.6
- 35 " 39 " 13.5
- 40 " 44 " 8.4
- 45 " 49 " 5.3
-
-This would not appear to suggest an adolescent origin for this disease
-to the extent advocated in our textbooks. The highest rate shown by
-males was in the age group from twenty-five to twenty-nine years and in
-the female cases, from thirty-five to thirty-nine years. Forty-nine per
-cent were thirty years or over at the time of admission, forty-three
-per cent were between twenty and thirty years of age and thirty per
-cent, between thirty and forty. Nineteen per cent were forty years or
-over at the time of admission. Pollock's[313] investigation, the most
-exhaustive statistical study yet made of dementia praecox, shows that
-fifty per cent of the cases have a family history of insanity, nervous
-diseases, alcoholism or neuropathic or psychopathic traits, with a
-full fifty per cent showing no evidence of unfavorable heredity. This
-again is at variance with opinions usually expressed on this subject.
-Forty-six per cent were of normal mental makeup and seventy-eight per
-cent intellectually normal before the onset of the psychosis. Alcohol
-was an assigned etiological factor in four per cent of these cases and
-there was a history of intemperance in eight per cent of the others.
-The incidence of dementia praecox is more than three times as great in
-cities as it is in the rural districts. The average length of hospital
-residence was sixteen years. The foreign born dementia praecox first
-admissions were found to be principally from Austria, Germany, Hungary,
-Ireland, Italy and Russia. Fifty-one and four-tenths per cent of the
-cases were natives of this country and 48.3 per cent, of foreign birth.
-It is interesting to note that in 1919, 39.9 per cent of the first
-admissions to the New York institutions for the criminal insane were
-cases of dementia praecox. The rate of admission was 37.1 per cent in
-1918, 20.5 per cent in 1917, 30.8 per cent in 1916 and 32.8 per cent in
-1915. Of the 37,607 patients in the New York state hospitals on June
-30, 1919, 22,036, or 58.8 per cent, were cases of dementia praecox. One
-hundred and thirty-eight were discharged as recovered during a period
-of three years. This number represented 5.2 per cent of the cases of
-dementia praecox discharged during that time, 2.01 per cent of those
-admitted, 1.1 per cent of all discharges, and .6 per cent of all first
-admissions. A review of the cause of death in 2,988 cases shows that
-the rate for tuberculosis was thirty-three per cent during four years
-when there was no influenza epidemic. This constituted over fifty-nine
-per cent of all of the deaths due to tuberculosis during that period of
-time.
-
-Dementia praecox with the highest admission rate of any of the
-psychoses, its exceedingly unfavorable recovery rate, its extreme
-susceptibility to tuberculosis, and representing as it does over
-one-half of the population of our hospitals, must unquestionably be
-looked upon as the most important form of mental disease with which
-we have to deal today. The number of cases of dementia praecox in the
-Massachusetts and New York hospitals justifies the statement that there
-are approximately 120,000 persons suffering from this disease in the
-institutions of the United States, their maintenance alone costing the
-country twenty-five million dollars annually. Their permanent removal
-would make it possible to close at least sixty institutions larger than
-any state hospital in Massachusetts.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-PARANOIA AND THE PARANOID CONDITIONS
-
-
-A discussion of the part played by paranoia, or the paranoid
-conditions however characterized, in the psychiatry of the present
-day, is essentially a review of the final chapter in the history of
-a psychiatric conception which is several centuries old. The word
-paranoia, like many other terms still in use, is of Greek origin
-and was apparently applied by Hippocrates in a very general way to
-"madness" of any or all forms. It almost certainly had no more definite
-significance than that, in the works of Plato and Aristotle, nor can it
-be said to have been used in its modern sense by Celsus or Aretaeus.
-It seems to have meant something more in the vocabulary of Vogel, an
-eighteenth century writer. Under the heading of paranoia, according
-to Jelliffe,[314] Plocquet in 1772 included Paracope or delirium with
-six subdivisions:—(a) pathetica, (b) phronestica, (c) entomica,
-(d) encephalica, (e) hyperesthetica, and (f) sympathica. It was not
-recognized to any great extent by the earlier writers of the French
-school, but occupied a very prominent place in the development of
-German psychiatry. Heinroth in 1818 included the paranoias in his
-disorders of the intellect under the name of verrücktheit, a word that
-was destined to become one of great importance later, and spoke of an
-exaltation of the feelings which he called "paranoia ecstasia."
-
-Flemming[315] in his elaborate classification of psychoses in 1844
-described paranoid forms of "mania adstricta" or partial mania
-(monomania). Stark, a contemporary of Flemming's, made what seems
-to be a very direct reference to paranoia in his discussion of
-"Wahnsinn," as did Weiss in 1842. Von Feuchtersleben in 1845 wrote a
-very exhaustive description of "fixed delusions" which he classified
-as either involving the personality (mania metamorphosis) or as being
-ambitious, religious or relating to love (erotomania). He also spoke
-of a monomania or mania sine delirio which he attributed to Pinel. The
-exact significance of these conceptions cannot be determined.
-
-In 1845 Griesinger used the word verrücktheit as applying to a
-secondary incurable condition, exhibiting delusions of persecution
-and grandeur and usually developing after an attack of mania or
-melancholia. He also defined Wahnsinn, which he compared to Heinroth's
-"paranoia ecstasia," as including "states of exaltation characterized
-by assertive, expansive emotions, associated with persistent excessive
-self-estimation and extravagant fixed delusions which arise therefrom."
-Magnan spoke of "folie systematisée progressive" and a "folie
-systematisée des dégénérés." In his "Le Délire Chronique à Évolution
-Systematique" he divided paranoia into a stage of subjective analysis,
-one of persecution and a third of transformation of the personality.
-Lasègue described this same condition under the name of persecution
-mania in 1852. Falret and Ritti divided the course of this disease
-into four periods, one of insane interpretations, one of visual
-hallucinations, one of general sensory derangement and a stereotyped
-state or mania of ambition. Morel was of the opinion that these
-psychoses were always preceded by an initial period of hypochondriasis.
-
-Pritchard described as monomania a form of insanity "characterized by
-some particular illusion or erroneous conviction impressed upon the
-understanding, and giving rise to a partial aberration of judgment."
-Esquirol devoted as many as one hundred and thirty pages to a study
-of monomania, which he subdivided into seven forms:—the erotic,
-"raisonnante" or moral insanity, the alcoholic, the incendiary, the
-homicidal, the suicidal and the hypochondriacal.
-
-It was probably the work of Mendel in 1881 which was responsible for
-the use of the word paranoia in its modern sense. He spoke of primary
-and secondary paranoias.[316] The former was described as a "functional
-psychosis characterized by the primary appearance of delusional ideas.
-The delusions of primary paranoia, without being interfered with by
-any opposing ideas, control the entire mental life of the patient.
-The remaining ideas not affected by morbid processes stand in close
-relation, but not in conflict, with the dominating delusions. The
-feelings are determined by the content of the delusions and vary with
-them. In the same way the abnormalities of conduct are due to the
-content of the delusional ideas, with or without hallucinations." Régis
-in 1892 described his systematized progressive insanity as involving
-three distinct stages,—one of subjective analysis, a stage either
-of persecution, religious exaltation or eroticism and jealousy, and
-finally a megalomanic state ending occasionally in dementia. Cramer,
-in an elaborate review of the literature of paranoia in 1894, refers
-to twenty-eight different designations used by various writers in the
-discussion of this subject up to that time. Serieux and Copgras (1909)
-include deliria of interpretation and of vindication in their grouping
-of these conditions.
-
-In the words of Meyer, paranoia eventually reached its high water
-mark in the work of Krafft-Ebing.[317] He defined it as "a chronic
-mental disease occurring exclusively in tainted individuals, frequently
-developing out of the constitutional neuroses, the principal symptoms
-of which are delusions." These are devoid of all emotional foundation
-and from the beginning are systematized, methodic and "combined by the
-processes of judgment, constituting a formal delusional structure.
-Consciousness is not disturbed and judgment as a rule is not impaired
-but is entirely based on delusional premises." The conduct of the
-individual is determined by his hallucinations and delusions. The
-process of development is slow and the disease remains stationary for
-many years, but never ends in dementia. In a study of over one thousand
-cases Krafft-Ebing[318] never observed a definite recovery, although
-lucid intervals occurred, generally in the beginning of the disease.
-The taint of paranoia he describes as heredity, in the form of abnormal
-character, psychoses, constitutional neuroses and alcoholism. In a few
-instances he reported developmental defects in the brain. He found in
-all cases an anomaly of personality which determined the later form
-of the paranoia. Suspicious, retiring, solitary persons were usually
-persecuted. Rough, irritable, egotistical individuals developed the
-querulent forms and the over-conscientious eccentrics became the
-victims of religious paranoia. He attaches a considerable importance
-to the influence of the unconscious or subconscious mind. "Its
-predominance is shown in the dreamy, romantic, enthusiastic life of
-such individuals, and in the fact that accidental delusions occurring
-in sickness, dream pictures, and reminiscences from reading or plays,
-are elaborated in the depths of the soul, and early burst forth in
-the form of imperative ideas and desultory primordial delusions,
-which become latent, but later find their ultimate evaluation in the
-delusional ideas of the disease."
-
-It is interesting to note that Krafft-Ebing speaks of precipitating
-factors as puberty, the climacteric, uterine disease and onanism.
-There is a definite period of incubation followed by one of full
-development in which judgment and reason are lost. Hallucinations
-of hearing were found to be the more common form, followed in the
-order of their numerical occurrence by disturbances of sensibility,
-vision, taste and smell. Persecutory ideas, moreover, were said to be
-much more frequent than delusions of grandeur. The terminal states
-he speaks of as mental enfeeblements with a prominence of emotional
-dulness, rather than intellectual defects. He divides the disease
-into original paranoia and the later or acquired forms. Original
-paranoia begins before or at latest during puberty. Hereditary taint
-is always to be found. Conspicuous features are sentimental tendencies
-inclining to hypochondria, eroticism with sensitiveness and emotional
-instability. Delusions as to parentage are common, suggested often
-by the fancied or real resemblance of the patient to pictures of
-distinguished personages. Transitory ideas of persecution or grandeur
-are nearly always present. The erotic element is more frequent in
-females. Intermissions sometimes last for years. The termination is
-often found in confusional states. The classic or acquired form of the
-disease develops later in life, often during the involution period. Two
-varieties are described,—the persecutory and the expansive. Subsidiary
-types of the former are sexual paranoia, often with delusions of
-jealousy, and querulous insanity with mania for lawsuits. The sexual
-complex he attributes largely to masturbation or enforced abstinence.
-The expansive group is divided into inventive or reformatory paranoia,
-the religious and the erotic varieties (erotomania). The acquired
-form as described by Krafft-Ebing is quite similar to the "folie
-systematisée" of Magnan. It conforms, moreover, in a general way to
-the views expressed in the English textbooks on delusional insanity
-and is the paranoia of Spitzka, Chapin, Berkley, Peterson and many
-other American psychiatrists. This conception of the psychosis was the
-generally accepted one for many years.
-
-The institutional reports of that day showed large numbers of paranoics
-in some of the hospitals. It was a disease that played an important
-part in many murder trials and has received more attention from the
-courts and newspapers than any other form of insanity, so-called, ever
-described in the textbooks. There was a time, according to Kraepelin,
-when from seventy to eighty per cent of the patients in the German
-hospitals were diagnosed as cases of genuine paranoia. Certainly that
-cannot be said of the institutions of this country. In the New York
-state hospitals, for instance, during a period of sixteen years, from
-October 1, 1888, to September 30, 1904, when the classical form of
-paranoia was officially recognized in statistics, 84,152 admissions
-were reported. Of this number 1,655, or 1.9 per cent, were diagnosed
-as cases of paranoia. At the Matteawan State Hospital for the criminal
-insane during this time 1,728 admissions were shown, with no cases of
-paranoia. At the Dannemora State Hospital for insane convicts during
-the same period there were 354 admissions, sixteen, or 4.51 per cent,
-of which were paranoiacs. This is exceedingly interesting but extremely
-difficult to explain. It is very hard to understand why no cases of
-paranoia reached Matteawan during a period of sixteen years. The
-percentage shown in the other institutions can be looked upon as being
-fairly representative of the incidence of paranoia as the disease was
-then understood.
-
-The decline and fall of the paranoia concept is to be attributed
-to Kraepelin. In 1893 his classification included hallucinatory and
-depressive forms of "Wahnsinn," both accompanied by persecutory ideas
-to a rather prominent degree, and paranoia proper, which he described
-as "Verrücktheit." This was defined as the "chronic development
-of a permanent delusional system with complete preservation of
-consciousness". In the sixth edition of his well-known textbook, which
-appeared in 1899, he enlarged the dementia praecox group previously
-described by him and added hebephrenia and katatonia to it as well
-as describing a new and important "paranoid" form of that disease.
-His own reasons for this were stated as follows[319]:—"The second
-clinical group" (dementia praecox, paranoid form) "which I am inclined,
-provisionally, to include under this head, is characterized by the
-fact that extravagant delusions, usually accompanied by numerous
-hallucinations, develop in a more coherent manner, and are maintained
-during a series of years, either then entirely to disappear, or to
-become entirely confused. Hitherto I have reckoned these forms, as
-'phantastische Verrücktheit' to paranoia, as is the general practice.
-It has, however, gradually become clearer to me that they are at all
-events, more nearly allied to dementia praecox than to paranoia.
-Whether we really have to do in this case only with a clinical variety
-of the former disease or a distinct malady, the future must decide."
-He did, however, at that time still recognize a small but well defined
-group of cases as genuine paranoia. "On the other hand, there is,
-without doubt, a group of cases, in which it is clearly recognizable
-from the outset that a permanent, immovable system of delusions
-slowly develops, with entire preservation of mental clearness, and
-of the regulation of the course of thought. It is these forms for
-which I would reserve the appellation of paranoia. It is they which
-necessarily lead to a profound transformation of the entire view of
-life; to a dislocation of the point of view which the patient assumes
-toward the persons and events of his environment." In the eighth
-edition of his book (1913) he separates out a considerable number
-of cases and places them in an entirely new group designated as
-"paraphrenias."[320] This is "a comparatively small group in which,
-in spite of many similarities to the manifestations of dementia
-praecox nevertheless on account of the much less marked development of
-emotional and volitional disturbances the inner structure of the mental
-life is considerably less affected, or in which at least the loss of
-inner unity is essentially limited to certain intellectual functions.
-Common to all of these clinical forms which cannot be sharply
-differentiated is the marked prominence of delusion formation and the
-paranoid colouring of the disease process. At the same time there are
-also alterations in the disposition, but not until the last stages of
-the disease that dulness and indifference which so often are the first
-indications of dementia praecox." In other words, we are dealing with a
-group which shows the paranoid features of dementia praecox but largely
-lacks its deteriorative processes. This is a very decided change of
-views and may be looked upon either as establishing a definite status
-for a large number of cases not properly accounted for in the past
-or as an indication of a tendency to return to former conceptions of
-paranoia.
-
-Of the paraphrenias as described by Kraepelin "approximately one-half
-show that slow but progressively developing mixture of delusions
-of persecution and grandeur which Magnan has described under the
-designation of 'délire chronique à évolution systematique.' Certainly
-this disease of Magnan's, as far as can be determined from the
-descriptions available, is not a clinical entity in the sense of the
-views expressed here; we would unhesitatingly include with the paranoid
-forms of dementia praecox many of the cases, with well developed
-mannerisms and the coinage of new words, which progress rapidly to
-mental enfeeblement. At the same time, however, 'délire chronique' with
-its slowly progressing forms lasting for decades includes a number of
-cases which form the nucleus of the first paraphrenic disease group to
-be described." Whether or not the paraphrenia of Kraepelin is accepted
-as having been established, it must be conceded that the question as to
-whether anything remains of the original paranoia group is one worthy
-of serious consideration. Many have discarded the term entirely.
-
-Kraepelin's paraphrenia is divided into the following
-forms:—systematica, expansiva, confabulans and phantastica. The
-systematic type is characterized by "the extremely insidious
-development of continuously progressing delusions of persecution, with
-the later appearance of delusions of grandeur without deterioration of
-the personality." The expansive form shows "the prominent development
-of delusions of grandeur with a predominant exalted mood and mild
-excitement." The confabulans variety is a small group "distinguished by
-the prominent rôle played by falsifications of memory." The phantastic
-form shows "a marked development of phantastic, unsystematized,
-changeable delusions." This was the paranoid dementia praecox of his
-sixth edition. Of the cases heretofore assigned to the paranoia group
-Kraepelin has expressed the opinion that about forty per cent belong
-to dementia praecox. "A further somewhat larger part falls to the
-paraphrenic forms to be described here." The practically negligible
-remainder he apparently concedes to genuine paranoia. In his eighth
-edition Kraepelin states that the latter constitute less than one
-per cent of all admissions. He now limits the term paranoia to cases
-arising from purely internal causes and showing a slowly developing
-permanent system of delusions without any disturbance of thought,
-volition or conduct. The delusional formations may be of various
-types,—persecution, jealousy, self-importance (great inventions, ideas
-of noble birth, etc.) or they may be of a religious or erotic nature.
-The "querulents" he now classifies with the psychogenic disorders. His
-present conception does not admit of the association of paranoia with
-hallucinations.
-
-The most interesting and important feature, perhaps, of Kraepelin's
-presentation is his insistence upon internal causes only as etiological
-factors. He assumes a psychopathic foundation for the development of
-the disease. In more than one half of his cases he found well marked
-personal peculiarities. These were manifested in some instances in the
-form of irritability, excitability and abnormalities of conduct. Other
-individuals were suspicious, unreliable, lacking in will power and
-over-ambitious. Homosexual tendencies were not infrequent. External
-factors, such as unpleasant experiences, may influence the form of the
-delusional expressions but should not be looked upon as explaining
-their origin. They develop in an emotional soil definitely related to
-the hopes and fears of the healthy individual and are to be looked
-upon as a morbid transformation of perfectly normal mechanisms. In
-addition to this he speaks of an increased self-consciousness, a
-natural tendency to resistiveness, an undeveloped type of thinking,
-psychological compensations for the disappointments of life, evidences
-of developmental inhibitions, improper habits of thought leading to
-morbid conceptions, etc. He refers to exaggerated self-consciousness
-as the fundamental basis of paranoia. In this soil delusions develop
-as a result of inadequate intellectual processes due to developmental
-inhibitions. All of these views have been elaborated more fully in
-his recent discussions of the subject of "comparative psychiatry."[321]
-These mechanisms, he says, have not escaped the notice of the Freudian
-school. Kraepelin feels, however, that their arguments "are not based
-either on a clear conception of paranoia or on any evidence at all
-acceptable."
-
-Bleuler's theory of the disease is summed up in the following quotation
-from his "Affectivität, Suggestibilität, Paranoia"[322]:—"The exact
-observation of the objective and subjective relations at the time of
-the origin of the disease shows us therefore nothing more than the
-appearance of errors, such as occur to normal persons under analogous
-affects and a connection of accidental occurrences to a thought
-complex which is kept continually awake by defects and his own trends
-of thought, just as it is in a corresponding normal mental process.
-The pathological feature is only the fixation of the error so that it
-becomes a delusion, and then the further extension of the delusions so
-that it finally becomes paranoia." In 1906 when this was written he
-suggested no explanation for the extension of such errors and their
-fixation in an actual psychosis. This might readily be interpreted as a
-logical result of the paranoic "constitution."
-
-The development of paranoic states was summarized by Meyer[323] as
-follows:—"A. Feeling of uneasiness, tendency to brooding, rumination
-and sensitiveness, with inability to correct the notions and to make
-concessions—paranoic constitution and paranoic moods. B. Appearance
-of dominant notions, suspicious or ill balanced aims. C. False
-interpretations with self-reference and tendency to systematization,
-without or with D. Retrospective or hallucinatory falsifications, etc.
-E. Megalomanic developments or deterioration or intercurrent acute
-episodes. F. At any period antisocial and dangerous reactions may
-result from the lack of adaptability and excessive assertion of the
-sidetracked personality."
-
-Freud sees in paranoia a reversion to the homosexuality of the
-developmental period of the individual with a projection of symptoms
-resulting from mental conflicts due to a repression of complexes.
-He described the sexuality of the infantile period as being purely
-autoerotic in character, the sexual interests of the child being
-centered in its own body. From this stage the object of interest is
-gradually transferred to other individuals of the same sex, the normal
-attraction to the opposite sex being a final development of later
-years. Freud believes that in paranoia there is a fixation in one of
-these early transitional stages. "Persons who cannot rise completely
-out of the stage of narcissism and are thus prematurely fixed or
-arrested in the evolution of their dispositions, are exposed to the
-danger that a flood of libido which finds no outlet, sexualizes their
-social tendencies and reverts the sublimations achieved in the course
-of the development."[324] The resulting mechanisms may be looked upon
-as defense reactions. The subconscious homosexual longings of the
-individual are repressed but finally admitted to full consciousness
-in the form of a projection, the sexual object usually being accused
-of persecution, thus justifying the attitude of the paranoic towards
-the cause of his troubles. In erotomania the antagonism is directed
-not against the homosexual object but upon some person of the opposite
-sex. Freud interprets the delusions of jealousy of the alcoholic as an
-evidence of homosexual attraction, the individual justifying himself
-by the charge that it is his wife and not himself who is the guilty
-one. The delusions of grandeur he looks upon as a sweeping denial
-of all extraneous influences, the individual building a defense for
-himself by assuming a self-aggrandizement that leaves no room for
-homosexual objects. Perhaps these mechanisms are, as Meyer suggests,
-only another expression of the well recognized and more or less normal
-tendency to accuse others of being at fault in some way when what we do
-ourselves goes wrong. Certainly, if nothing more, they are exceedingly
-ingenious and interesting theories. One cannot but be impressed by the
-extraordinary skill of Freud in discovering the sexual origin of almost
-any mental process with which we are familiar. The ready facility with
-which his study of sexual conflicts and repressions can be shown to
-serve as a complement to the anatomical, symptomatic, and prognostic
-hypotheses of Kraepelin is also worthy of note.
-
-As has already been said, there is considerable question as to how
-much, if anything, remains of the old-time paranoia concept. The
-uncertainties attending diagnosis have given rise to the modifying
-term "paranoid" which has been very generally used for many years. It
-should be remembered that paranoia when at its best only constituted
-approximately two per cent of all psychoses reported from institutions.
-These various considerations have resulted in its not having a
-distinctive place in the classification adopted by the American
-Psychiatric Association and it has been given official recognition as
-follows:—
-
-"From this group should be excluded the deteriorating paranoid states
-and paranoid states symptomatic of other mental disorders or of some
-damaging factor such as alcohol, organic brain disease, etc.
-
-"The group comprises cases which show clinically fixed suspicions,
-persecutory delusions, dominant ideas or grandiose trends logically
-elaborated and with due regard for reality after once a false
-interpretation or premise has been accepted. Further characteristics
-are formally correct conduct, adequate emotional reactions, clearness
-and coherence of the train of thought."
-
-A study of the statistics of American hospitals shows quite clearly
-the importance which should be attached to the paranoid conditions.
-During 1918 and 1919 there were 13,588 admissions to the thirteen New
-York state hospitals. Two hundred and fifty-six, or 1.88 per cent, of
-these were cases of paranoia or paranoid conditions. During a period
-of eight years there were 49,640 admissions of which 1,240, or 2.5
-per cent, were paranoid conditions. In Massachusetts sixty-four, or
-2.12 per cent, of the 3,011 admissions during 1919 were reported as
-paranoid conditions. In twenty-one hospitals in other states there
-were 18,336 admissions. Of these, 789, or 4.3 per cent, were paranoid
-conditions. These statistics show quite a small admission rate for
-these psychoses in New York and Massachusetts. The rate in other state
-hospitals is noticeably higher. As the percentage for dementia praecox
-is considerably lower in the reports from these institutions than it is
-in Massachusetts and New York, it is fairly reasonable to assume that
-many cases shown as paranoid forms of dementia praecox in Massachusetts
-and New York are classified with the paranoid conditions in the other
-states. If we consider the total admissions from all of the hospitals
-in question, we find 2,093 paranoid conditions in all, constituting
-2.94 per cent of a total of 70,987 cases. It has already been shown
-that paranoia, at a time when it was a well recognized entity,
-constituted only 1.9 per cent of over eighty-four thousand consecutive
-admissions. This clinical grouping has, therefore, obviously been
-enlarged by adding paranoid conditions which could not probably be
-classified as well recognized types of other psychoses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-THE EPILEPTIC PSYCHOSES
-
-
-Ancient history contains numerous references to epilepsy. The "Morbus
-sacer" of the Romans was apparently a subject of great interest to
-Hippocrates,[325] who wrote, over two thousand years ago, "The sacred
-disease appears to me to be no wise more divine nor more sacred than
-other diseases; but has a natural cause, from which it originates
-like other affections. Men regard its nature and cause as divine from
-ignorance and wonder, because it is not at all like other diseases."
-Presumably for a somewhat similar reason the disease was also referred
-to as the "Morbus Sideratus," it being thought that those affected
-were "star struck" or smitten in some mysterious and supernatural
-manner. By others it has been suggested that the theory regarding the
-divine origin of the disease was attributable to the seizures which
-always preceded the prophesies of the priests of Apollo. Herodotus is
-responsible for the statement that Cambyses, the king of the Persians,
-was subject to the "sacred disease" from birth. Such historians as
-Hippocrates and Euripides have definitely established the status
-of Hercules as a confirmed epileptic. "Morbus Herculeus" was one
-of the earliest designations of the disease. It was referred to by
-Plutarch in his writings. Suetonius describes the emperor Caligula
-as unquestionably afflicted with epilepsy. No less an authority than
-Lombroso speaks of Napoleon, Molière, Julius Caesar, Petrarch, Peter
-the Great, Mohammed, Händel, Swift, Richelieu, Charles V. Flaubert,
-Dostoieffsky and St. Paul as all being victims of the same affection.
-Truly this is a noble assemblage,—one which might readily make the
-disease fashionable!
-
-Maudsley ("Body and Mind") was convinced that Swedenborg suffered from
-a form of epileptic insanity. The following quotation from his diary
-would lend some color to that theory:—"There happened to me something
-very curious. I came into violent shudderings, as when Christ showed
-me His Divine Mercy. The one fit followed the other ten or fifteen
-times." After his fifty-fifth year, according to Maudsley, Swedenborg
-was permanently insane. The historian Sloan in his "Life of Napoleon"
-accepts as an established fact the statement that this great military
-strategist was an epileptic. Appian's "Roman History" certainly
-justifies Lombroso's reference to Julius Caesar: "At length, whether he
-lost all hope, or else for the better preservation of his health, never
-more afflicted with the falling sickness and sudden convulsions than
-when he lay idle, he resolved upon a far distant expedition against
-the Gatae and the Parthians." Washington Irving in speaking of some
-of the peculiar experiences of Mohammed suggests that, "Some of his
-adversaries attributed them to epilepsy." Even a very brief review of
-the historical aspects of this disease should perhaps not omit the
-contribution made by Shakespeare: "My Lord is fallen into an Epilepsie.
-This is his second Fit." (_Othello_)
-
-Epilepsy and the mental disturbances associated with it are so
-intimately related that they can hardly be considered separately.
-Notwithstanding that fact it must be admitted that there is no sharply
-circumscribed clinical entity properly definable as epilepsy. Nor is
-there anything distinctive about the psychotic manifestations occurring
-during the course of that disease, although Tuke's Dictionary mentions
-over thirty different varieties. In the most exhaustive study of
-epilepsy ever made in this country Spratling[326] reported that memory
-defects were noted in ninety per cent of the patients examined by him.
-It should be borne in mind that the group studied did not include
-any committed mental cases. He found from eight to ten per cent so
-slightly affected as to be legally "sane," "except at the brief moment
-of attack." Fifty per cent were mentally incompetent with rational
-intervals and forty per cent were "continually irresponsible." This
-latter class included from twenty to twenty-five per cent of imbeciles
-and idiots and from fifteen to twenty per cent recognizable as insane
-"by law and medicine alike." The prevalence of mental disease in a
-hospital population composed exclusively of epileptics is shown by his
-statement that of 801 patients examined at Craig Colony forty-one could
-not tell their own names; 166 did not know their age; 267 could not
-name the year, 263 the month, and 226 the day of the week; 238 did not
-know where they were; 378 were unable to state the year of their birth,
-183 the last place of residence, 219 the name of the institution, and
-248 the length of time there; in addition to this, 224 could not write
-well enough to sign their own names. It is interesting to note that
-the disease had its onset in 38.5 per cent of his cases before the age
-of ten years, in 43.5 per cent between the ages of ten and twenty,
-and in 9.5 per cent between the ages of nineteen and twenty-nine.
-Gowers found that seventy-six per cent developed symptoms before
-the age of twenty. Spratling classified the mental conditions found
-in epileptics as follows:—Psychic epilepsy, epileptic automatism,
-pre- and postparoxysmal mental disturbances, paroxysmal states
-(epileptic mania), and interparoxysmal conditions. The latter included
-transitory ill-humor, slight dulling or clouding of the intellect,
-feeblemindedness, imbecility, idiocy, epileptic dementia and acute
-confusional insanity which he says belongs to the manic-depressive
-group. He warns against the danger of classifying as dementia
-conditions due entirely to the use of bromides.
-
-L. Pierce Clark[327] looks upon epilepsy as the logical development
-of a well defined individual make-up described as the "epileptic
-constitution" and existing from the earliest childhood. In support
-of that theory he has reviewed the contributions of other writers on
-this subject. He found that Vogt called attention to the epileptic
-"poverty of ideas, prolonged reaction time, egocentricity, many
-religious reactions and acts of servility." Jung referred to a series
-of superficial associations, influencing the ideas of the patient,
-somewhat similar to those occurring in imbecility and sometimes
-observed in normal individuals of the uneducated class. Roemer speaks
-of a disturbance of "secondary identification" involving memory
-pictures with special sense recognition unimpaired. Eintinger described
-an essential poverty of affectivity and Wiersma, periodical variations
-in attentiveness. Ritterhaus defined the epileptic mental content
-as one of poverty of ideas, prolonged reaction time, egocentricity,
-emotional reactions and circumstantiality. Arndt included in the
-epileptic character peculiar inward fervor, characteristically
-egotistic in nature, and resembling the alcoholic temperament. Bianchi
-believed that the disease developed on a personality basis strongly
-suggesting the criminal type. He spoke of an inadaptability to the
-environment, the preponderance of individualistic instinct, cruelty,
-laziness, evil life, precocious and excessive development of the sexual
-instinct, irascibility and impulsiveness. Turner described an epileptic
-"temperament." He found these individuals to be egotistical, conceited,
-pretentious in conversation, emotionally unstable and sometimes
-obstinate or over-religious. Hartmann and di Gaspero noted as
-prodromal manifestations, abnormal changes of temper, excitability,
-anxious fears, sudden depressions, restlessness, irritability,
-distrust, memory falsifications, and violent impulses. Voisin found
-that less than ten per cent of epileptics showed a perfect balance
-in the emotional make-up. Hübner expressed the opinion that true
-dipsomania occurs chiefly in epileptics. He found alternations in the
-character of the individual in from ninety to ninety-five per cent of
-his cases.
-
-Clark's[328] conclusions were summarized by him as follows:—"1. There
-is more or less constant affective defect in all epileptics, sane as
-well as insane; that such defect is due to an inherent make-up of the
-psyche in which mainly an egocentricity and a highly sensitized feeling
-are given to the individual; and that from this constitutional make-up
-or alteration the ultimate deterioration of the psyche, intellectually
-as well as emotionally, is gradually developed, step by step, and if
-the state is not corrected that this finally and logically ends in
-so-called epileptic dementia. 2. The epileptic alteration is seen to
-proceed from the mental make-up or constitution of the individual
-epileptic long before his malady reaches the convulsive stage and that
-the one is but a further and final unfoldment of the former." As Clark
-expresses it, "The nucleus of this personality defect is a temperament
-of extreme hypersensitiveness and egotism and all that these two
-main characteristics entail ... a personality defect which makes its
-possessor incapable of social adaptation in its best setting and which,
-if it remains uncorrected, renders the individual inadequate to make a
-normal adult life." He looks upon the epileptic reaction as a "more or
-less direct outcome of the epileptic's inability to stand the stress
-and harassments of life from which he seeks automatic or unconscious
-withdrawal." This exhibits itself as a loss of spontaneous interest,
-day-dreaming, lethargy, somnolence, etc., terminating finally in
-epileptiform attacks when the strain becomes too great. A rather
-complete description of the "epileptic character" appeared in Schüle's
-"Klinische Psychiatrie" in 1886.
-
-An analysis of these mental mechanisms leads naturally to certain
-therapeutic indications. In view of the history of the bromide
-therapy, since the time of its introduction by Laycock as the ideal
-form of treatment in 1851, such suggestions should be given serious
-consideration. Clark advocates the early use of educational methods in
-correcting the defects of the epileptic constitution. Thus he would
-obtain control of the egocentricity and hypersensitiveness by reducing
-environmental stresses, teaching adjustment to the surroundings, and
-finding suitable and normal outlets for the spontaneous desires of the
-individual. He is of the opinion that in the apparently deteriorated
-cases mental interests can be restored and emotional and mental
-dilapidation greatly improved. He has reported a series of cases
-showing that the frequency and severity of seizure can be greatly
-influenced "with the more or less permanent arrest of the disorder
-in not a few cases."[329] A subsequent study of the mental mechanisms
-involved was summarized by Clark[330] in these words: "It is fairly
-obvious that the mental content in epilepsy proves that the epileptic
-regresses from the displeasurable difficulties of life, and in the
-first states of the fit the stress alone may be uncovered; whenever the
-patient reaches a deeper unconscious state, he gains the level of an
-easily recognized sexual striving."
-
-Kraepelin[331] would differentiate between "symptomatic" forms of
-epilepsy due to organic diseases, injuries or growths; and the
-"genuine" variety not associated with any coarse brain lesion. He
-describes as indications of impending attacks, occurring several hours
-or even days before, headache, irritable ill-tempered moods, general
-discomfort, weakness, palpitations, oppression, anxiety, vertigo,
-nausea, hot and cold sensations, sense deceptions of various kinds,
-muscular twitching, sexual excitement, disturbed sleep, unpleasant
-dreams, etc. Binswanger found these symptoms present usually in the
-severer forms of the disease. Finkh found them in twenty-five per cent
-of his cases. Psychic, sensory, motor and vasomotor aura are described.
-Kraepelin after discussing first the paroxysmal attacks occurring
-in the disease speaks of the various forms of psychic epilepsy as
-constituting the second important group of clinical manifestations
-to be considered. These conditions may be looked upon as pre- or
-post-epileptic insanity, depending on their relation to convulsions, or
-may be entirely independent of them or considered as equivalents.
-
-The most common form of psychic epilepsy he describes as periodical
-ill-humor. It begins sometimes with sexual excitement (Ducosté). The
-patient becomes moody, surly, irritable, quarrelsome, gives up his
-work, refuses to eat and complains of everything around him. In some
-cases uneasiness, gloom or depression are manifested and suicidal
-tendencies may develop. Consciousness is clear although the patients
-complain that they cannot think or are confused and forgetful. Some
-have headache, perspire, show dilated pupils, vasomotor disturbances,
-nausea, etc. The picture is often complicated by alcoholic indulgence
-with attacks resembling dipsomania. This sometimes results in an
-epileptic clouded or dream state in which the patients become
-blustering, abusive, and violent or make senseless journeys. They may
-manifest a sudden impulse to wander from place to place without any
-apparent reason. Sexual excitement frequently occurs, with masturbation
-and exhibitionism, attacks on children or homosexual tendencies.
-Usually there is no recollection of these episodes. Occasionally
-expansive or ecstatic moods appear and rarely a flight of ideas is
-noted. These attacks of ill-humor usually last from a few hours to
-several days, often disappearing suddenly. Alcoholism always lengthens
-the duration. In some cases active hallucinations and clouding of
-consciousness occur. Dreams are common. Others show anxious states
-with hallucinations and sometimes well marked delusions. An actual
-delirium may appear, although usually only for a very short time.
-The hallucinations and delusions may persist for months, suggesting
-dementia praecox.
-
-A second large group shows a more marked clouding of consciousness.
-These are the characteristic twilight or dream states of epilepsy.
-Thought is confused, desultory, retarded or incoherent. Sometimes there
-is a tendency to rhyme and repeat questions, or even a genuine flight
-of ideas. The mood may be depressed, anxious or irritable, although
-ecstatic states occur. The patient may become quiet, inaccessible,
-stuporous or cataleptic. Some, however, become excited. Later, defects
-of memory occur and amnesic periods may extend over a considerable
-length of time. The patellar reflexes may be increased and the pupils
-dilated and sluggish. There may be a contraction of the field of vision
-or disturbance of color sense, tactile sensation, smell and taste,
-with muscular weakness, Babinski reflexes, speech defects, dizziness,
-uncertain gait, nystagmus, etc. Somnambulism is sometimes encountered
-in epilepsy, although it is strongly suggestive of hysteria. The great
-majority of cases present the picture of a simple dreamy stuporous
-condition. Apprehension is clouded, the patients become confused,
-cannot control their thoughts, mistake the persons around them, lose
-themselves on the street, and wander away. They destroy their clothes,
-undress in the street, etc. Sexual excitement, exhibitionism and
-masturbation are common. Characteristic dream states may appear as
-equivalents.
-
-A delirious confusion with hallucinations and delusions often
-develops. Some cases have a very strong religious coloring and
-believe themselves to be in heaven or hell—hear the voice of God,
-angels, etc. Grandiose ideas may appear and wonderful adventures are
-narrated. The mood is variable and may be either anxious, cheerful or
-erotic. There is a marked tendency to violence and the patients may
-be very restless and agitated. Delusions are common and often lead to
-suicidal attempts. Some exhibit an anxious delirium accompanied by
-numerous hallucinations. The patient is clouded as well as disoriented
-and delusions develop early. Fabrications sometimes appear in this
-condition. These deliria may last a few hours or several weeks.
-Profound and more or less long continued epileptic stupors may
-complicate the situation.
-
-A "conscious delirium" of longer duration is observed in some
-instances. The sensorium is not so much clouded, and the patient
-appears quite clear. Hallucinations and illusions usually develop
-early in the attack. Pleasurable, grandiose ideas often appear. The
-attitude in a general way resembles that of a confused disorientation.
-Anxious moods may develop, or rarely cheerful tendencies. Consciousness
-becomes dreamy, with hallucinations of a religious coloring. Patients
-with an apparently clear sensorium may commit numerous foolish or even
-criminal acts without any apparent insight into their significance.
-Such conditions as this may last weeks or months. Self-accusation may
-occur between attacks. These individuals are quite likely to start on
-absolutely aimless journeys which may be the outcome of an alcoholic
-debauch. The dream state in such cases may have a decided alcoholic
-coloring with characteristic hallucinations or humorous tendencies.
-This may be mixed with religious ecstatic manifestations. Dream states
-only occur once or twice during the lifetime of an epileptic or may be
-comparatively frequent. Many patients never have them.
-
-Aschaffenburg found fainting attacks in seventy-four per cent,
-convulsions in forty-two per cent, stupors in forty-four, petit mal
-in fifty-eight, dream states in thirty-six, and ill-humor in from
-sixty-four to seventy per cent of his cases. In his Munich clinic
-Kraepelin studied 515 epileptics. Eighty-six and eight-tenths per
-cent of them had attacks of unconsciousness, probably often reported
-as convulsions, 23.3 per cent had dizzy spells, 9.7 per cent stupors,
-15.1 per cent petit mal, 3.3 per cent attacks of various kinds
-without unconsciousness, 16.5 per cent dream states, 1.9 per cent
-somnambulisms, 36.9 per cent ill-humor, 13.8 per cent excitements,
-mostly alcoholic complications, and 2.5 per cent had status epilepticus.
-
-An epileptic weakmindedness develops in many cases. The field of
-thought is contracted and egocentric in character with delayed
-associations as shown by Jung. The patient is egotistical, interested
-in petty details, and strongly inclined to religious tendencies. He
-always minimizes the severity of the disease which, in his opinion,
-is improving rapidly. He is likely to develop mild paranoid ideas and
-feels that he has been mistreated or that others are prejudiced against
-him. These individuals are usually moody, irritable, dull, emotionally
-unstable and excitable. They are often overactive but not industrious.
-Many show a persistent "wanderlust." Werther reported that between
-seven and eight per cent of his cases were tramps or beggars. Quite
-a few show criminal tendencies. They nearly always have a marked
-susceptibility to alcohol which greatly aggravates their symptoms.
-Kraepelin is inclined to look upon the epileptic personality as a
-result of the disease and not the soil in which it develops.
-
-In the more advanced deteriorations or epileptic dementias there is
-a marked mental dulness with poverty of thought, loss of memory,
-irascibility and occasional violence. Kraepelin refers to a genuine
-"epileptic physiognomy" which is often observed. Strabismus, nystagmus,
-ptosis, tremors and many other neurological symptoms are frequently
-found. Clark and Scripture have described a characteristic "voice" in
-epilepsy. Besta found a subnormal temperature in sixty-six per cent of
-his cases. Very elaborate studies of the blood have been reported from
-time to time. The secretions and excretions have been made the subject
-of exhaustive research and the changes in metabolism have been gone
-into thoroughly.
-
-The pathology of epilepsy has been given careful consideration by
-Alzheimer. In cases of status epilepticus he found extensive acute
-alterations, more particularly in the Betz cells, with swelling of
-the neurones, crumbling of the Nissl bodies, and dislocation of the
-nucleus to the apex. Here and there the ganglion cells were entirely
-destroyed and others showed regressive changes. Karyokinetic figures
-are seen in the glia cells, which are usually swollen, show ameboid
-changes and contain degenerative products. Accumulations of broken
-down cell products are found around the vessels. A sclerosis of the
-cornu ammonis, usually unilateral, was reported by Bourneville in
-14.8 per cent, by Pfleger in fifty-eight per cent, and by Alzheimer
-in from fifty to sixty per cent of the cases of epilepsy examined.
-This consists of an atrophy of the cells in a well defined area and
-their replacement by a network of fibres. The cells are shrunken or
-entirely gone, while there is a great increase in the neuroglia
-elements with many free nuclei. The walls of the vessels are thickened
-and "stäbchenzellen" appear. The significance of these findings is not
-known. Nissl looks upon them as only a part of a general involvement
-of the cortex. Widespread cell changes were frequently reported by
-both Nissl and Alzheimer. A marked increase in the neuroglia has been
-found particularly in the superficial layers of the cortex,—the
-so-called "marginal gliosis" of Chaslin. The vessels show an intimal
-proliferation and a thickening of the walls, with occasional mast-cells
-in the lymph spaces. Ranke has called attention to the presence or
-persistence of "Cajal" cells in the ordinarily cell free layers of the
-cortex. These are large transversely placed ganglion cells, common in
-the superficial layers of the cortex of the newborn but not found in
-the normal adult brain. This condition is looked upon as a cortical
-development defect. These so-called "Cajal" cells are also found in
-some of the mental deficiencies. Nevertheless it must be conceded that
-there are no definitely characteristic pathological changes so constant
-as to render certain the differentiation of this disease postmortem.
-
-No forms of insanity perhaps are clinically so difficult and
-unsatisfactory from the standpoint of classification as are the
-epileptic psychoses. The various mental manifestations of the disease
-may very logically be described as: 1. Pre-paroxysmal episodes, 2.
-Paroxysmal states, 3. Post-paroxysmal episodes, 4. Inter-paroxysmal
-conditions to be specified, as excitements, depressions, anxieties,
-confusion, stupor, dream states, paranoid conditions, etc., and 5.
-Epileptic deterioration. There is some question as to whether the
-various psychic epilepsies, so called, are sufficiently clear-cut to
-constitute clinical entities.
-
-The delimitation of these psychoses for statistical purposes is
-described in the Association's manual as follows:—
-
-"In addition to the epileptic deterioration, transitory psychoses
-may occur which are usually characterized by a clouded mental state
-followed by an amnesia for external occurrences during the attack. (The
-hallucinatory and dream-like experiences of the patient during the
-attack may be vividly recalled.) Various automatic and secondary states
-of consciousness may occur.
-
-"According to the most prominent clinical features the epileptic mental
-disorders should therefore be specified as follows:—
-
-"(a) Epileptic deterioration: A gradual development of mental
-dullness, slowness of association and thinking, impairment of memory,
-irritability or apathy.
-
-"(b) Epileptic clouded states: Usually in the form of dazed reactions
-with deep confusion, bewilderment and anxiety or excitements with
-hallucinations, fears and violent outbreaks; instead of fear there may
-be ecstatic moods with religious exaltation.
-
-"(c) Other epileptic types (to be specified)."
-
-During a period of sixteen years in the New York state hospitals
-(ending October 1, 1888) 3,167 of 84,152 admissions were cases of
-"epilepsy with insanity." This meant an admission rate of 3.76 per
-cent. It must be borne in mind, however, that the differentiation
-between epilepsy with insanity and psychoses clearly due to epilepsy
-was not attempted at that time. During a subsequent period of
-eight years in the same institutions, when what is essentially the
-present classification was in use, the admission rate for epileptic
-psychoses was 2.42 per cent. In 1919 with 3,011 first admissions to
-the Massachusetts state hospitals only fifty cases (1.66 per cent)
-were reported as showing psychoses due to epilepsy. Six hundred and
-twelve cases, constituting 3.33 per cent of 18,336 first admissions,
-were reported by twenty-one hospitals in other states. An analysis
-of a total of 70,987 first admissions in forty-eight state hospitals
-therefore showed that 1,865, or 2.62 per cent, were epileptic
-psychoses. After reading the statements contained in various textbooks
-regarding the extraordinary frequency of epileptiform seizures in
-dementia praecox, it is difficult to escape the conclusion that
-the percentage of epileptics has been underestimated rather than
-exaggerated.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE PSYCHONEUROSES AND NEUROSES
-
-
-The words neurosis, psychosis and psychoneurosis are of obscure origin
-and have had a varied significance from time to time. Murray[332]
-defines psychosis as a psychological term indicating "a change in
-the psychic state; an activity or movement of the psychic organism,
-as distinguished from neurosis" which he speaks of as a "change in
-the nerve-cells of the brain prior to, and resulting in, psychic
-activity." Huxley in discussing this subject in 1871 made the
-following differentiation: "In all intellectual operations we have to
-distinguish two sets of successive changes—one in the physical basis
-of consciousness and the other in consciousness itself; one set which
-may, and doubtless will, in course of time, be followed through all its
-complexities by the anatomist and the physicist, and one of which only
-the man can have immediate knowledge. As it is very necessary to keep
-a clear distinction between these two processes, let the one be called
-neurosis and the other psychosis."
-
-Von Feuchtersleben used the latter word in its present psychiatric
-significance in his "Lehrbuch der Aertzlichen Seelenkunde" in 1845.
-Its repeated appearance in the first volume of the _Allgemeine a
-Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie_ in 1844 would strongly suggest a frequent
-use of the term in the German psychiatry of that day. It was unknown
-in English works until quite recently, although the word is found in
-Maudsley's "Responsibility in Mental Diseases" (1874)—"No wonder that
-the criminal psychosis which is the mental side of the neurosis,
-is for the most part an intractable malady, punishment being of no
-avail to produce reformation." Lewes, in "The Problems of Life and
-Mind" published after his death in 1879, makes a very significant
-remark: "Pathologists call it a psychosis, as if it were a lesion of
-the unknown psyche." Clouston's 1911 edition makes no reference to
-psychoneuroses as such.
-
-The word neurosis has been much more extensively employed in medical
-literature. William Cullen, a well-known professor in the University
-of Edinburgh, in his "First Lines of the Practice of Physic" in
-1774, said: "I propose to comprehend, under the title of neuroses,
-all those preternatural affections of sense or motion which are
-without pyrexia, as a part of the primary disease." In his "Synopsis
-Nosologicae Medicae" in 1785 he divided diseases into four general
-classes: Pyrexia or febrile diseases; neuroses or nervous diseases, as
-epilepsy; cachexiae or diseases resulting from bad habit of the body,
-as scurvy; and locales, or local disease, as cancer. Brachet,[333] who
-was one of the earlier writers on the subject of hysteria, defined that
-disease in the following words in 1847: "Hysteria is a neurosis of the
-cerebral nervous system, which manifests itself more or less brusquely
-by crises of general chronic convulsions and by the sensation of a
-globe ascending in the course of the oesophagus, at the upper extremity
-of which it becomes fixed, causing there a menace of suffocation."
-Briquet, another French writer, expressed somewhat similar views
-in 1859. The word neurosis as now used may be said to refer to a
-functional disturbance of the nervous system, which, if directly due to
-etiological mental factors, is spoken of as a psychoneuroses.
-
-Just what diseases are to be included under the grouping of neuroses
-and psychoneuroses is another question. Practically all of the older
-authorities, at least, have agreed on hysteria and neurasthenia.
-When we get beyond this point, however, there are wide differences
-of opinion. Oppenheim, in his second edition, under the heading of
-neuroses, included hysteria, hypnotism and hypnosis, neurasthenia,
-morbid fears, imperative ideas, astasia-abasia, traumatic neuroses,
-hemicrania, headache, vertigo, epilepsy, eclampsia, chorea minor,
-Huntington's disease, paralysis agitans and many other conditions.
-
-Krafft-Ebing[334] was responsible for the following delimitation of the
-psychoneuroses, which he admits to be "somewhat dogmatic" and has
-used for many years largely for didactic purposes: "1. Parasitic,
-accidentally acquired diseases in individuals whose cerebral functions
-were previously normal and whose disease could not be foreseen. 2.
-Disease based upon temporary disposition (grave physical disease and
-the simultaneous action of powerful exciting causes), hereditary
-predisposition not excluded, but only latently present in the brain
-of one easily affected, but previously normal in its functions. 3.
-Tendency to cure of the disease and infrequency of relapses. 4. Slight
-tendency to transmission to descendants, and when it occurs, in benign
-forms (psychoneuroses). 5. Typic course of the disease picture. Mania,
-as a rule, arises from a melancholic initial stage; and so-called
-secondary conditions are the terminations of primary conditions. The
-disease picture, even when it appears, has a certain duration and
-independence. The whole course of the disease is quite narrowly limited
-in time, and goes on either to recovery or dementia. 6. No tendency to
-periodicity of the attacks or the grouping of symptoms. 7. Sanity and
-insanity are sharply defined, and in striking contrast." In this group
-he includes mania, melancholia, acute curable dementia and primary
-hallucinatory delirium. He describes hysteria, neurasthenia, etc.,
-under the psychic degenerations with paranoia and speaks of them as
-constitutional neuroses. His psychoneuroses certainly do not come
-within the general acceptation of the term at this time but represent
-the views of a certain school of German writers.
-
-More recently the words neurosis and psychoneurosis have been used as
-synonymous terms by many writers. Kempf has even gone so far as to
-suggest discarding the word psychosis completely. In any event, the
-view that we should only designate as psychoneuroses such functional
-conditions as are clearly due to psychic causes seems to be gaining
-ground. The term neurosis is generally applied at this time to diseases
-primarily physical rather than mental in their symptomatology. The
-prominence of psychogenic factors has been given great weight in recent
-literature. In the second edition of his work on Psychiatry, Diefendorf
-makes the following statement: "Neuroses are commonly designated as
-a group of diseases characterized by changing and transitory nervous
-disturbances, to be distinguished from psychoses by the fact that the
-symptoms do not involve the mental field. But in practice psychoses
-without nervous symptoms or neuroses without mental symptoms are not
-encountered."
-
-Since the term was first introduced by Morel in 1860, many French
-writers, such as Régis and Magnan, have emphasized the importance of
-the insanity of degeneracy. This included moral insanity, the sexual
-perversions and various other psychopathic conditions as well as
-the obsessions, compulsions, impulsions, phobias, doubts, etc., now
-recognized as psychogenic in origin and usually assigned collectively
-to the psychoneuroses under the designation of psychasthenia. In his
-sixth edition Kraepelin included both hysteria and epilepsy in his
-group of neuroses, while constitutional peculiarities of character, as
-well as compulsive and impulsive insanity with sexual perversions,
-were classified under the psychopathic states (degenerative insanity).
-In his seventh edition epilepsy was described as a separate entity. In
-the eighth edition we find a new grouping. The psychogenic conditions
-are divided into nervous exhaustion (neurasthenia), the dread neuroses,
-induced insanity, the paranoid conditions of the deaf, the traumatic
-neuroses, the prison and the "querulant" psychoses. Hysteria now
-appears separately. Under the constitutional psychopathic disorders
-he discusses nervousness, compulsion neuroses, impulsive insanity and
-the sexual perversions. In view of these varying conceptions which are
-fairly representative of the literature of the day, we are certainly
-on safe ground in confining a consideration of the psychoneuroses to
-hysteria, neurasthenia, psychasthenia and various other conditions
-characterized by anxiety and fears.
-
-Hysteria has long been a subject of interest and controversy. It
-has been a topic of discussion since the time of Esquirol and even
-Sydenham. It was studied exhaustively by Brachet in 1847. Briquet
-in 1859 defined hysteria as "an encephalic neurosis whose apparent
-phenomena consist principally in the perturbation of the vital actions
-which serve to manifest the affective sensations and passions." Lasègue
-wrote an elaborate treatise on the subject in 1864. It was discussed
-in detail later by Möbius, Charcot and many others. To Möbius hysteria
-was "a congenital morbid mental state where diseased bodily conditions
-are produced by ideas." During the last twenty or thirty years many new
-and interesting theories have been advanced. Binet sees in hysteria
-a condition of double consciousness, the two states almost entirely
-independent and separated by periods of amnesia. Janet's[335] interesting
-conception of the disease is covered in full in his definition:
-"Hysteria is a mental disease belonging to the large group of the
-diseases due to weakness, to cerebral exhaustion; it has only rather
-vague physical symptoms, consisting especially in a general diminution
-of nutrition; it is above all characterized by moral symptoms, the
-principal one being a weakness of the faculty of psychological
-synthesis, an abulia, a contraction of the field of consciousness
-manifesting itself in a particular way; a certain number of elementary
-phenomena, sensations and images, cease to be perceived and appear
-suppressed by the personal perception; the result is a tendency
-to a complete and permanent division of the personality, to the
-formation of several groups independent of each other; these systems
-of psychological factors alternate, some in the wake of others, or
-coexist; in fine, this lack of synthesis favors the formation of
-certain parasitic ideas which develop completely and in isolation
-under the shelter of the control of the personal consciousness
-and which manifest themselves by the most varied disturbances,
-apparently only physical." He summarized this as a complete doubling
-(dédoublement—literally undoubling, as translated by Corson) of the
-personality. On analysis there is fundamentally much in this view
-strongly suggestive of the theories of Breuer and Freud.
-
-Babinski interprets hysteria as a purely psychic functional disturbance
-due to suggestion. He would eliminate from this field all symptoms
-which cannot be induced by suggestion and relieved by methods of
-persuasion. The ordinary physical manifestations of the disease, such
-as anesthesia, hyperesthesia, paralyses, convulsions, etc., Babinski
-describes as stigmata. His theories lead him to suggest "pithiatism" as
-the correct name for hysteria.
-
-A revolutionary and epochmaking contribution to the literature of
-this important subject was the publication of their "Studien über
-Hysterie" by Breuer and Freud in 1895. The latter has made various
-further expositions of his views more recently. What the ultimate
-outcome of the hysteria problem may be, only time can determine. No
-consideration of the subject, however, is complete, nor should any
-definite conclusions be attempted, without a thorough understanding
-of theories which have a material bearing on the mental mechanisms
-involved in all of the psychoneuroses. Breuer and Freud advanced the
-suggestion that hysteria is always the result of a psychic trauma.
-The mechanisms involved may be very briefly summarized. Studies of
-everyday life show that the peculiar amnesia often observed for certain
-names and events does not mean usually in the average individual a
-mere fading of memory with the lapse of time. Freud found that the
-inability to recall things in such cases is largely due to the fact
-that they are for some reason or other unpleasant in nature and
-therefore not desirable to remember. They are accordingly pushed into
-the background as it were, by burying them in the subconscious strata
-of the mind and intentionally obliterating them from memory. When the
-ordinary well balanced individual is confronted with an unpleasant
-situation he meets it as best he can, by the exhibition of normal
-reactions of various sorts. He treats the matter lightly, dismisses
-it as a joke or "laughs it off." His dignity may be maintained by a
-display of anger or resentment. The mental equilibrium may be restored
-by a resort to profanity, tears, violence, or even physical flight.
-An emotional outlet in the form of hate or thoughts of revenge may be
-necessary to settle the question and finally dispose of it by "getting
-it off the mind." There are unpleasant situations which for various
-reasons cannot be met and treated in this ordinary way. The mental
-shock of the "psychic trauma" may, for instance, be the result of an
-occurrence which is so distasteful and repulsive as to be incompatible
-with the present existence. There being no other escape from such a
-difficulty, it is rejected by the psychic censor, to use Freud's
-expression, and repressed or forced into the subconscious. This is
-the inadequate reaction which takes place in hysteria and leads to a
-dissociation and rudimentary splitting of the consciousness. Freud
-finds that in practically every instance the repressed and painful
-idea is due to a psychic trauma resulting from some incident of a
-sexual nature; furthermore, that it usually dates back to the time of
-childhood. These buried sexual complexes are completely disposed of by
-what Freud speaks of as the process of "conversion," the associated
-affect being radiated, as it were, into the physical sphere where it is
-converted into a memory symbol in the form of an hysterical symptom.
-The mental symptoms of the disease he explains as the results of the
-elaboration and development of hypnoid states or erotic day-dreams of
-the individual. Freud[336] summarized his views in a series of formulae
-"which strive to progressively exhaust the nature of hysteria" as
-follows:—
-
-"1. The hysterical symptom is the memory symbol of certain efficacious
-(traumatic) impressions and experience.
-
-"2. The hysterical symptom is the compensation by conversion for the
-associative return of the traumatic experience.
-
-"3. The hysterical symptom—like all other psychic formations—is the
-expression of a wish realization.
-
-"4. The hysterical symptom is the realization of an unconscious fancy
-serving as a wish fulfilment.
-
-"5. The hysterical symptom serves as a sexual gratification, and
-represents a part of the sexual life of the individual (corresponding
-to one of the components of his sexual impulse).
-
-"6. The hysterical symptom, in a fashion, corresponds to the return of
-the sexual gratification which was real in infantile life but had been
-repressed since then.
-
-"7. The hysterical symptom results as a compromise between two
-opposing affects or impulse incitements, one of which strives to
-bring to realization a partial impulse, or a component of the sexual
-constitution, while the other strives to suppress the same.
-
-"8. The hysterical symptom may undertake the representation of diverse
-unconscious nonsexual incitements, but can not lack the sexual
-significance."
-
-The practical application of these theories of Freud is illustrated
-by the line of treatment suggested. By his method of "catharsis" the
-repressed and forgotten painful idea is restored to the conscious
-sphere of the mind and a normal reaction brought about by "affording
-an outlet to the strangulated affect through speech." To accomplish
-this result it is obviously necessary to find out what the psychic
-trauma was that originally caused the repression. For this purpose he
-uses psychoanalysis, hypnosis and the study of dreams. Psychoanalysis
-is nothing more or less, as Campbell says, than a sort of "scientific
-confessional", a complete analysis of the mental mechanisms of the
-individual in a search for the buried complexes. It has largely been
-preferred by Freud to hypnosis, the latter often being impracticable
-for various reasons. The association test of Sommer was very
-successfully adapted to the determination and explanation of buried
-complexes by Jung. Freud's views as to the analysis of dreams in
-the unravelling of mental mechanisms are set forth in full in his
-"Traumdeutung" (1900). He describes a dream as being "the more or less
-disguised fulfilment of a suppressed wish." Owing to the activities of
-the psychic censor we may have either manifest or latent dreams. The
-former are recalled on waking; the latter are distorted or forgotten
-and indicate the repressed wish. He classifies dreams as, those which
-represent an unexpressed wish as being fulfilled, those which represent
-the realization of the wish in some entirely concealed form and those
-which represent it in a form insufficiently or partly concealed.
-Freud justified his emphasis of the sexual element in his studies of
-the psychoneuroses by the publication of his "Drei Abhandlungen zur
-Sexualtheorie." In this he calls attention to the neglected importance
-of sexual factors in the developing mentality of the child and shows
-that these influences are manifested long before the age of puberty.
-He even maintains that the normal child is homosexual as well as
-incestuous at a certain stage. These erotic impulses are largely
-unconscious and become submerged, playing an important part later in
-the development of the neuroses.
-
-Kraepelin has devoted one hundred and sixty pages of his work on
-psychiatry to a consideration of the subject of hysteria. The mental
-symptoms of the disease are all described as being definitely
-associated with twilight or dream states (Dämmerzustände). These he
-refers to as including somnambulisms, definite excitements, attacks
-assuming a characteristic silly or "puerile" form, confusions, deliria
-of various kinds, the Ganser complex, prison stupors and double
-personalities (retrograde amnesia). He does not accept Freud's views as
-to the influence of the sexual life in the etiology of hysteria.
-
-Neurasthenia was first described by Beard of New York in 1880. As has
-already been shown, it was referred to by Kraepelin as one of the
-psychogenic neuroses. Freud is much inclined to question the existence
-of such an entity as the classic neurasthenia described by Beard. He
-feels that most of the cases can be traced to a definite association
-with some other psychosis. He does, however, recognize a neurasthenic
-complex which is entirely sexual in origin and attributes it to the
-excessive masturbation of adult life. The symptoms, according to Freud,
-are a result of the inadequate sexual relief afforded by the habit,
-and are those of nervous exhaustion, a sense of pressure or fulness in
-the head, spinal irritation, hyperesthesias, paresthesias, diminished
-sexual power, and occasionally a mild form of emotional depression. He
-would also differentiate another psychoneurosis of sexual origin—the
-anxiety neurosis (Angstneurose). He mentions an increased irritability
-as a prominent symptom often in the form of an oversensitiveness to
-noises. The characteristic feature, however, is a state of anxious
-expectation. This may manifest itself in a mere uneasiness and general
-tendency towards pessimism or may approach a state of hypochondriasis
-with paresthesia and annoying somatic sensations. Fear of sudden death
-may be experienced. There may be physical symptoms such as disturbed
-heart action (palpitation or tachycardia), disturbance of respiration
-(dyspnea or asthmatic attacks), profuse perspiration, periods of
-trembling, dizziness, attacks of inordinate appetite, diarrhea, etc.
-Nocturnal frights are common. The symptoms as outlined above are
-accompanied by a marked anxiety. He finds anxious psychoses usually
-in women, in the form of virginal fears in adults, the anxiety of
-the newly married, similar states occurring in widows or intentional
-abstainers, and fears occurring at the climacterium. This condition
-in women he believes to be due as a rule to coitus interruptus or
-ejaculatio praecox. Similar anxieties in men, according to Freud, are
-due to abstinence, frustrated sexual excitement, coitus interruptus or
-senile conditions. Masturbation may also be a factor. He also admits
-that there are causes other than sexual, in the form of overwork,
-serious illnesses, etc. The mental mechanism involved is a "deviation
-of the somatic sexual excitement from the psychic, and in the abnormal
-utilization of this excitement occasioned by the former."
-
-In 1903 Janet formulated his conception of psychasthenia, describing
-it as a clinical entity. In this grouping he included the obsessions
-of doubt, phobias, imperative ideas, impulsive obsessions, compulsions
-and other conditions described by various authors. The essential
-mechanism to be considered, according to Janet, is a "lowering of the
-psychological tension." This results, as White expresses it, in an
-inadequate perception of the realities of the outside world. Meyer has
-spoken of psychasthenia as "a lowering of general interest and tendency
-to rumination over what is accessible to the patient in his memory,
-but is not squarely met, and where the normal reaction is replaced
-by rumination, substitutive acts and panics." These conditions are
-described by Freud as belonging to the "Zwangsneurose" or compulsion
-neuroses. The obsessing ideas force themselves into the consciousness
-of the individual, who is perfectly clear as to their inconsistency
-but cannot escape them. These he also looks upon as being of sexual
-origin and due to repression as in hysteria. After the unpleasant
-idea is repressed, however, the mechanism is different. Instead of
-converting the concept into a bodily symbol, a defense reaction
-displaces the affect from the painful thought, connecting it with some
-entirely disinterested and innocuous idea. This process he spoke of as
-substitution. This transference, as in hysteria, takes place in the
-subconscious and is not recognized by the patient as having anything to
-do with his peculiar symptoms. Compulsive ideas prevent the recurrence
-in thought, of the repressed etiological factor. It must be conceded
-that these mechanisms are exceedingly interesting from a psychological
-point of view. Freud's theories have, however, met with a great deal
-of opposition, due apparently to the fact that all of his conceptions
-are based almost exclusively on the influence of the sexual life on
-the human mind. The characteristic and entirely consistent Freudian
-answer to this objection is that it is a "defense reaction." Without
-attempting to determine the exact basis of the psychoneuroses the
-fact remains that their importance from a psychiatric point of view
-cannot be questioned. They constitute in a large measure the field
-of observation covered by the out-patient clinics and psychopathic
-hospitals. They played an exceedingly important part in the psychiatry
-of the late war.
-
-Leaving out of consideration the mental mechanisms involved, the
-American Psychiatric Association has endeavored to collect statistical
-data relating to the various psychoneuroses generally recognized, as is
-shown by the suggestions regarding their delimitation, in the manual:—
-
-"The psychoneurosis group includes those disorders in which mental
-forces or ideas of which the subject is either aware (conscious) or
-unaware (unconscious) bring about various mental and physical symptoms;
-in other words these disorders are essentially psychogenic in nature.
-
-"The term neurosis is now generally used synonymously with
-psychoneurosis, although it has been applied to certain disorders in
-which, while the symptoms are both mental and physical, the primary
-cause is thought to be essentially physical. In most instances,
-however, both psychogenic and physical causes are operative and we can
-assign only a relative weight to the one or the other.
-
-"The following types are sufficiently well defined clinically to be
-specified:
-
-"(a) Hysterical type: Episodic mental attacks in the form of delirium,
-stupor or dream states during which repressed wishes, mental conflicts
-or emotional experiences detached from ordinary consciousness break
-through and temporarily dominate the mind. The attack is followed by
-partial or complete amnesia. Various physical disturbances (sensory
-and motor) occur in hysteria, and these represent a conversion of the
-affect of the repressed disturbing complexes into bodily symptoms
-or, according to another formulation, there is a dissociation of
-consciousness relating to some physical function.
-
-"(b) Psychasthenic type: This includes the compulsive and obsessional
-neuroses of some writers. The main clinical characteristics are
-phobias, obsessions, morbid doubts and impulsions, feelings of
-insufficiency, nervous tension and anxiety. Episodes of marked
-depression and agitation may occur. There is no disturbance of
-consciousness or amnesia as in hysteria.
-
-"(c) Neurasthenic type: This should designate the fatigue neuroses in
-which physical as well as mental causes evidently figure; characterized
-essentially by mental and motor fatigability and irritability; also
-various hyperesthesias and paresthesias; hypochondriasis and varying
-degrees of depression.
-
-"(d) Anxiety neuroses: A clinical type in which morbid anxiety or fear
-is the most prominent feature. A general nervous irritability (or
-excitability) is regularly associated with the anxious expectation or
-dread; in addition there are numerous physical symptoms which may be
-regarded as the bodily accompaniments of fear, particularly cardiac and
-vasomotor disturbances; the heart's action is increased, often there is
-irregularity and palpitation; there may be sweating, nausea, vomiting,
-diarrhea, suffocative feelings, dizziness, trembling, shaking,
-difficulty in locomotion, etc. Fluctuations occur in the intensity of
-the symptoms, and acute exacerbations constituting the "anxiety attack."
-
-"(e) Other types."
-
-The psychoneuroses occur very infrequently in institutions for mental
-diseases. In 49,640 first admissions to the New York state hospitals
-during a period of eight years, only 671 cases were reported as
-neuroses or psychoneuroses, constituting 1.35 per cent of the total.
-Of this number 29.97 per cent were of the hysterical type, 37.35
-of the psychasthenic, 30.27 of the neurasthenic form, and 2.41 per
-cent were anxiety psychoses. In the Massachusetts hospitals during
-the year 1919, thirty-six, or 1.19 per cent, of the 3,011 admissions
-reported were neuroses or psychoneuroses. Of these, 44.83 per cent
-were of the hysterical, 24.14 of the psychasthenic, and 18.39 per
-cent of the neurasthenic forms. On analyzing 18,336 admissions to
-twenty-one hospitals in other states we find 297 cases of neurosis or
-psychoneuroses, 1.63 per cent of the total. Of these, 44.11 per cent
-were cases of hysteria, 28.28 of psychasthenia, 22.90 of neurasthenia
-and 4.71 per cent of anxiety psychoses. The neuroses or psychoneuroses
-constituted 1.42 per cent of over seventy thousand admissions to all
-institutions. Of the 1,048 psychoneuroses reported, 35.20 per cent were
-cases of hysteria, 33.68 of psychasthenia, 29.19 of neurasthenia, and
-3.91 per cent of anxiety psychoses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-THE PSYCHOSES WITH PSYCHOPATHIC PERSONALITY
-
-
-The introduction of the term psychopathic personality is probably to be
-attributed to the description of "Die Psychische Minderwertigkeiten"
-by Koch in 1893. These were referred to by Morel[337] as "Psychopathic
-Depreciations," a group in which he says Koch included "a very large
-number of these psychical manifestations, so varied in their nature
-and intensity which, without belonging to the class of mental diseases
-proper, cannot, nevertheless, be reconciled with the idea of perfect
-mental sanity." These were described as being either congenital or
-acquired and including psychopathic predisposition, psychopathic
-defect and degeneration. To congenital defects were attributed the
-"Eccentrics, disequilebrated, overscrupulous and capricious persons,
-foolish, misanthropes, redressers of wrong, reformers of society,
-etc." In the degenerative processes he included mental deficiencies
-both intellectual and moral. Meyer,[338] who based his conception of
-"constitutional inferiority" largely on the work of Koch, says that
-the latter by "Psychische Minderwertigkeiten" "meant those little
-defects which constitute the inferiority of the individual in the whole
-strife of life, that inferiority which does not allow him to come up
-to an actually efficient balance in the struggle of life.... They
-were oddities, peculiar nicks in the personalities of the various
-people, and he designated those as constitutionally inferior." Koch
-in this grouping unfortunately included hysteria, psychasthenia and
-neurasthenia. Meyer eliminated these: "I wanted to do justice to the
-hysterias and psychasthenias which I could define as such, but I knew
-there was a whole group of cases in which the definition could not
-be pushed. I also knew that it was difficult to give the definition
-in the downward line towards imbecility, and since it was so very
-hard to give the definition in the individual cases, I thought that
-the least trouble would arise from making a relatively large group
-of 'inferiorities not sufficiently differentiated' and let those be
-entered under the heading of 'constitutional inferiority.'"
-
-The original conception of this group was that it included intellectual
-defects which have subsequently been classified with the mental
-deficiencies, leaving only those cases showing purely psychopathic
-taints of a constitutional origin. There have been numerous other
-descriptions of these conditions. Ziehen[339] included under the
-psychopathic constitution "chronic, psychopathic conditions, which
-in their symptomatology and course not only involve defect of the
-affectivity but also of the intelligence, even though pronounced
-psychopathic symptoms, such as delusions, hallucinations, etc., do not
-intrude for any extended period. Where hallucinations and analogous
-symptoms do appear they are solitary and the patient retains insight
-into the condition." Ziehen's psychopathic constitution covers a very
-wide field, including not only hysteria and neurasthenia but epilepsy.
-
-The psychopathic personalities as described today represent only
-a modern interpretation of conditions which have been given
-ample consideration in the psychiatric literature of the past.
-An early illustration of this fact is Pritchard's definition of
-"moral insanity" in 1835:—"A morbid perversion of the feelings,
-affections and active powers, without any illusion or erroneous
-conviction impressed upon the understanding; it sometimes coexists
-with an apparently unimpaired state of intellectual faculties."
-The psychopathic states were undoubtedly fully covered in Morel's
-description of the insanity of degeneracy in 1860. This he divided
-into cases arising from constitutional nervous temperaments, moral
-insanity, the feebleminded with or without morbid impulses, and those
-with criminal tendencies. This conception was well summarized by
-Diefendorf[340]:—"The disharmony of the intellectual and the moral
-faculties is one of the most striking features of degeneracy. As in
-the defects of the intellectual development, so in the moral sphere,
-the condition varies from a complete arrest of moral development to
-all forms of moral perversion and even to an abnormal development of
-the moral and emotional susceptibility. All of these conditions may
-exist, with a perfect development of the intellectual faculties.... The
-professional criminals should also, without doubt, be included in this
-class, as they present all possible varieties of moral perversions and
-anomalies, all of which may exist with preservation of the intellect
-and even with intellectual keenness."
-
-Magnan described compulsions, impulsions and contrary sexual instincts
-as episodes of the insanity of degeneracy. The psychopaths were
-undoubtedly the "déséquilibrés" or ill-balanced individuals of
-Régis,[341] whose work on "Mental Medicine" included an exceedingly
-elaborate discussion of the so-called "borderline" conditions.
-"After maturity they are complex beings, heterogeneous, made up of
-disproportioned elements, contradictory qualities and defects, and
-as over-endowed in some directions as they are deficient in others.
-Intellectually, they often possess in a very high degree, the faculties
-of imagination, of invention, and of expression, that is to say, the
-gifts of speech, the arts, and poetry; on the moral side, they possess
-a singular emotivity, or rather, sensibility. What they lack, more or
-less completely, is good judgment, the moral sense, and especially
-continuity or logical consecutiveness, a unity of direction in
-intellectual production and the actions of life. It follows, that in
-spite of their often superior qualities, these persons are incapable
-of conducting themselves in a rational manner, of following regularly
-the exercise of a profession that seems well beneath their capacity, of
-looking after their interests or those of their families, of carrying
-on business prosperously or of directing the education of their
-children; their existence, therefore, constantly recommencing, is one
-long contradiction between the apparent wealth of means and poverty
-of results. They are the utopians, the theorists, the dreamers, who
-are enamored with the best things but accomplish nothing. The public
-which sees only the brilliant exterior looks upon these individuals as
-artists and superior beings. The medal is reversed, however, to those
-who are compelled to associate with them and share their existence;
-they see their defects, their incapacities and evil tendencies, of
-which they are not merely the witnesses, but also the victims. Aside
-from their lack of mental poise these individuals also display an
-excessive emotional sensibility and an enfeeblement of psychic energy
-that reveals itself by a noticeable predominance of spontaneity over
-reflection and volition. Hence their inability, their instability,
-and their irresolution; hence also their alternations of apathy and
-activity, of excitement and torpor, their violent attacks of passion
-and their cries of despair for the most trivial and slightest reasons."
-Régis divided the "psychic discordances" or disharmonies into the
-ill-balanced, the original and the eccentric. These were all included
-in the degeneracies of evolution. Clouston covers this same ground
-fully and in a somewhat similar manner in his "Unsoundness of Mind"
-(1911).
-
-The insanities of degeneracy have also been given considerable space by
-such Italian writers as Lombroso, Bianchi, etc. Lombroso in "The Man
-of Genius" (1888) discussed this subject as follows:—"A theory, which
-has for some years flourished in the psychiatric world, admits that
-a large proportion of mental and physical affections are the result
-of degeneration, of the action, that is, of heredity in the children
-of the inebriate, the syphilitic, the insane, the consumptive, etc.;
-or of accidental causes, such as lesions of the head or the action of
-mercury, which profoundly change the tissues, perpetuate neuroses or
-other diseases in the patient, and, which is worse, aggravate them in
-his descendants, until the march of degeneration, constantly growing
-more rapid and fatal, is only stopped by complete idiocy or sterility.
-Alienists have noted certain characteristics which very frequently,
-though not constantly, accompany these fatal degenerations. Such are,
-on the moral side, apathy, loss of moral sense, frequent tendencies
-to impulsiveness or doubt, psychical inequalities owing to the excess
-of some faculty (memory, aesthetic taste, etc.) or defect of other
-qualities (calculation, for example), exaggerated mutism or verbosity,
-morbid vanity, excessive originality, and excessive preoccupation with
-self, the tendency to put mystical interpretations on the simplest
-facts, the abuse of symbolism and of special words which are used as an
-almost exclusive mode of expression."
-
-Several other very elaborate works have been published on the subject
-of degeneracy. One of the better known of these perhaps is that of
-Max Nordau on "Degeneration" (1894). The book of Grasset[342] on the
-"Demifous et Demiresponables" has been translated into English and
-constitutes one of our most valuable contributions on this subject.
-Grasset credits Trélat with making the first comprehensive study of the
-semi-insane in his "La Folie Lucide," etc., in 1861. His classification
-of these conditions included imbeciles, the feebleminded, satyrists,
-nymphomaniacs, monomaniacs, erotomaniacs, jealous individuals,
-dipsomaniacs, spendthrifts, adventurers, the conceited or boastful,
-evildoers, kleptomaniacs, suicides and the inert and lucid manias.
-Grasset gives some interesting illustrations of the psychopathic traits
-of various men of genius. Tolstoï fell sixteen feet as a result of
-attempting to fly when eight years old, and whipped himself with ropes
-to become accustomed to pain. In school he chose a course in Oriental
-languages because everyone else was interested in law. Not being able
-to finish a college career in two years, he decided to go to a desert
-and live a purely animal life. It was necessary for him to resort to
-devices of various kinds to prevent suicide. Rousseau was at various
-times a clockmaker, music master, painter and servant in addition to
-studying medicine, music, theology, and botany. He dedicated a pamphlet
-"to all Frenchmen who were friends of justice" and distributed it on
-the streets. One of his acts was to write a letter "to God Almighty"
-and place it under the altar of Notre Dame. Persecutory ideas were
-entertained by him for years. Emile Zola was evidently a psychasthenic
-as well as a psychopath. He counted the gas jets on the street, the
-numbers on the doors, and the cabs passing by. These were added
-together. "For a long time the multiples of three seemed to him of
-good omen, then the multiples of seven were reassuring." "For a long
-time he was afraid he would not succeed in any proceeding on which he
-was about to enter if he did not leave the house with his left foot
-first." Balzac had an ambulatory mania and could not be found when
-called for military service. It is said that on one occasion "when he
-had put on a handsome new dressing gown he wanted to go out into the
-street with it on with a lamp in his hand to excite the admiration of
-the public." His father is said to have stayed in bed for twenty years
-without any reason for so doing, suddenly resuming his former mode of
-life at the end of that time. Schopenhauer broke a hotel proprietor's
-arm because he heard him talking outside of his room. He refused to pay
-a legitimate account because his name was spelled with two p's instead
-of one, on the bill. He often burned his beard instead of shaving and
-wrote his notes in Greek, Latin and Sanskrit for fear someone would
-read them. In his will he left all of his possessions to soldiers and
-to his dog. Goethe alternated between great joy and extreme depression
-and had unjustifiable attacks of anger. Frederick II had such a
-dislike for changing his coat that he had only two or three during the
-course of his life. When Schiller wanted to meditate he had a habit of
-putting his feet on ice and sniffing the aroma of fermenting apples.
-Nordau says "that Richard Wagner is accused of having a greater degree
-of degeneracy than all the degenerates that we have thus far seen
-put together." Mozart played the harpsichord at three years of age,
-composed concertos at five and made a concert tour at the age of six.
-He was extremely nervous and fell in love at fifteen with a girl of
-twenty-five. In the last months of his life he was obsessed with the
-idea that he had to prepare his own funeral mass. Lombroso's theory
-is that "genius is a true degenerative psychosis, belonging to the
-group of moral insanities which may temporarily spring from other
-psychoses and take their form, but always conserving certain special
-characteristics which distinguish it from the others." Although his
-conclusions may not be warranted it must be admitted that many men of
-genius have been psychopaths.
-
-Kraepelin[343] in discussing the influence of heredity on psychoses and
-personalities, says, "Hence we may, perhaps, discriminate between
-congenital states of disease and morbid personalities, according as the
-disturbances are apparently the expression of the morbid conditions of
-past generations, or seem to be purely personal abnormalities, although
-it is certainly impossible to make any sharp distinction." In 1915, in
-the fourth volume of his eighth edition, Kraepelin devoted nearly one
-hundred and fifty pages to the subject of psychopathic personalities.
-These he divides into the excitable, the unstable, the impulsive,
-the eccentric, the liars and swindlers, the antisocial or enemies of
-society, and the quarrelsome.
-
-A study of the "excitable" psychopaths in Kraepelin's[344] clinic
-showed the intellectual standard of these individuals to be above the
-average. Apprehension and judgment were unimpaired even when mental
-inferiority was not entirely lacking. Some complained of poor memory
-or absentmindedness, others of a feeling of fatigue. A definite mental
-activity was noted, usually of a happy mood, but occasionally with
-depressive tendencies. The characteristic feature was an emotional
-excitement, associated often with violent rages, without any adequate
-reason. The emotional reaction changed quickly to one of despair,
-anxiety, irritability or inaccessibility. The mood in a large number of
-cases was depressed and tearful, while others were cheerful and elated,
-laughing and joking, or erotic. Often without any apparent cause,
-irritability, pessimism, unsociability, weariness of life and thoughts
-of suicide appeared—more particularly during menstrual periods. The
-emotional state as a rule was kind, affable, good-natured, tractable,
-often religious, sensitive or sympathetic. The patients are often
-spoken of as well-liked, industrious, honest and substantial citizens.
-Some are timid, bashful or gloomy in disposition. Others are conceited,
-overbearing, tyrannical, rude, unsociable and quarrelsome. Many are
-childish, foolish or eccentric, highstrung and affected or untruthful.
-Some are unsteady, restless and over-occupied, full of schemes, rash,
-talkative, gossiping, and assuming striking mannerisms. Occasionally
-they are disinclined to any regular occupation, neglect their work,
-loaf around and are supported by their relatives. In sixty-two per cent
-of these cases the patients were brought to the clinic on account of
-suicidal tendencies. This was due to reduced circumstances in nearly
-fifty per cent of the men and in seventy-one per cent of the women. In
-the men marital troubles and love affairs were more common; sometimes
-loss of position, or death in the family, etc. Spurious attempts at
-suicide of a theatrical type were frequently reported. Next to suicidal
-inclinations as a cause for being brought to the clinic there were
-assaults, attacks of rage and outbursts of despair. In any stress or
-anger over a disagreeable occurrence these individuals are likely to
-become abusive, shout, scream, run around, strike the head against
-the wall, tear their clothes off, pull out their hair, etc. Some
-rush around all night in the streets in a senseless rage, improperly
-clothed. Occasionally they attack others unjustifiably and for no
-apparent reason. They are exceedingly susceptible to alcohol. During
-their excitements, consciousness may be clouded. Afterwards they say
-they were confused, not themselves, in a dream as it were, etc. Some
-have no recollection whatever as to what was done. These excitements
-rarely last more than a few hours. Thirty-two per cent of the men and
-less than ten per cent of the women were convicted of crime, usually
-for disturbing the peace, or criminal assaults, but occasionally for
-much more serious offenses. As a rule alcohol is a factor in these
-cases. The relations between the sexes are characterized by jealousy
-and quarreling. The women are particularly likely to have delusions of
-infidelity. Genuine hysterical attacks occur in a certain number of
-cases. They often see visions and may have dizzy spells or syncopes.
-Somnambulism may occur. Nervous symptoms often appear—headaches,
-unpleasant dreams, palpitations, tremors, increased reflexes,
-tics, etc. The excitable cases constituted nearly one-third of the
-psychopaths admitted at Kraepelin's clinic. Sixty per cent of these
-were women. The majority of cases were between fifteen and twenty-five
-years of age. Heredity appeared to be a factor in forty-seven per
-cent and many showed physical defects. Fifty per cent of the men were
-intemperate.
-
-The "unstable" psychopaths are characterized by a dominating weakness
-of the will. In nearly one-half of the cases the intellectual
-endowment is normal, some having a surprising power of comprehension
-and ability to take up new things, with accurate observation of their
-surroundings and keen discrimination. These persons have no great
-persistence and do not exert themselves, are inattentive, tire easily
-and are distractible. They never go into things deeply and have only a
-superficial knowledge of events. They learn readily and forget quickly.
-The memory is poor and unreliable. The imagination is usually very
-active, with a tendency to exaggerate, dream of the impossible and
-relate great stories. There is an inclination to boast and fabricate,
-telling of wonderful but wholly imaginary deeds and accomplishments.
-They often represent themselves to be important personages. Some show
-artistic talent, write plays or fantastic poetry and discuss literary
-and dramatic problems. They are strongly inclined to become actors. The
-higher intellectual development is uniformly defective. Comprehension
-is not clear and judgment is immature and short-sighted. Their
-interests are devoted to frivolous matters without much attention to
-more important questions. They sometimes show great prospects in school
-but do not fulfill them later. The mood is cheerful and conceited, with
-a very high opinion of themselves and great ambitions. They blame their
-relatives for their lack of success and claim they are not understood
-or appreciated. Sometimes the emotional trend is more sad and gloomy.
-They complain of being unlucky, everything goes wrong. Occasionally
-anxieties appear, with a feeling of oppression, fear of being alone, of
-mental troubles or suicide. These feelings are, however, superficial
-in character, usually disappearing in a short time, to be followed by
-excitement, outbursts of anger or anxiety. They are often quarrelsome.
-The characteristic disturbance, however, is that of the will. They are
-entirely lacking in the capacity to stick to any one occupation. They
-are not punctual, are interfered with in innumerable ways and often
-change their work, looking for something more suitable. Hypochondriacal
-notions hamper their activities. Senseless journeys and trips are often
-undertaken. Some become vagabonds and tramps. They are much inclined
-to bad company and resort to immoderate use of tea, coffee, drugs and
-alcohol. Sixty-four per cent of Kraepelin's male cases and twenty per
-cent of the women were intemperate. The sexual habits are very often
-irregular and venereal diseases to be expected. Kraepelin found either
-gonorrhea or syphilis in twenty-two per cent of the women examined.
-Some exhibited homosexual tendencies. Many become spendthrifts, making
-extravagant and foolish purchases. They are inclined to speculate
-unwisely. Fifty-four per cent of the men and nearly a third of the
-women as a result of their moral deterioration come into conflict
-with the courts on account of thefts, assaults, quarrels, vagrancy,
-etc. Suicidal tendencies were shown in forty-eight per cent of the
-men and sixty-five per cent of the women in Kraepelin's clinic. In
-many cases these were induced by alcoholism, in other instances by
-family quarrels, etc. Often the reasons given were foolish. Hysterical
-attacks appear in a certain percentage of cases in the women. Some had
-hallucinations and confusional attacks or syncopes. Tremors, headaches,
-increased reflexes and other neurological symptoms occasionally
-appeared. The "unstable" group included about one-fifth of the
-psychopaths observed by Kraepelin. Thirty-six per cent of these were
-women. The majority of those admitted were between the ages of fifteen
-and twenty-five. Heredity was a factor in forty-nine per cent of the
-cases.
-
-The "impulsive" psychopaths are characterized by a domination of
-the conduct by emotional impulses. The intellectual makeup of these
-individuals is usually good. They often have a special bent for art,
-music, poetry, etc. They frequently show a considerable mental activity
-and versatility. They express themselves well, make witty remarks and
-appear brilliant, although they may complain of absentmindedness or
-fatigability. They are always conceited, born to greater things and
-have a great future. There is an almost unbounded egotism in some
-cases. The emotional tone is good-natured, easygoing and accessible.
-Many are sensitive and visionary; others obstinate, inconsiderate,
-pretentious or quarrelsome. The mood is usually high-spirited and
-confident but variable. The patients are often depressed and hopeless,
-complaining of their luck. At other times they are sullen, surly,
-irritable and faultfinding. Many exhibit suicidal tendencies. An
-emotional irritability is exceedingly common, with violent outbursts
-of anger. Often they refuse to associate with others for a time and
-will speak to no one. The three common types are the spendthrift, the
-wanderer and the dipsomaniac. The spendthrifts usually indulge in
-alcohol and naturally soon contract enormous debts. They frequently
-have little insight into their condition or blame someone else
-for it. Many become wanderers and go aimlessly from one place to
-another—wherever their inclination leads them. The memory for these
-events is good. Some inadequate reason is always offered. These
-wanderers usually are children between the ages of ten and fifteen.
-The impulsive alcoholics may have attacks very rarely, sometimes only
-once a year. Debauches are preceded by restless and moody conduct.
-After constant drinking for days or weeks they sometimes have suicidal
-impulses. Sexual excitements may occur. They always show psychopathic
-traits between attacks. They are unsteady, unreliable, make sudden
-resolutions, change their occupations and residence and lead a wild
-existence with surprising adventures. Some have hysterical attacks,
-fainting spells, or even convulsions. The impulsive psychopaths
-constituted only two or three per cent of Kraepelin's cases.
-Practically all were over twenty-five years of age. There was a
-hereditary taint in seventy-one per cent of the cases.
-
-The "eccentric" psychopaths are characterized by a lack of uniformity
-and consistency in the mental makeup. The intellectual endowment of
-these individuals is usually normal. They are often absentminded,
-forgetful and show a variation in productivity. Some are artists
-or devote themselves to inventions. Judgment is impaired and
-reasoning becomes distorted and onesided. There is a tendency towards
-exaggeration and extravagance in their viewpoints, with a leaning
-towards queer notions. They are often quickwitted, versatile and write
-long and wordy documents. Their mode of expression is bombastic and
-labored, and the content of speech or writing, verbose, desultory,
-flighty and full of meaningless expressions. They show a certain
-shrewdness and cunning, dissimulate, resort to all kinds of evasions,
-and are conspicuous in their conduct. Occasionally there is a tendency
-towards delusional ideas of a mild form. As a rule the mood is
-cheerful, although often depressed, suspicious or irritable. They are
-opinionated, boastful and better than others. Usually there is an
-emotional excitability. The patients are sensitive and irritated by
-small things, scold and complain. Sometimes they are sentimental and
-dreamy, with extravagant language. They often take sudden dislikes to
-brothers, sisters or other members of the family. They are capricious,
-quarrelsome, and faultfinding. Their conduct is aimless, contrary
-and incomprehensible. They lose all capacity for judgment of real
-conditions. They cannot proceed in any orderly way in things which they
-are really fitted for. They do not stick to anything long, changing
-plans and occupations frequently. They often go about at night talking,
-arguing and drinking. It is not unusual for them to quarrel with
-their wives or even commit assaults. The majority of these eccentric
-psychopaths were men over thirty-five and of degenerate families. This
-group constitutes only a small number of cases.
-
-The "liars and swindlers" are characterized by an excitability of
-the imaginative faculties and a variable and uncertain will power.
-At first these individuals are likely to appear as unusually gifted
-persons. They are good-natured, present an excellent appearance and are
-apparently well informed on almost all subjects. They have a faculty
-for quoting foreign languages and sometimes are familiar with many
-tongues. Often they are brilliant conversationalists. On investigation
-their actual knowledge is found to be very superficial. They are
-inclined to art, poetry and literature. Many become interested in
-hypnotism or spiritualism. They are inclined to join religious sects
-or attach themselves to the Salvation Army. These individuals learn
-quickly but do not stick to things long. Their mental powers are not
-orderly or consistent. They have an extraordinary imagination but
-accomplish nothing. They are liars from birth, the falsifications
-usually being entirely useless. Many are anonymous letter writers.
-They are often unable to discriminate, themselves, between the true
-and the false in their own stories. These fabrications appear to be
-an emotional product, the imaginary occurrence practically always
-relating to the individual himself. They boast of their superiority in
-literary and scientific accomplishments and claim to be theologians,
-mathematicians, jurists, chemists, etc. In their imaginations and
-fabrications the patients always better themselves. In many instances
-they assume pretentious titles, represent themselves as counts,
-princes, etc. Sometimes they strongly suggest paranoia. In a small
-number of cases self-accusations appear and they confess to all kinds
-of imaginary crimes. As a rule they are elated and optimistic, but
-often affected and theatrical. Occasionally suicidal attempts are
-made. At times general depressions or anxious states appear. Some are
-coarse and deceitful. They are usually uncertain and capricious in
-everything. Some become spendthrifts. They are naturally cheats and
-swindlers; occasionally thieves. The swindling schemes resorted to are
-innumerable. The use of false names and assuming of uniforms and titles
-of various kinds is the most common. They make purchases of all kinds
-without any ability to pay or any intention of doing so. Many refuse
-to pay bills without any excuse whatever. Others attempt to marry rich
-women by deceitful means and misrepresentations. Some practice medicine
-without a license; others claim damages for imaginary injuries.
-Sexual offenses are common. If arrested they are often inclined to
-claim amnesia for the period of time when the act was committed. They
-occasionally have genuine psychoses and hysterical attacks. These
-simulate various diseases. The group of liars and swindlers constituted
-from six to seven per cent of the psychopaths in Kraepelin's clinic.
-Seventy-one per cent of the men were accused of crimes. The majority
-of cases were under twenty-five years of age. Heredity was a very
-important factor.
-
-The "antisocial" psychopaths or enemies of society are characterized
-by a blunting of the moral elements of their makeup and a lack of
-adjustment to their environment. Kraepelin found that forty per cent
-of his cases were persons who had done well in school. They have a
-strong dislike for regular occupations and avoid them in every possible
-way. Their behavior is variable, with a tendency to be industrious
-occasionally and more often lazy. Frequently they appear queer,
-abstracted, inattentive, dreamy, sleepy or dull. When at their best
-they are not bright mentally and have no ambition or far reaching
-interest. They learn quickly and forget as rapidly. Their store of
-knowledge is very limited. They have no capacity for going into things
-thoroughly and cannot acquire a higher education. They are lacking
-in judgment, foresight and discrimination. Many have a weakness for
-cheap stories of adventure, pictures of crime, etc. In expression they
-are usually quick as well as verbose. A characteristic is their lack
-of truthfulness. They are liars and braggarts. The mood is usually
-cheerful and confident; sometimes arrogant, surly, moody, irritable and
-occasionally depressed or anxious. They change unexpectedly from one
-mood to the other. Irritability, with outbursts of anger, is common.
-They often become threatening and destructive. Eighteen per cent of
-Kraepelin's cases attempted suicide. At least one-third of these were
-theatrical attempts on account of fear of punishment. Childish vanity
-and conceit is a very common symptom, with boastful tendencies. A
-prominent feature is the lack of any deep emotional reactions. They
-do not react normally and properly to their surroundings. Another
-characteristic defect is their entire lack of sympathy for anyone else.
-They are likely to be cruel to animals as well as persons. They show
-little affection for parents, children or relatives and are lacking
-in a sense of decency and personal cleanliness. As children they
-are exceedingly troublesome in school. Some have to go to custodial
-institutions for care. Many are truants at school and run away from
-home, becoming wanderers and vagabonds. They are inclined to sexual
-excitement, irregularities and crimes of various sorts. Seventy per
-cent of Kraepelin's cases were thieves, beginning to steal as children;
-twenty per cent were embezzlers and twelve per cent guilty of fraud
-or forgery. Practically every variety of crime was represented. They
-exhibit an extraordinary tendency to revert to criminal habits. Prison
-life makes some submissive but starts others in a war against society.
-They often attempt violence or make passive resistance to the law. They
-occasionally develop hypochondriacal tendencies. Friendly advances are
-greeted with mistrust. Some are stubborn, sulky, unrepentant and have
-nothing to say, or lie and explain by putting the blame on others. Thus
-an opposition to all organized society develops. They often look upon
-themselves as martyrs. Others take the situation lightly and minimize
-the gravity of their position. Some seem to really see the error of
-their ways. The antisocial individuals sooner or later, like other
-psychopaths, are very prone to hysterical attacks, fainting spells,
-or even convulsions. Anesthesias and hyperesthesias may be noted.
-Some patients complain of headache, disturbed sleep, dreams, etc. The
-antisocial in Kraepelin's clinic constituted less than ten per cent of
-the psychopaths, of which seventy per cent were men. Half of the women
-were prostitutes. Over eighty per cent of the cases were under twenty
-years of age.
-
-The intellectual makeup of the "quarrelsome" psychopath is usually
-fairly good. As a rule these persons show a narrowing of the
-intellectual sphere, with, however, a well-defined shrewdness which
-enables them to take advantage of others. Some show a tendency to
-pedantry and hair-splitting arguments. Memory is good but distorted
-by an emotional coloring. Judgment is warped and unreliable. They
-are credulous and accept statements without proof, but they look
-with suspicion on anything not in accord with their own ideas. The
-influence of these factors leads to an emotional excitability. They
-are always passionate, sensitive individuals who become excited over
-trivial matters. This is complicated by a marked self-confidence,
-minimizing their own failings. Quarrels are the inevitable consequence.
-Everything is exaggerated in importance. The conclusion is reached that
-the neighbors and others are all organized against them. Sometimes
-the feeling of enmity is transferred from one individual to another.
-The patient is constantly in trouble with someone. They are almost
-invariably of the male sex and usually of middle age or older when they
-come under observation.
-
-For statistical purposes the differentiation of the psychopathic
-personalities has been described by the Association's committee as
-follows:—
-
-"Under the designation of psychopathic personality is brought together
-a large group of pathological personalities whose abnormality of makeup
-is expressed mainly in the character and intensity of their emotional
-and volitional reactions. To meet the demands of current usage, the
-term for this group has been shortened from the older one "psychoses
-with constitutional psychopathic inferiority" with which it is
-synonymous. Individuals with an intellectual defect (feeblemindedness)
-are not to be included in this group.
-
-"Several of the preceding groups, in fact all of the so-called
-constitutional psychoses, manic-depressive, dementia praecox, paranoia,
-psychoneuroses, etc., may be considered as arising on a basis of
-psychopathic inferiority or constitution because the previous mental
-makeup in these conditions shows more or less clearly abnormalities in
-the emotional and volitional spheres. These reactions are apparently
-related to special forms of psychopathic makeup now fairly well
-differentiated, and the associated psychoses also have their own
-distinctive features.
-
-"There remain, however, various other less well differentiated types
-of psychopathic personalities, and in these the psychotic reactions
-(psychoses) also differ from those already specified in the preceding
-groups.
-
-"It is these less well differentiated types of emotional and volitional
-deviation which are to be designated, at least for statistical
-purposes, as psychopathic personality. The type of behavior disorder,
-the social reactions, the trends of interests, etc., which psychopathic
-personalities may show give special features to many cases, _e.g._,
-criminal traits, moral deficiency, tramp life, sexual perversions and
-various temperamental peculiarities.
-
-"The pronounced mental disturbances or psychoses which develop in
-psychopathic personalities and bring about their commitment are varied
-in their clinical form and are usually of an episodic character. Most
-frequent are attacks of irritability, excitement, depression, paranoid
-episodes, transient confused states, etc. True prison psychoses belong
-in this group.
-
-"In accordance with the standpoint developed above, a psychopathic
-personality with a manic-depressive attack should be classed in the
-manic-depressive group, and likewise a psychopathic personality with a
-schizophrenic psychosis should go in the dementia praecox group.
-
-"Psychopathic personalities without an episodic mental attack or any
-psychotic symptoms should be placed in the _without psychosis_ group
-under the appropriate subheading."
-
-Unfortunately there are no statistics which show the incidence of
-psychopathic personalities in the community. A study of 70,987 first
-admissions to state hospitals shows that the psychoses associated with
-this condition constituted only 1.12 per cent of the total number. On
-the other hand, the reports of the Phipps Psychiatric Clinic show an
-admission rate for psychopaths of over six per cent during a five-year
-period. When they reach a state hospital it is usually owing to the
-development of manic-depressive insanity or some other well-defined
-psychosis. The important and troublesome cases from a social point of
-view are those that do not reach hospitals. A much larger percentage is
-to be found in institutions of the correctional and penal type. There
-is no greater problem today than the attitude of the state towards
-the psychopathic criminal. The influence of these individuals on the
-community at large is something that we have no means of estimating at
-the present time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE PSYCHOSES WITH MENTAL DEFICIENCY
-
-
-The literature of mental deficiency is almost as old as that of
-medicine. Imbecility was studied at some length by Plato and Galen
-and was recognized by Felix Plater, who has been accredited with the
-first classification of mental diseases known (seventeenth century).
-Fitzherbert[345] in his "Natura Brevium" in 1652 included the following
-interesting definition of idiocy: "He that shall be said to be a sot
-and idiot from his birth, is such a person who cannot count or number
-twenty pence, nor tell who was his father or mother, nor how old he is,
-so as it may appear that he hath no understanding or reason what shall
-be for his profit, or what for his loss; but, if he have sufficient
-understanding to know and understand his letters, and to read by
-teaching or information, then it seems he is not an idiot." One of
-the first medical writers to discuss mental defects at any length was
-Esquirol. In differentiating them from mental diseases he said: "Idiocy
-is not a disease, but a condition in which the intellectual faculties
-are never manifested; or have never been developed sufficiently to
-enable the idiot to acquire such an amount of knowledge as persons of
-his own age, and placed in similar circumstances with himself, are
-capable of receiving. Idiocy commences with life, or at that age which
-precedes the development of the intellectual and affective faculties,
-which are from the first, what they are doomed to be during the whole
-period of existence." ... "A man in a state of Dementia is deprived
-of advantages which he formerly enjoyed. He was a rich man, who has
-become poor. The idiot, on the contrary, has always been in a state of
-want and misery." An elaborate treatise on the subject of cretinism was
-published by Fodéré in 1792.
-
-Tredgold,[346] in discussing the etiology of mental deficiency, divides
-the causes into factors indicative of, or producing, a variation of the
-germ plasm and those acting directly upon the offspring. The former
-include neuropathic inheritance, alcoholism, tuberculosis, syphilis,
-consanguinity and the age of the parents. Among the latter are abnormal
-mental and physical conditions of the mother during pregnancy, or
-injury to the fœtus; abnormalities of labor, primogeniture and
-premature delivery; and after birth—traumatic, toxic, convulsive and
-nutritional factors. He found neuropathic inheritance in over eighty
-per cent of the cases studied. In 64.5 per cent the heredity took
-the form of mental defects, insanity or epilepsy, and in eighteen
-per cent paralysis, cerebral hemorrhage, neuroses of various kinds,
-or psychoses. There was a history of alcoholism in 46.5 per cent of
-the series investigated. Tuberculosis occurred in the families of
-thirty-four per cent, syphilis in 2.5 per cent, consanguinity in five
-per cent, and a marked disparity in the ages of the parents in four
-per cent. Factors acting directly on the offspring, either before,
-during or after birth, were found to be present in sixty-five per cent.
-Goddard[347] in a study of 327 cases found a history of inherited mental
-deficiency in fifty-four per cent, probable heredity in 11.3 per cent,
-neuropathic ancestry in twelve per cent, accidents of various kinds in
-nineteen per cent, and no ascertainable cause of any kind in 2.6 per
-cent of the total number.
-
-The definition of a feebleminded person, proposed by the Royal
-College of Physicians of London, and subsequently adopted by the
-English Royal Commission, reads as follows:—"One who is capable of
-earning a living under favorable circumstances, but is incapable,
-from mental defect existing from birth, or from an early age, (a) of
-competing on equal terms with his normal fellows; or (b) of managing
-himself and his affairs with ordinary prudence." The English Mental
-Deficiency Act of 1913 included the following definition:—"Persons
-in whose case there exists from birth or from an early age mental
-defectiveness not amounting to imbecility, yet so pronounced that
-they require care, supervision, and control for their own protection
-or for the protection of others, or, in the case of children, that
-they, by reason of such defectiveness, appear to be permanently
-incapable of receiving proper benefit from the instruction in ordinary
-schools." It will be noted that imbeciles and idiots do not come
-within the scope of these definitions. This is due to the fact that
-the term feeblemindedness as used in England includes only the High
-Grade Amentia of Tredgold or the Morons as defined by Goddard. The
-classification of the latter is as follows:
-
-1. High Grade Morons—Those that can do fairly complicated work, with
-only occasional or no supervision, run simple machinery or take care of
-animals, but are unable to plan.
-
-2. Middle Grade—Those capable of doing routine institution work only.
-
-3. Low Grade—Those who are only capable of running errands, doing
-light work, making beds, scrubbing or caring for rooms—if there is no
-great complexity of furniture.
-
-Tredgold describes imbecility as Medium Grade Amentia and idiocy as Low
-Grade Amentia.
-
-The Mental Deficiency Act of England defines idiots as "persons so
-deeply defective in mind from birth, or from an early age, as to be
-unable to guard themselves against common physical dangers." It also
-refers to moral imbeciles as "persons who from an early age display
-some permanent mental defect coupled with strong vicious or criminal
-propensities on which punishment has had little or no deterrent
-effect." The imbecile as defined by the Royal Commission of England
-is "one who by reason of mental defect existing from birth or from an
-early age is incapable of earning his own living, but is capable of
-guarding himself against common physical dangers."
-
-Tredgold classifies either feeblemindedness, imbecility or idiocy
-if due to pathological germinal variations (caused by alcoholism,
-tuberculosis, syphilis, etc., and manifested by amentia, insanity,
-epilepsy, etc.) as being either simple, microcephalic, or Mongolian.
-He describes those which represent somatic modifications due to
-gross cerebral lesions as syphilitic, amaurotic, hydrocephalic,
-porencephalic, sclerotic, paralytic and other toxic, inflammatory or
-vascular forms. The somatic modifications due to defective cerebral
-nutrition he divides into epilepsy, cretinism, nutritional forms and
-isolation (sense deprivation).
-
-The classification of mental defects used by Fernald at the
-Massachusetts School for the Feebleminded and based on mental ages
-is as follows:—Idiot,—low grade, less than one year; middle grade,
-one year or more; high grade, two years. Imbecile,—low grade, three
-and four years; middle grade, five years; high grade, six and seven
-years. Moron,—low grade, eight and nine years; middle grade, ten
-years; high grade, eleven and twelve years. Fernald calls attention
-to the fact that the diagnosis cannot be based on the mental age
-alone. The intelligence quotient must be taken into consideration.
-This is determined by dividing the mental by the physical age. It is a
-comparison of the average intelligence of the child, using the normal
-as a standard. The diagnosis cannot be definitely made until the age of
-sixteen, or until the probable mental age at sixteen is determined.
-
-The following definitions are used by the American Association for
-the Study of the Feebleminded:—"An idiot is a mentally defective
-person having a mental age of not more than 35 months, or, if a child,
-an intelligence quotient of less than 25. An imbecile is a mentally
-defective person having a mental age between 36 months and 83 months
-inclusive, or, if a child, an intelligence quotient between 25 and 49.
-A moron is a mentally defective person having a mental age between
-84 months and 144 months inclusive, or, if a child, an intelligence
-quotient between 50 and 74."
-
-Tredgold expresses the opinion that "the insanity of the feebleminded
-and high grade imbeciles does not, on the whole, differ from that
-occurring in ordinary persons." In sixty-two cases under his
-observation he found the following forms:—Mania, thirty-two;
-melancholia, sixteen; alternating mania and melancholia, six; stupor,
-one; delusional insanity, one; and juvenile general paresis, six. He
-also speaks of epileptic insanity and terminal dementia in his cases.
-
-Kraepelin[348] describes certain characteristics as applying very
-generally to the mental deficiency group which he prefers to speak
-of as "Oligophrenia." Sense perception is often interfered with
-by defective vision, opacities of the lens and cornea, errors of
-refraction, optic atrophy or deafness. The apprehension of external
-impressions may be prevented to a certain extent also by disturbances
-of attention. Only the sharper and stronger stimuli reach the patients
-as a rule and these impressions are retarded. Many occurrences escape
-their notice entirely and their sense perceptions are poor and scanty
-at best. Disturbances of attention are shown by the attitude, facial
-expression, carriage and conduct, so that they have an appearance
-of apathy and indifference when their real feelings are entirely
-different. An increased effort cannot be produced by an exertion of the
-will, nor can the fatigue which such attempts result in, be overcome.
-Repeated tests of various kinds show a marked decrease in the power
-of apprehension. In profound idiocy it is difficult to determine
-whether any impression can be made on the sense organs or not. When the
-patients react to a severe pin prick it is only after a considerable
-delay, apprehension and attention being equally impaired. Schlesinger
-found fifty-five per cent of his cases lacking in interest, thirty-five
-per cent were distractible and ten per cent showed an increased
-fatigability. An evidence of the lack of attention is the fact that the
-weakminded as a rule are not susceptible to hypnotism.
-
-The apprehension of colors, form and dimensions is uncertain and
-difficult. The patients learn to distinguish colors very late usually.
-They can form no clear conception as to the outlines, surface or
-contents of objects. They have considerable difficulty in putting
-syllables and sentences together. They recognize the details but
-not the significance of pictures. In the elaboration of impressions
-they are unable to distinguish between the real and the accidental
-or nonessential. This gives rise to a confusion of ideas. Changes in
-size, color, shape, etc, always annoy them. Their lack of observation
-and discrimination explains the absence of timidity in the presence
-of strangers which characterizes normal children. There is also a
-defective apprehension of auditory impressions and they are unable to
-understand very familiar sounds. Ley showed that they were often unable
-to identify letters they heard pronounced. There is a marked inability
-to grasp the meaning of ordinary words. The sense of taste and smell
-is comparatively much less impaired. Very defective children object at
-once to quinine when it is placed on the tongue. Nevertheless, many do
-not notice unpleasant odors or even the taste of excreta, etc.,—things
-which are exceedingly offensive to normal individuals,—and are
-entirely indifferent as to the quality of their food. Sensory
-disturbances of the skin are not very marked. In a series of
-esthesiometric tests, however, Ley obtained unsatisfactory "automatic"
-responses in eighteen cases, meaningless answers in forty-eight, and
-intelligent responses in eleven of 127 mental defectives examined. The
-application of the sense of touch in recognizing articles is acquired
-with difficulty. Pain sensations are somewhat diminished also and some
-defectives are apparently insensible to blows, etc. That the sense of
-position and location is not well developed is often shown by coarse,
-awkward movements. The sense of weight and motion is lacking. Demoor
-found that the feebleminded usually pointed out the larger article
-as being the heavier even when lighter in weight. Claparede found
-this characteristic present in one per cent of ninety-seven pupils
-rejected as a result of mental tests, in eight per cent of the mildly
-weakminded, and in sixty-five per cent of the markedly defective
-cases. Memory is always involved. Superficial impressions are easily
-lost. Johnson subjected seventy-two defective children to retention
-tests. Seventy could correctly repeat only three numbers; sixty-six
-only four; fifty-one only five; twenty-seven only six; fourteen only
-seven, and four only eight. Ranchburg's tests showed them to be very
-susceptible to suggestion. Some defectives, on the other hand, have a
-peculiar faculty for remembering dates, numbers, performing feats of
-arithmetic, etc. The memory defect is usually shown more especially
-by the inability to take advantage of the experience of the past. The
-patients learn with difficulty, read little and forget what they are
-taught. The events of life leave few traces and make only a superficial
-impression on them. The intellectual horizon for this reason is very
-limited. Their thoughts are confined largely to the matter of clothing,
-food, etc.
-
-The fundamental obstacle in the mental progress of the defectives is
-the inadequate elaboration of general impressions and conceptions.
-There is an absence of any understanding of the importance of time,
-events, numbers, etc. They often have no idea whatever as to the
-significance of money. Dates mean nothing usually and they are often
-unable to determine the time of day. The train of thought as shown
-by tests made by Buccola is delayed. Their poverty of thought is
-shown by the fact that defective children can think of only about
-one-fourth as many words during a given time as suggest themselves
-to the normal child—a test suggested by Binet. Tests reported by
-Sommer, Nathan, Binet and others show a marked delay in association
-time and an impoverished mental capacity. They frequently repeat the
-test word or give entirely meaningless replies. Associations do not
-become fixed on repeated tests as they do with normal individuals
-(Wreschner). It is not easy for them to repeat numbers, the months of
-the year or days of the week backwards. They cannot supply omitted
-words or syllables in sentences (Ebbinghaus test). It is hard for them
-to assemble picture puzzles or pieces of cards. Revesz found that it
-was more difficult for them to learn to divide than to subtract or
-add. Multiplication he found to be most easily acquired. They did not
-do well in tests requiring any reason or judgment. They are entirely
-incapable of defining or explaining abstract conceptions of any kind.
-They cannot explain the meaning of fables and have no appreciation of
-irony. Nor can they correct the most obvious faults in test sentences.
-They have no insight into their own condition and no grasp on either
-past or present events. Their capacity for efficient occupation and
-employment is much diminished. Their ability to acquire an education
-is also limited. Of 286 cases examined in school Schlesinger found
-only fifteen per cent to be industrious in their habits. Nine per cent
-failed in writing, eighteen in reading and twenty-four per cent in
-arithmetic tests.
-
-The emotional life is also much impoverished and unstable. There is
-no sense of shame and no feeling of family pride or patriotism. There
-is often a tendency to commit criminal acts. As a rule the mood is
-indifferent and apathetic—in strange surroundings they are sometimes
-timid and anxious. Some feel ashamed of their speech defects and
-awkwardness. Others show a childish cheerfulness, or satisfaction
-and self-confidence. There is a tendency to uncontrollable laughter,
-attacks of anxiety, angry excitement, or childish despair with
-hysterical manifestations which disappear quickly. Usually the patients
-are inoffensive, manageable and well behaved, but easily susceptible to
-bad influences. Often they are queer, whimsical, capricious, obstinate
-and childish. Henneberg, who examined a large series of cases,
-described 33.8 per cent as anxious, timid, sensitive and inclined to
-weep; 15.7 per cent as apathetic, dreamy, sluggish and seclusive; 12.6
-per cent as quiet, serious, good-natured, sociable and pleasant; 18.7
-as active, cheerful, shallow, playful and talkative; and nineteen per
-cent as rude, malicious, obstinate, irritable and bad-tempered. The
-sexual life is sometimes undeveloped or may show actual perversions.
-Bonhöffer found six idiots and fifty-three feebleminded persons in
-an examination of 190 prostitutes. The volitional expressions of the
-defective are very largely impulsive. They act without reflection or
-regard to consequences and are easily induced to do improper acts.
-The inhibition of will is shown by the defective control of ordinary
-movements in responding to commands. They are always slow in learning
-to walk. The childish inability to perform finer and more precise
-movements does not disappear later as it does in the course of normal
-development. This is shown in their gait, awkward movements, etc.
-Kraepelin interprets the tendency to bedwetting as an evidence of
-volitional disturbance, also the stereotyped, rhythmical movements of
-the idiot. Laser found that forty per cent of his cases had the habit
-of biting the finger nails.
-
-Dependent upon the inhibition of volitional impulses, two clinical
-groups of the feebleminded have been described by Kraepelin,—the
-excitable and the apathetic or dull. The excited forms are much
-more common. Schlesinger, however, found thirty-one per cent of his
-cases of the apathetic variety; twenty-nine per cent were excitable;
-twenty-eight per cent had simple mental defects, and the remainder
-showed antisocial tendencies. In the apathetic or dull form there is
-a marked disturbance of the attention; the patient takes no interest
-in his surroundings, appears sluggish, awkward, emotionally dull, and
-devoid of any voluntary impulse, often doing only what he is urged
-to do. They are usually good-natured, contented, and do simple work
-under direction, in a slow and mechanical way. The lighter grades
-are of a dull, weak-willed, readily influenced type. They are timid,
-unconcerned and agreeable. The excitable variety, on the other hand,
-show a purposeless, mercurial variability. Their attention is easily
-distracted from one thing to another. They cannot sit still, are
-restless and constantly on the go. Occasionally they are violent.
-
-The defective control of motor impulses by the will is also shown in
-defectives by the disturbance of speech and writing. Crailsheimer found
-speech disturbances in 36.3 per cent of his cases, Schlesinger in
-thirty per cent, and Leubuscher in fifty per cent. They can often hear
-although mute, sometimes recovering their speech during an attack of
-excitement. Ley reported stammering in twelve per cent of his cases and
-stuttering in thirteen per cent. Agrammatism and akataphasia sometimes
-occur. Word-blindness is also referred to as a symptom and various
-disturbances of reading and writing have been observed.
-
-According to Kraepelin, the important developmental landmarks in
-the life of the young are the acquisition of speech (one year), the
-beginning of the school life (six years), the appearance (fourteen
-years) and the completion (eighteen years) of sexual development. The
-first and second periods represent the relative levels of low and high
-grade idiocy, the third imbecility and the fourth feeblemindedness.
-This classification is somewhat similar to that of Weygandt. The
-education ordinarily acquired by the higher grade of the feebleminded
-is somewhat limited. They may even excel in certain occasional lines
-of work, for example, in music, art, etc. They are usually poor in
-mathematics and lack interest and application as a rule. Difficult
-apprehension and mental fatigability are to be expected. They have
-to go over things repeatedly, as their memory is not good. Their
-education is often ample in some directions and very lacking in others.
-Their judgment is onesided, their viewpoint narrow and their worldly
-knowledge childish. What they acquire at school is soon forgotten.
-They take no interest in religion, politics or current events of
-importance, and very impractical ideas are expressed on all questions.
-The emotional manifestations vary. Some are agreeable, cheerful,
-tractable; others timid, tenderhearted, sensitive, slightly emotional
-or anxious. They are more likely to be obstinate, stubborn, unruly,
-rude, irritable, unsociable and violent-tempered. Some have periods
-of active excitement and become threatening, abusive and violent.
-Occasionally suicidal attempts are made, although they are usually not
-genuine. Some are addicted to sexual excesses, lying or swindling.
-Sexual perversions also occur in some cases. They are usually incapable
-of any continuous occupation and drift from one thing to another. As
-a rule they have little conception of the value of money and spend
-it recklessly. They are very susceptible to alcoholism and often
-commit petty crimes. Occasionally hysterical manifestations—syncopes,
-seizures, etc.—appear. Clouded and confused states have been
-observed. Frequently impulsive tendencies are noted. In some instances
-psychopathic traits are very striking. Excitable, unstable, impulsive,
-quarrelsome and antisocial types appear as well as liars and swindlers.
-Periodical excitements and depressions suggest manic-depressive forms.
-
-Considerable confusion has been occasioned by the relation thought
-by some to exist between mental deficiency and dementia praecox.
-Kraepelin[349] has spoken of an engrafted hebephrenia, as shown by the
-following quotation from his eighth edition:—"I made the suggestion
-a long time ago that certain, not very frequent, forms of idiocy with
-well developed mannerisms and stereotypies were an early expression
-of dementia praecox." He is of the opinion that "the affected manners
-of certain idiots, as well as the associated stereotypies of attitude
-and movement in addition to the negativistic impulses and the
-permanent obstinate inaccessibility to all attempts at approach, show
-no relation whatever to ordinary childish peculiarities and belong
-on the contrary to the well-known picture of dementia praecox." He
-interprets the "demenza precocissima" of Sante de Sanctis and the
-"dementia infantilis" of Heller as belonging to dementia praecox rather
-than the mental deficiency group. He further makes the suggestion
-that "weakmindedness existing from youth without focal symptoms, and
-later leading to deterioration, is as a rule to be looked upon as
-pfropfhebephrenia, if epilepsy and cerebral syphilis can be excluded,
-the former by the absence of seizures, the latter by the results of
-the Wassermann reaction." Engrafted hebephrenia or "pfropfhebephrenia"
-has been studied by various observers. After an analysis of ten cases
-Wasner reached the conclusion that feeblemindedness predisposes to
-dementia praecox. Weygandt and various other writers are not in accord
-with Kraepelin on this subject. It is, however, generally conceded that
-the occurrence of manic-depressive and other affective psychoses in
-mental defectives is not at all infrequent.
-
-As special types Kraepelin described microcephalic varieties, the
-tuberous sclerosis of Hartdegen and Bourneville (1880), vascular and
-other cerebral defects, infantilismus, dysadenoid and other endocrine
-conditions, Mongolian idiocy, hydrocephalus, encephalitic forms,
-etc. Alzheimer, Hammarberg, and Bourneville have made pathological
-classifications of the mental deficiencies.
-
-Psychoses which render the commitment of mental defectives to hospitals
-for mental diseases necessary are comparatively infrequent, as is
-shown by statistics. In the words of the statistical manual, "the most
-common mental disturbances are episodes of excitement or irritability,
-depressions, paranoid trends, hallucinatory attacks, etc." Cases
-diagnosed as showing manic-depressive psychoses or dementia praecox
-are not shown in the mental defective group. Three and forty-eight
-hundredths per cent of the admissions to the Massachusetts hospitals
-during 1919 were diagnosed as psychoses with mental deficiency. During
-a period of eight years the admission rate to the New York hospitals
-amounted to 2.8 per cent. The admissions to twenty-one institutions in
-other states constituted 4.33 per cent of the whole number reported.
-In 70,987 admissions to forty-eight hospitals in sixteen states the
-psychoses with mental deficiency amounted to 3.22 per cent of all first
-admissions.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abbot, E. Stanley, 248
-
- Abraham, Karl, 419
-
- Abrahamson, Isador, 341
-
- Acute chorea, 338
-
- Acute hemorrhagic polioencephalitis superior, 356, 357
-
- Administration and legislation, 50
-
- Adrenal diseases, 214
-
- Adrenal stigmata, 204
-
- Adrenals, lesions of, 214
-
- Agnew, D. Hayes, 34
-
- Albany Hospital, 107
-
- Albrecht, 436
-
- Alcoholic psychoses, 344
- acute hallucinosis, 356
- acute intoxication, 348
- alcoholic deterioration, 350, 351
- alcoholic paralysis, 357
- chronic hallucinosis, 357
- chronic intoxication, 349
- delirium tremens, 352
- delimitation, 358
- history, 344
- Korsakow's psychosis, 354
- pathological intoxication, 349
- pathology, 356
- statistics, 360, 361
-
- Aliens in hospitals, 160
-
- Alzheimer, A., 225, 286, 302, 303, 304, 325, 354, 356, 485, 486, 536
-
- Alzheimer's disease, 274
-
- Amentia, 401
-
- American Institute of Criminal Law, 176
-
- American Psychiatric Association, 173, 231, 234, 245, 247, 263, 276, 291,
- 307, 320, 325, 331, 358, 390, 405, 421, 438, 453, 473, 487, 501, 521
-
- Anderson, Victor V., 178
-
- Anxiety neuroses, 501
-
- Appropriations, hospital, 26
-
- Aretaeus, 234, 409
-
- Arnold, 142
-
- Arsenic psychoses, 373
-
- Arteriosclerosis, cerebral, 280
- apoplectiform attacks, 288
- delimitation of psychoses, 291
- depressions, 287
- deterioration, 287, 288
- epileptiform attacks, 287, 288
- excitements, 287, 288
- pathology, 281, 282, 285, 286
- statistics, 292
-
- Aschaffenburg, G., 398
-
- Aurelianus, 235, 409
-
-
- Babcock, J. W., 379
-
- Babinski, J., 494
-
- Bailey, Pearce, 188
-
- Baillarger, J., 411
-
- Ball, Jau Don, 32
-
- Ballet, G., 197
-
- Barker, Lewellys F., 282, 309, 310, 364, 383
-
- Barrett, Albert M., 115, 248
-
- Baths, continuous, 98
-
- Bayle, A. L., 221, 293
-
- Beers, Clifford W., 121, 122, 123, 124, 127, 129
-
- Bellevue Hospital, 106
-
- Bianchi, L., 384
-
- Billigheimer, E., 211
-
- Binswanger, Otto, 191
-
- Birnbaum, K., 197
-
- Bleuler, E., 130, 145, 275, 436, 444, 445, 446, 447, 471
-
- Bloomingdale Hospital, 38
-
- Blumer, G. Alder, 46, 124
-
- Blumgarten, A. S., 203, 205
-
- Boards of Charities and Corrections, 52
-
- Boards of control, 52
-
- Boards of managers, 51
-
- Boards of trustees, 51
-
- Bonhöffer, K., 188, 347, 352, 353
-
- Boston Police Act, 64
-
- Boston State Hospital, 43
-
- Boveri, Piero, 341
-
- Brachet, J. L., 490
-
- Brain or nervous diseases, psychoses with, 332
- acute chorea, 338
- cerebral embolism, 332
- cerebral hemorrhage, 332
- cerebral thrombosis, 332
- encephalitis lethargica, 339
- meningitis, tubercular, 336
- multiple sclerosis, 336
- paralysis agitans, 334
- statistics, 343
- tabes dorsalis, 337
-
- Brain lesions, symptoms due to, 282, 283
-
- Brain tumors, 326
- frequency, 327
- psychoses, 328, 329, 330, 331
- statistics, of psychoses, 331
- symptoms, 327
-
- Brattleboro Retreat, 43
-
- Breuer, 494, 495
-
- Briggs, L. Vernon, 248
-
- Briquet, 490
-
- British Association, 240
-
- Bromide psychoses, 371
-
- Buckley, A. C., 422, 453
-
- Bucknill, J. C., 234, 393, 394
-
- Bumke, 436
-
- Burnham, Wm. H., 131
-
- Burr, C. W., 338
-
- Buzzard, E. F., 340
-
-
- Cabot, Richard C., 20
-
- Calmeil, J. L., 221, 293
-
- Camp, Carl D., 334
-
- Campbell, C. Macfie, 115, 132, 248, 497
-
- Casamajor, Louis, 371, 373
-
- Case rate, general diseases, 18
-
- Causes of death, 17, 18
-
- Celsus, 139, 234, 253
-
- Central neuritis, 437
-
- Cerebral embolism, 332
-
- Cerebral hemorrhage, 332
-
- Cerebral syphilis, 308
- delimitation of psychoses, 320
- gummatous, 310
- meningeal, 309
- pathology, 309
- salvarsan therapy, 319
- statistics, 321, 322
- symptomatology, 311
- treponema in inactive cases, 320
- vascular, 310
-
- Cerebral thrombosis, 332
-
- Cerebropathica psychica toxaemica, 404
-
- Chloral hydrate, 370
-
- Chorea, acute, 338
-
- Civil war psychoses, 186
-
- Clark, L. Pierce, 478, 479, 480
-
- Classification of mental diseases, 234
- American Psychiatric Association, 248, 249, 250
- Aretaeus, 234
- Aurelianus, 235
- British Association, 240
- Celsus, 234
- Cullen, 235
- Esquirol, 236
- Flemming, 236, 237, 238
- Galen, 235
- Griesinger, 239
- Hippocrates, 234
- Kraepelin, 242
- Krafft-Ebing, 240
- Linnaeus, 235
- Maudsley, 239
- Pinel, 236
- Plater, 235
- Pritchard, 236, 239
- Régis, 240
- Roman, 235
- Sauvages, 235
- Vogel, 235
-
- Clouston, T. S., 7, 8, 140, 144, 266, 304, 346, 508
-
- Cobb, Stanley, 133
-
- Cocaine psychoses, 367
-
- Colajanni, 178
-
- Collapse delirium, 400
-
- Columbia State Hospital, 41
-
- Columbus State Hospital, 43
-
- Commitment, methods of, 58
-
- Communicable diseases, 23
-
- Compression of brain, 253
-
- Concord State Hospital, 43
-
- Concussion of brain, 253
-
- Continuous baths, 98
-
- Copp, Owen, 67, 81, 131
-
- Cramer, 463
-
- Criminal responsibility, 169
-
- Criminal responsibility, laws relating to, 172
-
- Criminals, psychoses in, 180, 181, 182
-
- Crowbar case, 254
-
- Cullen, William, 235, 490
-
- Curtin, Roland G., 35
-
- Cushing, Harvey, 326, 327
-
-
- DaCosta, J. C., 253
-
- Davenport, Chas. B., 146
-
- Davis, Thomas K., 210
-
- Death rate:
- diseases of the nervous system, 18
- mental diseases, 19
- registration area, 17
- state hospitals, 28
-
- Definition of insanity, legal, 172
-
- DeFursac, J. R., 197
-
- Delirium:
- acute, 400
- collapse, 400
- exhaustion, 403
- febrile, 396
- infection, 395
- initial, 398
- tremens, 352
-
- Dementia praecox, 440
- delimitation, 453, 454, 455
- hebephrenia, 441
- history, 440
- katatonia, 441
- Kraepelin's views, 450, 451, 452, 453
- mental mechanisms, 442, 443
- schizophrenia, 444, 445
- statistics, 455, 456, 457
-
- Diagnosis, errors in, 20
-
- Dickens, Charles, 43
-
- Diefendorf, A. R., 229, 324, 422, 429, 455, 492, 506
-
- Diem, 149
-
- Diseases, communicable, 23
-
- Diseases, general case rate, 18
-
- Diseases, general, cause of death, 17
-
- Diseases, mental, social and economic importance of, 15
-
- Dix, Dorothea, 47, 48, 123, 126
-
- Dreyfus, G, L., 429
-
- Drugs and other exogenous poisons, 363
- arsenic, 373
- bromides, 371
- chloral hydrate, 370
- cocaine, 367
- gases, 374
- lead, 372
- mercury, 374
- morphine, 363, 364
- silver, 374
- statistics, 375
-
- Drusen, senile, 273
-
- Dublin, Louis I., 21
-
- Dunlap, Chas. B., 309, 337
-
-
- Earle, Pliny, 106
-
- Eastern State Hospital, Ky., 40
-
- Eastern State Hospital, Va., 36
-
- Economic loss on account of mental diseases, 28
-
- Economo, C. von, 339
-
- Eder, Montague D., 196
-
- Edsall, David L., 372, 374
-
- Embolism, cerebral, 332
-
- Emerson, H., 210
-
- Encephalitis lethargica, 339
-
- Endocrinology and psychiatry, 202
-
- Epilepsy, 475
- delimitation of psychoses, 487
- epileptic delirium, 483
- epileptic deterioration, 485
- epileptic dream states, 482
- epileptic ill-humor, 481
- etiology, 478, 479, 480
- pathology of, 485
- statistics, 488
-
- Epileptic personality, 478
-
- Epileptics, institutions for, 29
-
- Erlenmeyer, A., 365, 367
-
- Errors in diagnosis, 20
-
- Esquirol, J. E. D. 142, 236, 293, 524
-
- Etiology of mental diseases, 138, 154
- alcoholism, 152
- arteriosclerosis, 152
- brain tumor, 152
- cerebral syphilis, 152
- epilepsy, 152
- heredity, 145
- other factors, 153
- pellagra, 152
- psychic traumata, 152
- senility, 152
- traumatism, 152
-
- Evolution of the modern hospital, 34
-
- Exhaustion delirium, 403
-
- Expenditures, hospital, 26
-
-
- Falret, J., 411
-
- Falta, Wm., 203, 206, 207, 208
-
- Farrar, Clarence B., 122, 189
-
- Febrile delirium, 396
-
- Fernald, Walter E., 527
-
- Ferri, E., 177
-
- Feuchertsleben, E. von, 141, 394, 462, 489
-
- Flemming, C. F., 236, 237, 238, 346, 410, 461
-
- Focal symptoms due to brain lesions, 282, 283
-
- Foreign born in hospitals, 160
-
- Fracastoro, 293
-
- Franz, S. I., 372
-
- Friedreich, J. B., 394, 395
-
- Freud, S., 130, 145, 225, 226, 448, 472, 473, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498,
- 499, 500, 501
-
- Furbush, Edith M., 27, 29, 248
-
-
- Galen, 235, 253, 409
-
- Garofalo, 178
-
- Garretson, W. V. P., 206
-
- Gases, 374
-
- General diseases:
- case rate, 18
- cause of death, 17
-
- General paralysis, 293
- delimitation, 307
- etiology, 294
- history, 293
- juvenile form, 304
- pathology, 303
- physical signs, 301
- statistics, 306, 307
- types, 298
-
- Georgia State Sanitarium, 51
-
- Gesell, Arnold, 131
-
- Goddard, H. H., 525
-
- Goldberger, J., 381, 382
-
- Gonadal stigmata, 205
-
- Grasset, Joseph, 509
-
- Gregor, A., 386
-
- Griesinger, W., 105, 142, 239, 260, 383, 411, 462
-
-
- Hamilton, A. S., 324
-
- Handcock, Thos., 39
-
- Harlow, John M., 254
-
- Harrisburg State Hospital, 48
-
- Hartford Retreat, 40
-
- Hartung, M. U., 200
-
- Haslam, J., 293, 344
-
- Hecker, E., 222, 241, 440, 441
-
- Heinroth, J., 104, 239, 394, 395, 462
-
- Hemorrhage, cerebral, 332
-
- Henderson, D. K., 336
-
- Heredity, Mendelian, 145
-
- Heredity in mental diseases, 145, 150
-
- Heubner, 310
-
- Hippocrates, 138, 253, 344, 392, 409, 461, 475
-
- History-taking, 85
-
- Hitzig, 105
-
- Hoch, Aug., 115, 198, 234, 248, 372, 422, 445, 446, 448
-
- Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 230
-
- Hospitals:
- Albany, 107
- Bellevue, 106
- Bloomingdale, 38
- Boston Psychopathic, 108
- Boston State, 43
- Brattleboro Retreat, 43
- Columbia State, 41
- Columbus State, 43
- Concord State, 43
- Eastern State, Ky., 40
- Eastern State, Va., 36
- Georgia State Sanitarium, 51
- Harrisburg State, 48
- Hartford Retreat, 40
- Maryland, 37
- McLean, 39
- New York, 38
- Pennsylvania, 35
- Philadelphia, 34
- Sheppard and Enoch Pratt, 48
- Spring Grove State, 38
- St. Elizabeths, 48
- Trenton State, 47
- Utica State, 46
- Worcester State, 42
-
- Hospital social service, 113
-
- Hospital treatment, 84
-
- Hübner, 435
-
- Hunt, J. Ramsey, 284
-
- Huntington, Geo., 323
-
- Huntington's chorea, 323
- classification, 325
- mental symptoms, 324, 325
- statistics, 326
-
- Hurst, A. F., 200
-
- Huss, Magnus, 345
-
- Hydrotherapy, 97
-
- Hysteria, 493
-
-
- Idiocy, 527, 528, 529
-
- Imbecility, 527
-
- Immigration and mental diseases, 155
-
- Immigration laws, 164
-
- Incidence of mental diseases, 25
-
- Infantilismus, 211
-
- Infection delirium, 395
-
- Insanity, legal definition of, 172
-
- Institutions for mental defectives, 29
-
- Institutions for mental diseases, 25
-
- Involution melancholia, 427
- (see Melancholia)
-
- Ireland, M. W., 200
-
-
- Janet, Pierre, 222, 493, 494, 500
-
- Jelliffe, S. E., 235, 236, 293, 461
-
- Jung, C. G., 145, 225, 448, 484, 497
-
-
- Kahlbaum, K. 222, 412, 440, 441
-
- Kaplan, D. M., 206
-
- Karpas, M. J., 347
-
- Kehrer, F., 434, 435, 436
-
- Kempf, E. J. 245
-
- Kirby, Geo. H., 84, 115, 248, 342, 430
-
- Kirkbride, Thos., 71
-
- Kline, Geo. M., 56, 67
-
- Knapp, P. C., 329
-
- Knauer, A., 211, 405
-
- Koch, 504, 505
-
- Koch, M. L., 380
-
- Koller, 149
-
- Köppen, M., 256, 258
-
- Koren, John, 51
-
- Korsakow's psychosis, 354, 357, 358
-
- Kraepelin, E., 106, 149, 151, 211, 214, 224, 229, 242, 260, 267, 274,
- 286, 288, 290, 298, 300, 316, 324, 329, 334, 337, 348, 353, 365, 369,
- 395, 398, 415, 419, 431, 434, 440, 450, 453, 467, 470, 481, 484, 492,
- 511, 518, 520, 521, 528, 532
-
- Krafft-Ebing, R. von, 240, 296, 335, 346, 364, 368, 412, 463, 464, 465,
- 491
-
-
- Lambert, C. I., 281, 282
-
- Laws, immigration, 164
-
- Laws, Massachusetts, 63, 64, 65, 66
-
- Laws, New York, 61
-
- Laws relating to criminal responsibility, 172
-
- Laws relating to mental diseases, 57, 61
-
- Lead psychoses, 372
-
- Legal definition of insanity, 172
-
- Legislation and administration, 50
-
- Lesions of the adrenals, 214
-
- Lhermitte, J., 284
-
- Life insurance statistics, 21
-
- Linnaeus, 235
-
- Local boards of control, 52
-
- Locomotor ataxia, 337
-
- Lombroso, C., 177, 379, 508
-
- Louis, Pierre, 230
-
- Lust, F., 199
-
-
- MacCurdy, J. T., 199
-
- Magnan, V., 466, 506
-
- Manic-depressive psychoses, 409
- delimitation, 421
- depressed type, 417
- history, 409
- manic type, 416
- mixed type, 417
- psychological mechanisms, 419
- statistics, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426
-
- Mannheim, Paul, 363
-
- Maryland Hospital, 37
-
- Massachusetts legislation, 64, 65, 66
-
- Massachusetts temporary care laws, 63
-
- Maudsley, H., 239, 476
-
- McCarthy, D. J., 323, 335, 338
-
- McLean Hospital, 39
-
- McNaughton case, 171
-
- Melancholia, involution, 427
- delimitation, 438
- history, 427
- statistics, 439
-
- Mendel, E., 463
-
- Mendel, G., 145
-
- Mendelian heredity, 145
-
- Meningitis, tubercular, 336
-
- Mental cases in jails, 63
-
- Mental deficiency, 524
- criminals, 179
- etiology, 525
- history, 524
- institutions for, 29
- pfropfhebephrenia, 535
- statistics, 536
- types, 526, 527
-
- Mental diseases:
- appropriations for, 26
- classification, 234
- criminal responsibility, 169, 172
- death rate, 19
- economic loss, 28
- expenditures for, 26
- heredity in, 145, 150
- history-taking, 85
- hospital treatment, 84
- incidence of, 25
- institutional care of, 25
- laws relating to, 57, 61
- mental examination, 93
- military problems, 188
- physical examination, 88
- social and economic importance, 15
- state care of, 79
-
- Mental hygiene movement, the, 121
- Canadian committee, 128
- French society, 129
- history, 122, 123, 124, 125
- National Committee, 124
- objects and purposes, 127
- state societies, 126
-
- Mercury psychoses, 374
-
- Methods of commitment, 67
-
- Methods of control, 67
-
- Metropolitan Life Insurance statistics, 21
-
- Meyer, Adolf, 84, 106, 115, 116, 122, 130, 251, 346, 427, 452, 463, 471,
- 504, 505
-
- Meyer, E., 198
-
- Meynert, Th., 401
-
- Miliary plaques, 273
-
- Military problems, 188
-
- Misaurus, 393
-
- Mitchell, S. Weir, 80
-
- Möbius, 493
-
- Modern hospital, evolution of the, 34
-
- Modern progress of psychiatry, 217
-
- Mongeri, L., 384
-
- Morel, Jules, 177, 504
-
- Morgagni, G. B., 142, 410
-
- Morons, 526
-
- Morphine psychoses, 364, 365
-
- Mortality statistics, 16
-
- Mortality statistics, wage earners, 22
-
- Mott, Frederick W., 195, 196, 215, 302
-
- Multiple sclerosis, 336
-
- Murray, J. H., 489
-
-
- National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 54, 124
-
- Neubürger, 210
-
- Neurasthenia, 498
-
- Neuritis, central, 437
-
- Neuroses, 489
-
- New York Hospital, 38
-
- New York laws, 61
-
- Niles, G. M., 378
-
- Nissl, F., 225, 269, 302, 303, 325, 354, 356, 370, 392, 398, 486
-
- Nolan, Wm. J., 180, 459
-
- Nonne, Max, 190
-
- Norbury, Frank P., 67
-
- Nordau, Max, 178, 508
-
- Nothnagel's syndrome, 283
-
- Nurses, training schools for, 74
-
-
- Observation wards, 106
-
- Occupational therapy, 100
-
- Occupations, 32
-
- O'Malley, Mary, 372, 374, 375
-
- Opium, use of, 376
-
- Oppenheim, H., 190, 208, 308
-
- Orton, Samuel T., 248
-
- Osler, Wm., 280
-
- Out-patient clinics, 77, 78
-
-
- Paralysis agitans, 334
-
- Paranoia and paranoid conditions, 461
- delimitation, 473
- history, 461
- statistics, 474
-
- Parant, 335
-
- Paraphrenia, 468, 469
-
- Parathyroid stigmata, 204
-
- Pathologists, 75
-
- Paton, S., 228 364, 422
-
- Pavilion F., Albany Hospital, 107
-
- Pellagra, 378
- classification, 390
- etiology, 378, 380
- history, 378
- psychoses, 387, 388, 389
- statistics, 390
- symptoms, 383
-
- Pennsylvania Hospital, 35
-
- Pfropfhebephrenia, 535
-
- Philadelphia Hospital, 34
-
- Phipps Clinic, 115
-
- Physical examination, 88
-
- Pilgrim, Chas. W., 67
-
- Pineal stigmata, 205
-
- Pinel, 142, 219, 220, 223, 236
-
- Pituitary stigmata, 204
-
- Plater, Felix, 235
-
- Plato, 138
-
- Plocquet, 236
-
- Pollock, Horatio M., 27, 29, 248, 360, 361, 456, 458, 459
-
- Portal, 222
-
- Post-infectious psychoses, 402, 403
-
- Post-rheumatic psychoses, 404
-
- Pritchard, J. C., 236, 239, 410, 462, 506
-
- Procopiu, G., 385
-
- Psychasthenia, 500
-
- Psychiatric Institute, N. Y., 106
-
- Psychiatry, modern progress of, 217
-
- Psychiatry of the war, 185
-
- Psychoneuroses and neuroses, 489
- classification, 501
- history, 489
- hysteria, 493
- neurasthenia, 498
- psychasthenia, 500
- statistics, 503
-
- Psychopathic Hospital, Boston, 108
-
- Psychopathic Hospital, development of the, 104
-
- Psychopathic Hospital, University of Michigan, 107
-
- Psychopathic hospitals, 108, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115
-
- Psychopathic personality, 504
- classification, 521, 522
- statistics, 522
- the antisocial, 519
- the eccentric, 516
- the excitable, 511
- the impulsive, 515
- the quarrelsome, 521
- the unstable, 513
-
- Psychoses:
- alcoholic, 344
- arteriosclerotic, 280
- dementia praecox, 440
- due to drugs and other exogenous poisons, 363
- epileptic, 475
- general paralysis, 293
- involution melancholia, 427
- manic-depressive, 409
- of criminals, 181
- of different races, 163
- of recruits, 188
- of the civil war, 186
- of the Russo-Japanese war, 187
- paranoia and paranoid conditions, 461
- psychoneuroses and neuroses, 489
- senile, 266
- traumatic, 253
- with brain tumor, 326
- with cerebral syphilis, 308
- with Huntington's chorea, 323
- with mental deficiency, 524
- with other brain and nervous diseases, 332
- with other somatic diseases, 392
- with pellagra, 378
- with psychopathic personality, 504
-
-
- Quincke, 295
-
-
- Races of patients, 162
-
- Races, psychoses of, 163
-
- Raeder, O. J., 209, 319
-
- Ray, Isaac, 169, 170
-
- Rayner, H., 373
-
- Régis, E., 240, 266, 296, 384, 506, 507
-
- Rehm, 435
-
- Richards, R. L., 187
-
- Roberts, S. R., 382
-
- Roman classification, 235
-
- Rosanoff, A. J., 147, 148
-
- Rush, Benjamin, 141, 218, 219, 220
-
- Russell, Wm. L., 127
-
-
- Sachs, 337
-
- Salmon, Thos. W., 54, 124, 156, 157, 160, 165, 192, 193, 194, 195, 201
-
- Salvarsan therapy, 319
-
- Sandy, Wm. A., 388, 389
-
- Sankey, W. H., 414
-
- Sauvages, 235
-
- Savage, G. H., 240, 241
-
- Schaudinn, 218
-
- Schizophrenia, 444, 445, 446, 447
-
- Schläger, 260
-
- Scholz, 105
-
- Schüle, H., 415, 442, 480
-
- Schuster, 329
-
- Seelert, 436
-
- Senile drusen, 273
-
- Senile psychoses, 266
- Alzheimer's disease, 274
- delimitation, 276
- delirious and confused states, 272
- depressed and agitated types, 272
- errors in diagnosis, 279
-
- Senile psychoses, paranoid forms, 272
- pathology, 273, 274
- presbyophrenia, 272
- presenile conditions, 267, 268, 269
- senile deterioration, 271
- statistics, 275, 277, 278
-
- Shadwell, A., 360
-
- Shell shock, 189
-
- Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital, 48
-
- Sibbald, J., 105
-
- Silver psychoses, 374
-
- Simon, T. W., 229
-
- Singer, H. Douglas, 387
-
- Sinkler, Wharton, 338
-
- Smith, Frank R., 105
-
- Social and economic importance of mental diseases, 15
-
- Social service, hospital, 113
-
- Somatic diseases with psychoses, 392
- acute delirium, 400
- amentia, 401
- classification, 405
- collapse delirium, 400
- febrile delirium, 396
- history, 392
- infection delirium, 395
- infectious exhaustions, 403
- initial delirium, 398
- post-infectious psychoses, 402, 403
- post-rheumatic psychoses, 404
- statistics, 407
- types, 395
-
- Southard, E. E., 115, 117, 134, 245, 246, 279
-
- Specht, 435
-
- Spratling, Wm. P., 477
-
- Spring Grove State Hospital, 38
-
- St. Elizabeths Hospital, 48
-
- State care of mental diseases, 79
-
- State hospitals:
- construction, 70
- death rate, 28
- location, 69
- management of, 73
- number of, 49
- organization and functions, 68
- reception buildings, 72
- statistics, 27, 76
-
- Statistics:
- case rate, general diseases, 17
- communicable diseases, 23
- death rate and psychoses, 19
- death rate, mental diseases, 19
- epileptics, 29
- errors in diagnosis, 20
- hospitals for mental diseases, 25
- incidence of mental diseases, 25
- mental defectives, 29
- mortality, 16
- psychopathic hospitals, 108, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115
- psychoses:
- alcoholic, 360
- dementia praecox, 455
- epileptic, 488
- general paralysis, 306
- manic-depressive, 422
- melancholia, involution, 439
- paranoia or paranoid conditions, 474
- psychoneuroses and neuroses, 503
- senile, 275
- traumatic, 264
- with brain or nervous diseases, 343
- with brain tumor, 331
- with cerebral arteriosclerosis, 292
- with cerebral syphilis, 321
- with drugs or other exogenous poisons, 375
- with Huntington's chorea, 326
- with mental deficiency, 536
- with pellagra, 390
- with psychopathic personality, 522
- with somatic diseases, 407
- wage earners, 22
-
- Stigmata:
- adrenal, 204
- gonadal, 205
- parathyroid, 204
- pineal, 205
- pituitary, 204
- thymus, 205
- thyroid, 203
-
- Stöcker, Wm., 347
-
- Stransky, 435, 443
-
- Straus, S. G., 210
-
- Striatum syndrome, 284, 285
-
- Sutton, Thos., 352
-
- Sydenham, 409
-
- Symptoms due to brain lesions, 282, 283
-
- Syphilis, cerebral, 308
-
-
- Tabes, 337
-
- Tanzi, 385
-
- Temporary care laws, 63
-
- Thalmic syndrome, 284
-
- Thomas, Henry M., 332, 333
-
- Thymus stigmata, 205
-
- Thymus subinvolution, 215
-
- Thyroid stigmata, 203
-
- Thrombosis, cerebral, 332
-
- Timme, Walter, 215, 216
-
- Training schools for nurses, 74
-
- Traumatic psychoses, 253
- compression, 253, 260
- concussion, 253, 260
- delimitation, 263
- Friedmann's complex, 255
- mental enfeeblement, 262
- Meyer's classification, 257
- statistics, 264, 265
- traumatic constitution, 254
- traumatic neuroses, 256
-
- Tredgold, A. F., 525
-
- Trenton State Hospital, 47
-
- Treponema pallidum, 295
-
- Tubercular meningitis, 336
-
- Tuke, D. Hack, 138, 171, 234, 235, 344, 409, 411, 475
-
- Turner, 437
-
- Turro, R., 211
-
-
- Ullman, A. E., 229
-
- Utica State Hospital, 46
-
-
- Verrücktheit, 467
-
- Voegtlin, Karl, 380
-
- Vogel, 235
-
- Vogt, Cecile and Oskar, 284
-
- Voluntary patients, 62
-
-
- Wage earners, mortality statistics, 20
-
- Wahnsinn, 467
-
- War psychoses, 185
-
- Warthin, Alfred S., 320
-
- Wassermann reaction, 295
-
- Waters, C. O., 323
-
- Weber-Gubler syndrome, 283
-
- Weber, Hermann, 400
-
- Wernicke, C., 224, 356, 444
-
- Westphal, A., 316
-
- Weygandt, Wm., 187
-
- White, Wm. A., 130, 148, 227, 297, 339, 364, 420, 431, 448
-
- Widal, 295
-
- Williams, Frankwood E., 67, 248
-
- Willis, Thos., 140, 410
-
- Wilson, J. C., 371
-
- Wilson, S. A. K., 284
-
- Wilson's syndrome, 284
-
- Wolfsohn, Julian M., 191
-
- Worcester, Dean A., 189
-
- Worcester State Hospital, 42
-
- Wright, R. B., 97
-
-
- Ziehen, Th., 240, 266, 415, 506
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Cabot, Richard C.: Diagnostic Pitfalls Identified During a Study of
-3000 Autopsies. Journal of the American Medical Association. December
-28, 1912.
-
-[2] Dublin, Louis I.: Mortality Statistics of Insured Wage Earners and
-Their Families. 1919.
-
-[3] Statistical Directory of State Institutions, Department of
-Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 1919.
-
-[4] Pollock, Horatio M., and Furbush, Edith M.: Patients with Mental
-Disease, Mental Defects, etc., in Institutions of the United States.
-Mental Hygiene, January, 1921.
-
-[5] Ibid.
-
-[6] Pollock, Horatio M., and Furbush, Edith M.: Patients with Mental
-Disease, Mental Defects, etc., in Institutions of the United States.
-Mental Hygiene, January, 1921.
-
-[7] Ball, Jau Don: The Correlation of Neurology, Psychiatry, Psychology
-and General Medicine as Scientific Aids to Industrial Efficiency. The
-American Journal of Insanity, April, 1919.
-
-[8] Nineteenth Annual Report of the State Commission in Lunacy, N. Y.,
-1908.
-
-[9] Curtin, Roland G.: The Philadelphia General Hospital. Philadelphia
-General Hospital Reports Vol. VIII, 1910.
-
-[10] The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and
-Canada, Vol. III, 1916.
-
-[11] Ibid.
-
-[12] Ibid.
-
-[13] Friends' Asylum for the Insane, Frankford, Pa. Annual Report, 1853.
-
-[14] The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and
-Canada, Vol. II, 1916.
-
-[15] Ibid.
-
-[16] The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and
-Canada, Vol. II, 1916.
-
-[17] Reports and other documents relating to the State Hospital at
-Worcester, Mass. Published by order of the Senate, Boston, 1837.
-
-[18] Reports and other documents relating to the state Hospital at
-Worcester, Mass. Published by order of the Senate, Boston, 1837.
-
-[19] The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and
-Canada, Vol. III, 1916.
-
-[20] Dickens, Charles: American Notes, 1842.
-
-[21] The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United states and
-Canada, Vol. III, 1916.
-
-[22] The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and
-Canada, Vol. III, 1916.
-
-[23] Koren, John: Summaries of State Laws Relating to the Insane.
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene, New York, 1917.
-
-[24] Koren, John: Summaries of State Laws Relating to the Insane.
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene, New York, 1917.
-
-[25] Salmon, Thomas W.: The State Care of the Insane under State Boards
-of Control. State Hospital Bulletin, February 15, 1915.
-
-[26] Kline, George M.: Proposed Reorganization and Correlation of State
-Institutions in Massachusetts. American Journal of Insanity, January,
-1920.
-
-[27] Thirteenth Annual Report, New York State Hospital Commission.
-Albany, 1919.
-
-[28] Fourth Annual Report of the Massachusetts Commission on Mental
-Diseases. Boston, 1920.
-
-[29] Mitchell, S. Weir: Address before the Fiftieth Annual Meeting of
-the American Medico-Psychological Association. Transactions, 1894.
-
-[30] Copp, Owen: Barriers to the Treatment of Mental Patients. Mental
-Hygiene, April, 1918.
-
-[31] Kirby, G. H.: Guides for History Taking and Clinical Examination
-of Psychiatric Cases. 1921.
-
-[32] Wright, R. B.: Medical Staff Manual—Hydrotherapy. Boston State
-Hospital. 1920.
-
-[33] Sibbald, John: Psychiatry in General Hospitals. Review of
-Neurology and Psychiatry. January, 1903.
-
-[34] Smith, Frank R.: Extracts from the Writings of Wilhelm Griesinger,
-a Prophet of the Newer Psychiatry. American Journal of Insanity, July,
-1903.
-
-[35] Earle, Pliny: The Psychopathic Hospital of the Future. Address at
-the laying of the corner stone of the General Hospital for the Insane
-of the State of Connecticut, June 20, 1867. Utica, 1867.
-
-[36] Meyer, Adolf: The Aims of a Psychiatric Clinic. Proceedings of
-the Mental Hygiene Conference at the College of the City of New York,
-November, 1912.
-
-[37] Ibid.
-
-[38] Beers, Clifford W.: A Mind That Found Itself, 1908.
-
-[39] Notes and Comments. The American Journal of Insanity, July, 1908.
-
-[40] Farrar, Clarence B.: The Autopathography of C. W. Beers. American
-Journal of Insanity, July, 1908.
-
-[41] Notes and Comments. The American Journal of Insanity, July, 1908.
-
-[42] Beers, Clifford W.: A Mind That Found Itself. Revised. Fourth
-edition, 1917.
-
-[43] Beers, Clifford W.: A Mind That Found Itself. Revised. Fourth
-edition, 1917.
-
-[44] Ibid.
-
-[45] Russell, William L.: Community Responsibilities in the Treatment
-of Mental Disorders. Mental Hygiene, July, 1918.
-
-[46] Notes and Comments. Mental Hygiene, July, 1920.
-
-[47] Ibid., October, 1920.
-
-[48] White, William A.: Childhood: the Golden Period for Mental
-Hygiene. Mental Hygiene, April, 1920.
-
-[49] Copp, Owen: The Duty of the State and the Physician to the Mental
-Patient. The Pennsylvania Medical Journal, December, 1919.
-
-[50] Burnham, William H.: The Scope and Aim of Mental Hygiene. Boston
-Medical and Surgical Journal, December 19, 1918.
-
-[51] Gesell, Arnold: Mental Hygiene and the Public School. Mental
-Hygiene, January, 1919.
-
-[52] Campbell, C. Macfie: The Responsibilities of the Universities in
-Promoting Mental Hygiene. Mental Hygiene, April, 1919.
-
-[53] Cobb, Stanley: Applications of Psychiatry to Industrial Hygiene.
-The Journal of Industrial Hygiene, November, 1919.
-
-[54] Ibid.
-
-[55] Southard, Elmer E.: Notes and Comments. Mental Hygiene. January,
-1921.
-
-[56] Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
-
-[57] Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
-
-[58] Clouston, T. S.: Unsoundness of Mind. 1911.
-
-[59] Morgagni, G. B.: De Sedibus et Causis Morborum per Anatomem
-Indegatis. 1761.
-
-[60] Journal of Mental Science. January, 1870.
-
-[61] Clouston, T. S.: Unsoundness of Mind. 1911.
-
-[62] Mendel, Gregor J.: Versuche über Pflanzen Hybriden. 1865.
-
-[63] Davenport, Charles B.: Heredity in Relation to Eugenics. 1911.
-
-[64] Rosanoff, A. J., and Orr, Florence: A Study of Heredity in the
-Light of the Mendelian Theory. American Journal of Insanity, October,
-1911.
-
-[65] Rosanoff, A. J.: On the Inheritance of the Neuropathic
-Constitution. New York State Hospitals Bulletin, August 15, 1912.
-
-[66] White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.
-
-[67] Kraepelin, Emil: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 1. 1909.
-
-[68] Ibid.
-
-[69] Kraepelin, Emil: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 1. 1909.
-
-[70] Kraepelin, Emil: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 1. 1909.
-
-[71] Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in
-Relation to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of
-Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. 1, 1913.
-
-[72] Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in
-Relation to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of
-Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. 1, 1913.
-
-[73] Twenty-fifth Annual Report of the State Hospital Commission.
-Albany, 1914.
-
-[74] Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in
-Relation to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of
-Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. I, 1913.
-
-[75] Thirtieth Annual Report of the State Hospital Commission. Albany,
-1919.
-
-[76] Thirty-first Annual Report of the State Hospital Commission.
-Albany, 1920.
-
-[77] Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in
-Relation to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of
-Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. I, 1913.
-
-[78] Ray, Isaac: A Treatise on the Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity.
-1838.
-
-[79] Ray, Isaac: A Treatise on the Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity.
-1838.
-
-[80] Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
-
-[81] Report of the Committee on Medical Expert Testimony. Transactions
-of the American Medico-Psychological Association. 1910.
-
-[82] Anderson, Victor V.: Mental Disease and Delinquency. Mental
-Hygiene, April, 1919.
-
-[83] May, James V.: Mental Diseases and Criminal Responsibility. New
-York State Hospitals Bulletin, November, 1912.
-
-[84] Nolan, William J.: Some Characteristics of the Criminal Insane.
-The State Hospital Quarterly, May, 1920.
-
-[85] Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion. Part
-Third. Vol. 1, 1888.
-
-[86] Weygandt, W.: Psychiatry in the Field. Medizinische Klinik.
-Abstract of, Journal of American Medical Association, November 7, 1914.
-
-[87] Richards, R. L.: Nervous and Mental Disorders in their Military
-Relations. Modern Treatment of Nervous and Mental Disease. White and
-Jelliffe, 1913.
-
-[88] Physical Examination of the First Million Draft Recruits. Bulletin
-No. 11, War Department, Burgeon General, 1919.
-
-[89] Bailey, Pearce: Reconstruction in Nervous and Mental Diseases,
-Medical Record, June 16, 1919.
-
-[90] Farrar, Clarence B.: The Problem of Mental Diseases in the
-Canadian Army. Mental Hygiene, July, 1917.
-
-[91] Oppenheim, H.: The War and the Traumatic Neuroses. Berlin klin.
-Woch., March 15, 1915. Abstract of War Work Committee of the National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene, 1918.
-
-[92] Nonne, Max: Shall War Injuries Still Be Diagnosed as Traumatic
-Neuroses? Med. klin., Berlin, August 1, 1915. Abstract of the Journal
-of the American Medical Association. Sept. 18, 1915.
-
-[93] Binswanger, Otto: Hystero-somatic Symptoms in War Hysteria. Monat.
-für Psych. u. Neurol., Berlin, July and August, 1915. Abstract of War
-Work Committee of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 1918.
-
-[94] Wolfsohn, Julian M.: The Predisposing Factors of War
-Psychoneuroses. Lancet, London, Feb. 2, 1918.
-
-[95] Salmon, Thomas W.: The Care and Treatment of Mental Diseases and
-War Neuroses (Shell Shock) in the British Army. War Work Committee of
-the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 1917.
-
-[96] Mott, Frederick W.: Effects of High Explosives upon the Central
-Nervous System. Lancet, London, February 26, 1916.
-
-[97] Mott, Frederick W.: The Brain in Shell Shock. Brit. Med. Journal,
-November 10, 1917.
-
-[98] Eder, Montague D.: War Shock: the Psychoneuroses in War.
-Psychology and Treatment. 1917.
-
-[99] Ballet, Gilbert, and de Fursac, Rogues J.: The Concussion
-Psychoses: Psychoses from Nervous "Commotion" or Emotional Shock.
-Paris Méd., January 1, 1916. Abstract of the War Work Committee of the
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene. 1918.
-
-[100] Lust, F.: War Neuroses and Prisoners. München Med. Woch., Dec.
-26, 1916. Abstract of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
-Feb. 24, 1917.
-
-[101] MacCurdy, John T.: War Neuroses. Psychiatric Bulletin, July, 1917.
-
-[102] Hartung, M. U.: German Experiences of War Neuroses. Zeitschrift
-für d. ges. Neur. u. Psych., 1918. Abstract of the Journal of Nervous
-and Mental Diseases, Oct., 1919.
-
-[103] Hurst, A. F.: Observations of the Etiology and Treatment of War
-Neuroses. Brit. Med. Journal, September 29, 1918. Abstract of the
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. Oct., 1919.
-
-[104] Ireland, Merritte W.: Care of the Army's Mental Defectives.
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-
-[105] Salmon, Thomas W.: The Insane Veteran and a Nation's Honor. The
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-[106] Falta, Wilhelm: The Ductless Glandular Diseases. Trans. by Milton
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-[107] Blumgarten, A. S.: The Rôle of the Endocrine System in Internal
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-[108] Kaplan, D. M.: Internal Secretions. New York Medical Journal,
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-[109] Garretson, William V. P.: The Dominance of the Endocrines. New
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-[111] Raeder, Oscar J.: Endocrine Imbalance in the Feebleminded.
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-[112] Neubürger: Arch. für Psychiatrie. Vol. 55. Abstract of,
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-[113] Walter and Krumbach: Zeitschrift f. d. g. Neurologie und
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-[115] Davis, Thomas K.: Status Lymphaticus; Its Occurrence and
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-[116] Straus, S. G.: Thyroidal Constipation. New York Medical Journal,
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-[117] Turro, R.: Emotions and Endocrine Functions. Abstract of Journal
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-[118] Knauer, A., and Billigheimer, E.: Concerning Organic and
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-[119] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Vol. 4, 1915.
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-[121] Mott, Frederick W.: British Medical Journal, November, 1919.
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-[122] Timme, Walter: Clinical Endocrinology. Neurological Bulletin,
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-[123] White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. Seventh edition, 1919.
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-[124] Paton, Stewart: Psychiatry. 1905.
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-[125] Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.
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-[126] Simon, T. W.: The Occurrence of Convulsions in Dementia Praecox,
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-[127] Ullman, A. E.: Proceedings of the Inter-hospital Meeting at the
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-[128] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[129] Thirty-first Annual Report of the New York State Hospital
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-[130] Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. H.: A Manual of Psychological
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-[131] Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. H.: A Manual of Psychological
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-[132] Ibid.
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-[133] Jolliffe, S. E.: A Summary of the Origins, Transformations and
-Present-day Trends of the Paranoia Concept. The Medical Record, April
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-[134] Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. H.: A Manual of Psychological
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-[135] Pritchard, J. C.: A Treatise on Diseases of the Nervous System.
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-[136] Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification der Seelenstörungen, etc.
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-[137] Pritchard, J. C.: A Treatise on Insanity. 1835.
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-[138] Griesinger, W.: Die Pathologie und Therapie der psychischen
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-[139] Krafft-Ebing, R. v.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Third edition.
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-[140] Ziehen, Th.: Psychiatrie, 1894.
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-[141] Savage, G. H.: Insanity and Allied Neuroses. Fourth edition. 1907.
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-[142] Savage, G. H.: Insanity and Allied Neuroses. Fourth Edition. 1907.
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-[143] Kempf, E. J.: The Mechanistic Classification of Neuroses and
-Psychoses Produced by Distortion of Anatomic-Affective Functions. The
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. August, 1919.
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-[144] Southard, E. E.: A Key to the Practical Grouping of Mental
-Diseases. Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. January, 1918.
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-[145] Southard, E. E.: Recent American Classification of Mental
-Diseases. Transactions, American Medico-Psychological Association, 1918.
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-[146] Southard, E. E.: A Key to the Practical Grouping of Mental
-Diseases. Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. January, 1918.
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-[147] DaCosta, J. C.: Modern Surgery. Seventh edition. 1918.
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-[148] Ibid.
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-[149] Harlow, John M.: Recovery from the Passage of an Iron Bar through
-the Head. Boston, 1868.
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-[150] Witmer, Lightner: Brain: Functions of the Cerebral Cortex.
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-[151] Meyer, Adolf: The Anatomical Facts and Clinical Varieties of
-Traumatic Insanity. Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association, 1903.
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-[152] Meyer, Adolf: The Anatomical Facts and Clinical Varieties of
-Traumatic Insanity. Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association, 1903.
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-[153] Meyer, Adolf: The Anatomical Facts and Clinical Varieties of
-Traumatic Insanity. Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association, 1903.
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-[154] Griesinger, W.: Mental Pathology and Therapeutics. Translated by
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-[155] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2. 1910.
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-[156] Clouston, T. S.: Unsoundness of Mind. 1911.
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-[157] Ziehen, Th.: Psychiatrie. 1894.
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-[158] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[159] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[160] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[161] Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie, 1918.
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-[162] Southard, E. E.: Anatomical Findings in Senile Dementia, etc.
-Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological Association, 1909.
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-[163] Lambert, Charles I.: A Clinical-Anatomical Classification of the
-Senile and Arteriosclerotic Disorders. Transactions of the American
-Medico-Psychological Association. 1910.
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-[164] Ibid.
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-[165] Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine. Vol. 4, 1916.
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-[166] Lhermitte, J.: The Anatomical and Clinical Syndromes of the
-Corpus Striatum. Translated by J. H. Huddleson and W. M. Kraus. The
-Neurological Bulletin. May, 1921.
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-[167] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[168] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[169] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[170] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[171] Krafft-Ebing, R. v.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. 1888.
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-[172] Régis, E.: A Practical Manual of Mental Medicine. Translated by
-H. M. Bannister. 1894.
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-[173] White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.
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-[174] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[175] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[176] May, James V.: A Résumé of the Work of the Pathological
-Laboratory of the Binghamton State Hospital. July 1, 1911.
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-[177] Ibid.
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-[178] May, James V.: A Review of the Recent Studies of General Paresis.
-American Journal of Insanity. April, 1910.
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-[179] Mott, F. W.: Oliver-Sharpey Lectures on the Cerebro-Spinal Fluid.
-Lancet, July 2 and 10, 1910.
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-[180] Alzheimer, Alois: Histologische Studien zur Differentialdiagnose
-des Progres s. Paralyse. Hist. und Histopath. Arbeiten. 1904.
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-[181] Movimiento de la Casa de Orates de Santiago, 1920.
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-[182] Oppenheim H.: Diseases of the Nervous System. Translated by
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-[183] Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine. Vol, 4, 1916.
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-[184] Dunlap, Charles B.: Anatomical Borderline between the So-called
-Syphilitic and Metasyphilitic Disorders in the Brain and Spinal Cord.
-American Journal of Insanity, April, 1913.
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-[185] Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine. Vol. 4, 1916.
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-[186] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[187] Raeder, Oscar J.: Interim Report of the Neurosyphilis
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-Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological Association, 1919.
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-[188] Warthin, Alfred S.: The Persistence of Active Lesions in the
-Tissue of Clinically Inactive or "Cured" Syphilis. American Journal of
-Medical Sciences. October, 1916.
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-[189] McCarthy, Daniel J.: Paralysis Agitans, Chorea, etc. Modern
-Medicine, Osler and McCrae. 1915.
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-[190] Hamilton, Arthur S.: A Report of Twenty-seven Cases of Chronic
-Progressive Chorea. American Journal of Insanity. January, 1908.
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-[191] Diefendorf, A. Ross: Neurographs. May, 1908.
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-[192] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[193] Cushing, Harvey. Tumors of the Brain and Meninges. Modern
-Medicine, Osier and McCrae. 1915.
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-[194] Redlich, E. The Pathogenesis of Psychic Disturbances in Brain
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-[195] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[196] Thomas, Henry M.: Diseases of the Cerebral Bloodvessels. Modern
-Medicine, Osler and McCrae. 1915.
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-[197] Thomas, Henry M.: Diseases of the Cerebral Bloodvessels. Modern
-Medicine. Osler and McCrae. 1915.
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-[198] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[199] Camp, Carl D.: Paralysis Agitans and Multiple Sclerosis and Their
-Treatment. Modern Treatment of Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and
-Jelliffe. 1913.
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-[200] McCarthy, Daniel J.: Paralysis Agitans, Chorea, etc. Modern
-Medicine. Osler and McCrae. 1915.
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-[201] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[202] Henderson, D. K.: Disseminated Sclerosis with Psychosis. State
-Hospitals Bulletin. March, 1910.
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-[203] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[204] Sachs, Bernard: Syphilitic Diseases of the Central Nervous
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-[205] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[206] McCarthy, Daniel J.: Paralysis Agitans, Chorea, etc. Modern
-Medicine, Osler and McCrae. 1915.
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-[207] White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.
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-[208] Economo, C. von: Wien Klin. Wochenschrift. July 26, 1917.
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-[209] Buzzard, E., Farquhar, and Greenfield, J. G.: Lethargic
-Encephalitis Brain, 1919.
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-[210] Boveri, Piero: The Cerebrospinal Fluid in Epidemic Encephalitis.
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-[211] Abrahamson, Isador: Mental Disturbances in Lethargic
-Encephalitis. Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. September, 1920.
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-[212] Kirby, George H., and Davis, Thomas K.: Psychotic Aspects of
-Epidemic Encephalitis. Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry. May, 1921.
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-[213] Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
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-[214] Tuke, D. Hack: Alcohol, Use of, as a Beverage in Asylums. A
-Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
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-[215] Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification die Seelenstörungen.
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-[216] Clousten, T. S.: Clinical Lectures on Mental Diseases. 1898.
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-[217] Krafft-Ebing, R. von: Text book of Insanity. Translated by C. G.
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-[218] Meyer, Adolf: Modern Psychiatry: Its Possibilities and
-Responsibilities. New York State Hospitals Bulletin. September, 1909.
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-[219] Stöcker, Wilhelm: Klinischer Beitrag zur Frage der
-Alkoholpsychosen. Jena, 1910. Abstract of Morris J. Karpas in State
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-[220] Ibid.
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-[221] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[222] Shadwell, A.: Article on Temperance. The Encyclopedia Britannica,
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-[223] Pollock, H. M.: A Statistical Study of 1739 Patients with
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-[224] Krafft-Ebing, R. von: Text-book of Insanity. Translated by C. G.
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-[225] Paton, Stewart: Psychiatry. 1905.
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-[226] Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine, Vol. 4, 1916.
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-[227] White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.
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-[228] Erlenmeyer, A.: Die Morphiumsucht und ihre Behandlung. 1887.
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-[229] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[230] Mannheim, Paul: Ueber das Cocain und seine Gefahren, etc.
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-[231] Erlenmeyer, A.: Cocainsucht. 1886. Abstract in Zentralblatt für
-Nervenheilkunde, Psychiatrie, etc., by Goldstein. November, 1887.
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-[232] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[233] Wilson, James C.: The Opium Habit and Kindred Affections. System
-of Medicine. Pepper. 1886.
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-[234] Casamajor, Louis: Bromide Intolerance and Bromide Poisoning.
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-[235] Hoch, August: A Study of Some Cases of Delirium Produced by
-Drugs. Review of Neurology and Psychiatry. February, 1906.
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-[236] O'Malley, Mary, and Franz, Shepherd Ivory: A Case of Delirium
-Produced by Bromides. Bulletin No. 1. Government Hospital for the
-Insane. Washington, 1909.
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-[237] Edsall, David L.: Chronic Lead, Arsenic and Other Forms of
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-[238] Rayner, H.: Journal of Mental Science. 1880.
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-[239] Edsall, David L.: Chronic Lead, Arsenic and Other Forms of
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-[240] O'Malley, Mary: A Psychosis Following Carbon-Monoxide Poisoning
-with Complete Recovery. American Journal of the Medical Sciences. June,
-1913.
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-[241] Drug Addiction in the United States. Journal of Nervous and
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-[242] Niles, George M.: Pellagra. 1912.
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-[243] Babcock, J. W.: The Prevalence and Psychology of Pellagra.
-Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological Association, 1910.
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-[244] Studies in Pellagra. U. S. Treasury Department. Hygienic
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-[245] Voegtlin, Carl: The Treatment of Pellagra. Journal of the
-American Medical Association. September 26, 1914.
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-[246] Koch, M. L., and Voegtlin, Carl: Chemical Changes in the Central
-Nervous System in Pellagra. Hygienic Laboratory Bulletin No. 103,
-February, 1916.
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-[247] Goldberger, J.: Pellagra: Causation and a Method of Prevention:
-A Summary of Some of the Recent Studies of the Public Health Service.
-Journal of the American Medical Association, February 12, 1916.
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-[248] Goldberger, J., Wheeler, G. A., and Sydenstricker, Edgar: A Study
-of the Diet of Nonpellagrous and of Pellagrous Households. Journal of
-the American Medical Association. September 21, 1918.
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-[249] Roberts, Stewart R.: Types and Treatment of Pellagra. Journal of
-the American Medical Association, July 3, 1920.
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-[250] Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine, Vol. 4, 1916.
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-[251] Babcock, J. W.: The Prevalence and Psychology of Pellagra.
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-[252] Griesinger, W.: Pathology and Therapeutics of Mental Diseases.
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-[253] Mongeri, L.: Malattie Mentali. Milan, 228. Quoted by Babcock.
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-[254] Bianchi, Leonardo: A Textbook of Psychiatry. Translated by James
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-[255] Régis, E.: Precis de Psychiatrie. 1909. Quoted by Babcock.
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-[256] Procopiu, G.: La Pellagre. Paris. 1903. Quoted by Babcock.
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-[257] Tanzi, Eugenio: Textbook of Mental Diseases. Translated by
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-[258] Gregor, A.: Jahrb. Psychiat. Neurol. Leipsig, 1907
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-[259] Singer, H. Douglas: Mental and Nervous Disorders Associated with
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-[260] Sandy, William A.: Psychiatric Aspects of Pellagra. Transactions
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-[261] Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. Hack: A Manual of Psychological
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-[262] Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. Hack: A Manual of Psychological
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-[263] Feuchtersleben, E. von: Lehrbuch der Aerzlichen Seelenkunde.
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-[264] Friedreich, J. B.: Historisch kritische Darstellung der Theorieen
-über den Wahnsinn. 1839. Quoted by von Feuchtersleben.
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-[265] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[266] Knauer, A.: The Psychoses Occurring as a Result of Acute
-Articular Rheumatism. Zeitschrift f. d. ges. Neurol. u. Psychiatrie.
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-[267] Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
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-[268] Ibid.
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-[269] Ibid.
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-[270] Pritchard, James C.: A Treatise on Insanity and Other Disorders
-Affecting the Mind. 1835.
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-[271] Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification der Seelenstörungen.
-Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1844.
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-[272] Griesinger, Wilhelm: Die Pathologie und Therapie der psychischen
-Krankheiten. 1845.
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-[273] Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
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-[274] Sankey, W. H. O.: Lectures on Mental Disease. 1884.
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-[275] Schüle, Heinrich: Klinishe Psychiatrie. Third edition. 1886.
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-[276] Ziehen, Th.: Psychiatrie. 1894.
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-[277] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Sixth edition. 1899.
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-[278] White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.
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-[279] Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.
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-[280] Buckley, Albert C.: The Basis of Psychiatry. 1920.
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-[281] Paton, Stewart: Psychiatry. 1905.
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-[282] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[283] Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.
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-[284] Dreyfus, G. L.: Die Melancholia ein Zustanbild des
-Manisch-Depressiven Irreseins. 1907. Reviewed by Dr. George H. Kirby.
-The State Hospitals Bulletin, December 1, 1908.
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-[285] Dreyfus, G. L.: Die Melancholia ein Zustandbild des
-Manisch-Depressiven Irreseins. 1907. Review by Dr. George H. Kirby. The
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-[286] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[287] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.
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-[288] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[289] Kehrer, F.: Die Psychosen des Um- und Rückbildungsalters.
-Zentralblatt für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, April 1, 1921.
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-[290] Kehrer, F.: Die Psychosen des Um- und Rückbildungsalters.
-Zentralblatt für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, April 1, 1921.
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-[291] Kehrer, F.: Die Psychosen des Um- und Rückbildungsalters.
-Zentralblatt für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, April 1, 1921.
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-[292] Meyer, Adolf: Insanity: General Pathology. Reference Handbook of
-the Medical Sciences. 1909.
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-[293] Meyer, Adolf: Insanity: General Pathology. Reference Handbook of
-the Medical Sciences. 1909.
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-[294] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[295] Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Second edition, 1918.
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-[296] Ibid.
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-[297] Hoch, August: Review of Bleuler's "Schizophrenia." New York State
-Hospitals Bulletin, August 15, 1912.
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-[298] Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Second edition, 1918.
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-[299] Hoch, August: Review of Bleuler's "Schizophrenia." New York State
-Hospitals Bulletin, August 15, 1912.
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-[300] Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Second edition, 1918.
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-[301] Meyer, Adolf: Fundamental Conceptions of Dementia Praecox.
-British Medical Journal, September, 1906.
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-[302] Hoch, August: Constitutional Factors in the Dementia Praecox
-Group. Review of Neurology and Psychiatry, August, 1910.
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-[303] Jung, C. G.: The Psychology of Dementia Praecox. 1909.
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-[304] White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.
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-[305] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[306] Ibid.
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-[307] Meyer, Adolf: The Nature and Conception of Dementia Praecox. The
-Journal of Abnormal Psychology. Dec., 1910, Jan., 1911.
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-[308] Buckley, Alfred C.: The Basis of Psychiatry. 1920.
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-[309] Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.
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-[310] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth Edition, Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[311] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[312] Pollock, Horatio M., and Nolan, William J.: Sex, Age, and
-Nativity of Dementia Praecox First Admissions to the New York State
-Hospitals, 1912-1918. The State Hospital Quarterly, August, 1919.
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-[313] Pollock, Horatio M.: Dementia Praecox as a Social Problem. The
-State Hospital Quarterly, August, 1918.
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-[314] Jelliffe, S. E.: A Summary of Origins, Transformation and
-Present-Day Trend of the Paranoia Concept. New York Medical Record,
-April 5, 1913.
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-[315] Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification die Seelenstörungen.
-Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1844.
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-[316] Quoted by Cramer. Abgreugung und Differenzial-Diagnose der
-Paranoia. Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1894.
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-[317] Krafft-Ebing, R. von: A Text-book of Insanity. Translated by C.
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-[318] Krafft-Ebing, R. von: A Text-book of Insanity. Translated by C.
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-[319] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Sixth edition. 1899. Book Review,
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-[320] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[321] Kraepelin, E.: Die Erscheinungsformen des Irreseins. Zeitschrift
-für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie. December, 1920.
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-[322] Bleuler, E.: Affectivität, Suggestibilität, Paranoia. Translated
-by Charles S. Ricksher. New York State Hospitals Bulletin. February,
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-[323] Meyer, Adolf: Paranoia and Paranoid States. The Modern Treatment
-of Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. 1913.
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-[324] Meyer, Adolf: Paranoia and Paranoid States. The Modern Treatment
-of Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. 1913.
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-[325] Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.
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-[326] Spratling, William P.: Epilepsy and its Treatment. 1904.
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-[327] Clark, L. Pierce: Clinical Studies in Epilepsy. Psychiatric
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-[328] Clark, L. Pierce; Clinical Studies in Epilepsy. Psychiatric
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-[329] Clark, L. Pierce: Clinical Studies in Epilepsy (Concluded).
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-[330] Clark, L. Pierce: A Further Study of Mental Content in Epilepsy.
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-[331] Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.
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-[332] Murray, James A. H.: A New English Dictionary. 1888.
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-[333] Brachet, J. L.: Traité de l'hysteria. 1847.
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-[334] Krafft-Ebing, R. von: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Translated by C.
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-[335] Janet, Pierre: État mental des hystériques. Translated by C. R.
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-
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mental diseases; a public health problem, by
-James Vance May
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Mental diseases; a public health problem
-
-Author: James Vance May
-
-Release Date: April 26, 2017 [EBook #54611]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MENTAL DISEASES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, Ralph, Bryan Ness and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="tnote">
-<p class="tntitle">Transcriber's Note:</p>
-
-<p>Punctuation and possible typographical errors have been changed.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic, variable and inconsistent spelling have been preserved.</p>
-
-<p>Footnotes appear at the end of the text, after the Index.</p>
-
-<p>The cover image was created by the transcriber and placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<h1>MENTAL DISEASES</h1>
-
-<p class="front01"><i>A Public Health Problem</i></p>
-
-<p class="front02">BY</p>
-<h2 class="nopagebreak">JAMES V. MAY, M.D.</h2>
-
-<p class="front03">Superintendent, Boston State Hospital, Boston, Mass.; Fellow, and Chairman<br />
-of the Committee on Statistics, of the American Psychiatric Association;<br />
-Fellow of the American Medical Association, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="front03a">Formerly, Superintendent, Grafton State Hospital, North Grafton, Mass.; Medical<br />
-Member, The New York State Hospital Commission, Albany, N. Y.;<br />
-and Superintendent, Matteawan State Hospital, Beacon, N. Y.</p>
-
-
-<p class="front02">WITH A PREFACE BY</p>
-
-<p class="front04">THOMAS W. SALMON, M.D.</p>
-
-<p class="front03a">Professor of Psychiatry, Columbia University; Medical Advisor to the<br />
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene, New York City</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/colophon.png" width="178" height="200" alt="colophon" />
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="front04">BOSTON<br /></p>
-
-<p class="front04">RICHARD G. BADGER<br /></p>
-
-<p class="front02a">THE GORHAM PRESS<br /></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="front05">
-<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1922, by Richard G. Badger</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="front05">All Rights Reserved<br /></p>
-
-<p class="front06">Made in the United States of America<br /></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="front05">The Gorham Press, Boston, U. S. A.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
-
-
-<p>Interest in mental disorders is no longer confined to
-the relatively small number of persons whose duties or
-family ties bring them into daily contact with the mentally
-ill. Disorders that so profoundly affect human conduct
-were certain, sooner or later, to attract the attention of
-those who are interested in the study of human behavior
-in its broadest relations or who have special responsibilities
-with reference to the conduct of individuals and
-require all the information that they can secure on
-factors that modify the reactions of men, women or children
-in the social environments in which they live and
-die. Uncertain of themselves until they made sure of
-the sciences upon which their future work was to develop,
-social workers since the commencement of organized
-social work in this country demanded of the sciences concerned
-with the human mind some information that
-might aid them in dealing with the difficult problems in
-human adaptation which they found constituted the chief
-part of social work. Judges and those who are interested
-in penology have within recent years turned also
-to the students of abnormal human behavior for light
-upon problems of crime and delinquency. With mental
-hygiene becoming firmly established as a practical field
-of preventive medicine, another group of persons not
-directly concerned with the care of the mentally ill has
-become deeply interested in the forms, types and causes
-of mental illness. It is by such readers, quite as much
-as physicians, medical students and nurses, that Dr.
-May's work in bringing together the main facts regarding
-mental diseases and the people who suffer from them
-will be appreciated. For those whose interest in the subject<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-is incidental and not part of a life-long study, the
-information here presented will be of special value.
-There are, it is true, many technical works on mental
-diseases in their medical, social and legal relations, but
-it is doubtful whether elsewhere there can be found in a
-single volume as much varied information as that which
-Dr. May has brought together.</p>
-
-<p>There is probably no group of diseases about which
-there is such widespread popular ignorance or misinformation
-as those that affect the mind. People who
-would be ashamed not to have accurate information
-regarding the more important infectious diseases and
-more than general knowledge of the means by which they
-are transmitted speak of "insanity" as if there were a
-single disorder to which that name could properly be
-applied, and are without the slightest knowledge of the
-different forms of mental diseases, the periods of life in
-which they appear, their main characteristics and the
-means by which they terminate. Statistics relating even
-to those persons with mental disorders who are cared for
-in special institutions are usually quite unfamiliar to
-persons who have more than an ordinary amount of information
-regarding the prevalence of other diseases.
-Such a book as this will go far toward supplying the
-extraordinary lack of knowledge of conditions that have
-exceedingly important social and economic relations and
-from the study of which many lessons can be drawn that
-are applicable to human affairs far removed from those
-relating to patients in our hospitals for the insane.</p>
-
-<p class="front07"><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Salmon.</span><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Larchmont, New York,<br />
-January 11, 1922.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<table border="0" width="90%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="CONTENTS">
- <tr>
- <td class="tocl" colspan="3">
- <h2 id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tocc" colspan="3">PART I. GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tocr">CHAPTER</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tocr">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Social and Economic Importance of Mental
- Diseases</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Evolution of the Modern
- Hospital</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl">Legislation and Methods of
- Administration</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The State Hospitals&mdash;Their Organization
- and Functions</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Hospital Treatment of Mental
- Diseases</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Development of the Psychopathic
- Hospital</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Mental Hygiene Movement</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Etiology of Mental Diseases</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl">Immigration and Mental Diseases</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl">Mental Diseases and Criminal
- Responsibility</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychiatry of the War</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_185">185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">Endocrinology and Psychiatry</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_202">202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Modern Progress of
- Psychiatry</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Classification of Mental
- Diseases</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="toch" align="center" colspan="3">PART II. THE PSYCHOSES</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Traumatic Psychoses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Senile Psychoses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_266">266</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses with Cerebral
- Arteriosclerosis</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_280">280</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl">General Paralysis</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses with Cerebral
- Syphilis</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_308">308</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses with Huntington's Chorea,
- Brain Tumor and other Brain or Nervous Diseases</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_323">323</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Alcoholic Psychoses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id=
- "Page_8">[8]</a></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses Due to Drugs and other
- Exogenous Toxins</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_363">363</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses with Pellagra</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_378">378</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses with other Somatic
- Diseases</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_392">392</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Manic-Depressive Psychoses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_409">409</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">Involution Melancholia</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_427">427</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">Dementia Pr&aelig;cox</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_440">440</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl">Paranoia and the Paranoid
- Conditions</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_461">461</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Epileptic Psychoses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_475">475</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoneuroses and Neuroses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_489">489</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses with Psychopathic
- Personality</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_504">504</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl">The Psychoses with Mental
- Deficiency</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_524">524</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Index</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_537">537</a></td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 id="AUTHORS_PREFACE">AUTHOR'S PREFACE</h2>
-
-
-<p>In presenting a preliminary consideration of the subject
-of mental diseases as a public health problem the
-author is actuated by no other motive than that of stimulating
-the undertaking, at some future time, of a comprehensive
-investigation and survey of an important
-field which has never been systematically and adequately
-studied in the past. Under existing circumstances the
-facts necessary for an intelligent discussion of this question
-are unfortunately not obtainable. We have, as will
-be shown, practically no information whatever as to the
-incidence of mental diseases in the community. Hospital
-statistics are still in such a chaotic state that we
-are not even in a position to speak authoritatively of
-that part of the population which is entirely within our
-supervision and control in institutions. Before any progress
-can be hoped for we must at least have at our
-disposal accurate data relative to the patients within
-the walls of our hospitals. This presupposes a uniform
-scheme of statistical reports based upon some common
-viewpoint. Adequate preparations for this undertaking
-have been made by the American Psychiatric Association
-and the National Committee for Mental Hygiene.
-Every hospital for mental diseases in the country has
-been urged to cooperate in this movement. To show the
-necessity for more actively prosecuting this research has
-been one of the principal purposes of this book.</p>
-
-<p>In elaborating somewhat briefly the conception of the
-various psychoses generally accepted by American psychiatrists,
-and for that reason included in the classification
-adopted by the Association, every effort has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-made, as far as possible, to show the steps which have
-led up to present developments. The author has endeavored
-to confine himself to reflecting the views of others
-throughout and has used actual quotations from recognized
-authorities as far as was deemed advisable. In
-the discussion of the various psychoses frequent references
-will be noted to the description of the various
-clinical groups contained in the manual prepared by the
-Committee on Statistics for the American Psychiatric
-Association. As is shown in the manual, these definitions
-and explanatory notes were formulated by Dr. George H.
-Kirby.</p>
-
-<p>Special reference should be made to the important
-contributions to the literature of psychiatry of such well-known
-American writers as Meyer, Hoch, Kirby, White,
-Barrett, Campbell, Southard, Peterson, Diefendorf, Jelliffe,
-Paton, Salmon, Russell, Buckley, Rosanoff, Orton,
-Singer and many others. The work of Kraepelin, Bleuler,
-Nissl, Alzheimer, Freud, Jung, Stekel, Janet and
-others abroad has exercised an influence on the psychiatry
-of the day which must be recognized. We are very
-largely indebted to Pollock and to Furbush for the available
-information relating to the incidence of the various
-psychoses in this country. To the American Psychiatric,
-for many years the American Medico-Psychological,
-Association we owe an exhaustive historical review of
-the institutional care and treatment of mental diseases in
-the United States and Canada.</p>
-
-<p>Obviously this work was not intended as a textbook,
-nor was it designed to serve the purpose of one. It is
-an appeal to those who are already familiar with the
-fundamental principles of psychiatry. For that reason
-the interpretation of mental mechanisms given so much
-space in textbooks has been entirely omitted and no
-reference is made to the treatment of the individual
-psychoses. Such reliable statistical data as could be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-gathered from recent hospital reports and publications
-have been utilized in full. The following institutions
-were represented in this study:</p>
-
-<p class="p1e">1. <span class="smcap">Massachusetts</span>&mdash;fourteen hospitals (1919-1920): Boston
-State Hospital, Boston; Bridgewater State Hospital, State Farm;
-Danvers State Hospital, Hathorne; Foxborough State Hospital,
-Foxborough; Gardner State Colony, Gardner; Grafton State
-Hospital, North Grafton; McLean Hospital, Waverley; Medfield
-State Hospital, Harding; Monson State Hospital, Palmer;
-Northampton State Hospital, Northampton; State Infirmary,
-Tewksbury (Mental Wards); Taunton State Hospital, Taunton;
-Westborough State Hospital, Westborough; Worcester State
-Hospital, Worcester.</p>
-
-<p>2. <span class="smcap">New York</span>&mdash;thirteen hospitals (1912-1919): Binghamton
-State Hospital, Binghamton; Brooklyn State Hospital, Brooklyn;
-Buffalo State Hospital, Buffalo; Central Islip State Hospital,
-Central Islip; Gowanda State Homeopathic Hospital, Collins;
-Hudson River State Hospital, Poughkeepsie; Kings Park
-State Hospital, Kings Park, L. I.; Manhattan State Hospital,
-Ward's Island, New York City; Middletown State Homeopathic
-Hospital, Middletown; Rochester State Hospital, Rochester; St.
-Lawrence State Hospital, Ogdensburg; Utica State Hospital,
-Utica; Willard State Hospital, Ovid.</p>
-
-<p>3. Twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other states:</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Arkansas</span>&mdash;State Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Little Rock
-(1917-1918).</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Colorado</span>&mdash;Colorado State Hospital, Pueblo (1917 and 1918).</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Connecticut</span>&mdash;Connecticut State Hospital, Middletown (1917
-and 1918); Norwich State Hospital, Norwich (1905-1918 inclusive).</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Maryland</span>&mdash;Springfield State Hospital, Sykesville, 1919;
-Spring Grove State Hospital, Catonsville, 1918 and 1919.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Michigan</span>&mdash;Pontiac State Hospital, Pontiac, 1917 and 1918;
-State Psychopathic Hospital, Ann Arbor, 1917 and 1918; Traverse
-City State Hospital, Traverse City, 1917 and 1918.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Montana</span>&mdash;Montana State Hospital, Warm Springs, 1917 and
-1918.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">New Jersey</span>&mdash;Essex County Hospital, Overbrook, 1918.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Pennsylvania</span>&mdash;State Hospital Southeastern District of
-Pennsylvania, Norristown, 1919.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">South Carolina</span>&mdash;South Carolina State Hospital, Columbia,
-1918.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Utah</span>&mdash;State Mental Hospital, Provo, 1918.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Vermont</span>&mdash;Vermont State Hospital, Waterbury, 1917 and
-1918.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Virginia</span>&mdash;Central State Hospital, Petersburg, 1919; Western
-State Hospital, Staunton, 1919.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Washington</span>&mdash;Eastern State Hospital, Medical Lake, 1917
-and 1918; Northern State Hospital, Sedro Woolley, 1917 and
-1918.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">West Virginia</span>&mdash;Spencer State Hospital, 1917 and 1918; Weston
-State Hospital, Weston, 1917 and 1918.</p>
-
-<p class="p1f">These institutions may, I think, be looked upon as
-fairly representative of the hospitals of this country.
-Based on their official reports an analysis has been made
-of over seventy thousand consecutive first admissions.</p>
-
-<p>There is no disposition on the part of the writer to
-overestimate the value of statistical studies. Our conclusions
-should, however, be based as fully as possible
-on facts rather than on abstract theories or individual
-observations alone. The social, economic and clinical
-aspects of mental diseases must all be given adequate
-consideration if psychiatry is to fulfill its obligation to
-the community and assume a dignified rôle in the advancement
-of modern medicine.</p>
-
-<p class="front07">
-<span class="smcap">James V. May.</span><br /></p>
-<p class="noindent">
-Boston, Mass.,<br />
-December 15, 1921.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 id="PART_I">PART I</h2>
-
-<p class="st">GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a><br />
-<a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="front08" id="MENTAL_DISEASES">MENTAL DISEASES</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF MENTAL DISEASES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p1e">The importance of mental diseases as a factor in the
-social and economic welfare of the community has not
-been given adequate consideration, notwithstanding the
-remarkable progress of modern psychiatry. Nor is this
-influence, unfortunately, one which can be easily estimated
-or accurately determined. We have, as a matter
-of fact, no data at hand to show the prevalence of disease,
-either physical or mental, with any degree of exactness
-even under our most elaborately organized forms of
-government. There is no complete information available
-which will enable us to determine the frequency of
-such important conditions as appendicitis, cardiac or
-renal diseases, peritonitis, septic infections, diseases of
-the eye, ear, skin or nervous system. It is true that
-there are, in the majority of states, records of contagious
-or readily communicable diseases which are probably
-fairly reliable. Aside from this, the only information at
-our disposal is confined to mortality statistics.</p>
-
-<p>This suggests a further consideration of the advisability,
-if not absolute necessity, of more extensive statistical
-studies of diseases, both mental and physical, if the
-welfare of the community is to be safeguarded and the
-future of medical science assured. Every physician
-should be required by law to make careful reports to the
-Board of Health of his state showing all medical conditions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-requiring treatment by him or coming to his professional
-notice. The value of such information to
-medical science would much more than compensate for
-the comparatively small cost of such an undertaking.
-Nor is this procedure more radical either in theory or
-practice than was the proposal to report all communicable
-diseases only a few years since. The data thus made
-available in the various states should be correlated and
-published by the Public Health Service.</p>
-
-<p>The mortality statistics of the United States Census
-Bureau furnish us with a valuable index of the relative
-frequency of the various disease processes which determine
-the death rate of the community. They are based
-on the transcripts of death certificates received from the
-so-called registration area, which in 1920 had an estimated
-population of 87,486,713. The total number of
-deaths reported in 1920 was 1,142,558, a rate of 13.1 per
-1,000 of the population. It is true that the epidemic
-of influenza was still a factor of some importance at that
-time. The rate for 1916, however, was fourteen, for
-1917 fourteen and two-tenths, for 1918 eighteen and one-tenth
-and for 1919 twelve and nine-tenths per 1,000 of
-the population. The registration area now includes
-thirty-four states:&mdash;California, Colorado, Connecticut,
-Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky,
-Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan,
-Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska,
-New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
-Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
-Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington
-and Wisconsin. It is interesting, at least, to note the
-states not included in the registration <span class="no-break">area:&mdash;</span>Alabama,
-Arkansas, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Nevada, New
-Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas,
-West Virginia and Wyoming. The results obtained from
-a study of the reports from such an extensive district
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-must be looked upon as thoroughly representative of the
-country at large. The last complete statistics available
-are those for 1920. Influenza was still an important factor
-at that time, it being responsible for a death rate of
-71 per 100,000. The influenza rate was 98.8 in 1919,
-302.1 in 1918, 17.3 in 1917, 26.5 in 1916, 16 in 1915, 9.1 in
-1914 and 10.3 in 1912.</p>
-
-<p>The important causes of death in 1920 were as follows:</p>
-
-
-
-<table class="a" width="80%" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td style="width:50%">&nbsp;</td>
- <th class="td06"><i>Rate per 100,000</i></th>
- <th class="td06"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Typhoid fever</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.8</td>
- <td class="td04a">.6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Malaria</td>
- <td class="td04a">3.6</td>
- <td class="td04a">.3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Measles</td>
- <td class="td04a">8.8</td>
- <td class="td04a">.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Whooping cough</td>
- <td class="td04a">12.5</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diphtheria and croup</td>
- <td class="td04a">15.3</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Influenza</td>
- <td class="td04a">71.0</td>
- <td class="td04a">5.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tuberculosis of the lungs</td>
- <td class="td04a">100.8</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other forms of tuberculosis</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.8</td>
- <td class="td04a">.6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cancer and other malignant tumors</td>
- <td class="td04a">83.4</td>
- <td class="td04a">6.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Simple meningitis</td>
- <td class="td04a">6.0</td>
- <td class="td04a">.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cerebral hemorrhage</td>
- <td class="td04a">80.9</td>
- <td class="td04a">6.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Organic diseases of the heart</td>
- <td class="td04a">141.9</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Pneumonia (all forms)</td>
- <td class="td04a">137.3</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other diseases of the respiratory system</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">(tuberculosis and pneumonia excepted)</td>
- <td class="td04a">11.6</td>
- <td class="td04a">.9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Appendicitis and typhlitis</td>
- <td class="td04a">13.4</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hernia, intestinal obstruction</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.6</td>
- <td class="td04a">.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cirrhosis of the liver</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.1</td>
- <td class="td04a">.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Acute nephritis and Bright's disease</td>
- <td class="td04a">89.4</td>
- <td class="td04a">6.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Puerperal septicaemia</td>
- <td class="td04a">6.6</td>
- <td class="td04a">.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other puerperal accidents of pregnancy and labor</td>
- <td class="td04a">12.5</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Congenital debility and malformation</td>
- <td class="td04a">69.8</td>
- <td class="td04a">5.3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Violent deaths (suicide excepted)</td>
- <td class="td04a">78.5</td>
- <td class="td04a">6.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Suicide</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.2</td>
- <td class="td04a">.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Unknown or ill-defined diseases</td>
- <td class="td04a">17.7</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.4</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-
-<p class="p2">The pneumonia rate (all forms) for 1920 was quite unusual,
-137.3 per 100,000, as compared with 123.5 in 1919,
-286.6 in 1918, 150.5 in 1917, 137.8 in 1916, 133.1 in 1915,
-127.3 in 1914, 132.6 in 1913, 132.4 in 1912, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">The following table shows the average rate per
-100,000 of some of the more important general diseases
-during a period of eight years (1912, 1913, 1914, 1915,
-1916, 1917, 1918 and 1919):</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<table class="a" width="60%" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Typhoid fever</td>
- <td class="td05">13.86</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Measles</td>
- <td class="td05">9.01</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Scarlet fever</td>
- <td class="td05">4.87</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Whooping cough</td>
- <td class="td05">10.11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diphtheria and croup</td>
- <td class="td05">16.30</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tuberculosis (all forms)</td>
- <td class="td05">144.52</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cancer and other malignant tumors</td>
- <td class="td05">80.27</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cerebral hemorrhage, apoplexy</td>
- <td class="td05">78.91</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Acute endocarditis and organic diseases of the heart</td>
- <td class="td05">153.65</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Pneumonia (all forms)</td>
- <td class="td05">152.98</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Acute nephritis and Bright's disease</td>
- <td class="td05">101.63</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-
-<p class="p2ab">The death rate from diseases of the nervous system
-is of particular interest. The average annual rate per
-100,000 of the population for the years 1916, 1917, 1918
-and 1919 was as follows:</p>
-
-<table class="a" width="60%" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Encephalitis</td>
- <td class="td05">1.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Meningitis (total)</td>
- <td class="td05">8.17</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Locomotor ataxia</td>
- <td class="td05">2.27</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other diseases of the spinal cord (total)</td>
- <td class="td05">8.57</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cerebral hemorrhage, apoplexy</td>
- <td class="td05">80.57</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Softening of the brain</td>
- <td class="td05">1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paralysis without specified cause</td>
- <td class="td05">7.65</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">General paralysis of the insane</td>
- <td class="td05">6.77</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other forms of mental alienation</td>
- <td class="td05">2.17</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Epilepsy</td>
- <td class="td05">4.07</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Chorea</td>
- <td class="td05">.10</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other diseases of the nervous system</td>
- <td class="td05">3.85</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-
-<p class="p2ab">This shows a total death rate for nervous and mental
-diseases of 126.44 per 100,000. It is a fairly reasonable
-assumption that of the above, the following, at least, may
-be classified as having been definitely associated with
-psychoses:</p>
-
-
-<table class="b" border="0" width="60%" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <th class="td07" style="width:30%"><i>Rate per 100,000</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Encephalitis</td>
- <td class="td01">1.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Meningitis</td>
- <td class="td01">8.17</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Softening of the brain</td>
- <td class="td01">1.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">General paralysis of the insane</td>
- <td class="td01">6.77</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other forms of mental alienation</td>
- <td class="td01">2.17</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">We may, therefore, reasonably conclude that there
-was an average number of at least 19.36 per 100,000
-(from 1906 to 1910 this amounted to 32.1) in which the
-primary cause of death was associated with mental diseases,
-an exceedingly conservative estimate. This does
-not take into consideration the deaths due to senility
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-(15.5) or suicide (12.8), conditions which might very logically
-be included for obvious reasons. It is, of course,
-well known that the psychoses rarely, if ever, appear in
-the death certificates as a primary cause of death. As
-a matter of fact, they are not always shown in the secondary
-causes. Information on this subject is still less
-satisfactory from a statistical point of view. During the
-year 1917 (contributory causes have not been reported
-since that year) there was a total of 1,066,711 primary
-causes of death shown in the registration area and only
-372,291 contributory causes. Of this number the following
-may be classified as having been associated with
-psychoses:</p>
-
-
- <table class="a" width="70%" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07b"><i>Disease</i></th>
- <th class="td06"><i>Primary<br />Cause</i></th>
- <th class="td06"><i>Contributory<br />Cause</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Encephalitis</td>
- <td class="td04b">620</td>
- <td class="td04b">904</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Meningitis (total)</td>
- <td class="td04b">6,673</td>
- <td class="td04b">6,815</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Softening of the brain</td>
- <td class="td04b">888</td>
- <td class="td04b">722</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">General paralysis of the insane</td>
- <td class="td04b">5,248</td>
- <td class="td04b">648</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other forms of mental alienation</td>
- <td class="td04b">1,651</td>
- <td class="td04b">3,895</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="td04b">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td>
- <td class="td04b">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07a">Total</td>
- <td class="td04b">15,080</td>
- <td class="td04b">12,987</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">The contributory causes definitely showing mental
-diseases constitute only 3.4 per cent of the whole number,
-and the death rate for 1917, including both primary and
-contributory causes suggestive of probable psychoses,
-was 37.2 per 100,000. This would indicate that the number
-of deaths from mental diseases shown in the primary
-causes represents only about fifty-three per cent of all
-mental cases which are actual factors in determining the
-death rate of the community. A comparison of these figures
-with the number of cases dying in hospitals shows
-that they cannot be looked upon as determining the percentage
-of the general population showing psychoses.
-Of the 1,952 persons dying in the institutions for mental
-diseases in Massachusetts in 1919, approximately nineteen
-per cent showed the psychoses in the primary causes
-of death. This percentage would probably be fairly constant
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-throughout the country. It is, of course, a well
-recognized fact that the death certificate at best is not
-beyond suspicion and does not furnish information regarding
-the cause of death which can be accepted without
-question.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Richard C. Cabot<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> has made an elaborate study
-of errors in diagnosis as shown by autopsies. His work
-shows the following percentage of diagnostic accuracy:</p>
-
-<div class="pagebreak">
-<table class="a" width="80%" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <th class="td06p4c"><i>Per cent.</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diabetes mellitus</td>
- <td class="td03">95</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Typhoid fever</td>
- <td class="td03">92</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Aortic regurgitation</td>
- <td class="td03">84</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Lobar pneumonia</td>
- <td class="td03">74</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cerebral tumor</td>
- <td class="td03">72.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tubercular meningitis</td>
- <td class="td03">72</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Gastric cancer</td>
- <td class="td03">72</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mitral stenosis</td>
- <td class="td03">69</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Brain hemorrhage</td>
- <td class="td03">67</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Aortic stenosis</td>
- <td class="td03">61</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Phthisis, active</td>
- <td class="td03">59</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Miliary tuberculosis</td>
- <td class="td03">52</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Chronic interstitial nephritis</td>
- <td class="td03">50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hepatic cirrhosis</td>
- <td class="td03">39</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Acute endocarditis</td>
- <td class="td03">39</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Bronchopneumonia</td>
- <td class="td03">33</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Acute nephritis</td>
- <td class="td03">16</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">It must be admitted that Cabot's findings are discouraging.
-They are not so bad as they would seem, however,
-at first thought. Death certificates, unfortunately, do
-not have the significance which they should have. Physicians
-are well known to be entirely too careless in their
-preparation and inclined to look upon them merely as
-legal formalities which cannot readily be avoided. It is
-furthermore difficult, as every doctor knows, to point to
-one immediate primary cause of death in every instance.
-Very often there is a combination of factors concerned
-and it is possible at practically every autopsy to find
-lesions not represented in any way whatever in the death
-certificate. It is unquestionably true that statistics of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-any kind must be based on information some of which
-we know to be inaccurate. This should not be used as an
-argument for discontinuing, absolutely, our search for
-knowledge. It is merely a reason why our clinical standards
-should be improved.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">An exceedingly important contribution to our rather
-limited fund of accurate information regarding the general
-health of the country was the publication recently
-issued by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-on the mortality statistics of wage earners and their
-families. This covers a period of six years (1911 to
-1916) and represents a study of 635,449 deaths. The
-cases reported came from every state in the union with
-the following exceptions: Mississippi, North Dakota,
-South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Texas, Nevada, Arizona
-and New Mexico. Canada and many other localities
-outside of the "Registration Area" of the United
-States Census Bureau were included. The facts presented
-in this report are unique in that they render
-available for the first time a careful and detailed consideration
-of the diseases which may be looked upon as representative
-of the industrial population of the country.
-The various occupations shown in the order of their
-numerical importance were as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span>Laborers, teamsters,
-drivers and chauffeurs, machinists, textile mill
-operatives, clerks, office assistants, etc. It covers a study
-of ten million policy holders and nearly fifty-four million
-years of life in the aggregate. The age groups
-studied range from one year to seventy-five in ratios not
-very different from those exhibited in the general population.
-The death rate for all persons exposed was 11.81
-per 1,000 as compared with a rate of over thirteen per
-1,000 (white) of the general population of the registration
-area during the same period of time. The death
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-rate per 100,000 from 1911 to 1916 of some of the more
-important general diseases was as follows:</p>
-
-
-<table class="c" width="80%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Typhoid fever</td>
- <td class="td04">16.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diphtheria and croup</td>
- <td class="td04">24.3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Scarlet fever</td>
- <td class="td04">8.6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Acute articular rheumatism</td>
- <td class="td04">6.3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diabetes</td>
- <td class="td04">14.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cancer and other malignant tumors</td>
- <td class="td04">70.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Bronchopneumonia</td>
- <td class="td04">30.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diarrhea and enteritis (over two years old)</td>
- <td class="td04">13.9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cirrhosis of the liver</td>
- <td class="td04">15.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Puerperal septicemia</td>
- <td class="td04">8.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Accidents of all forms</td>
- <td class="td04">75.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Ill-defined diseases</td>
- <td class="td04">10.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Measles</td>
- <td class="td04">8.9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Influenza</td>
- <td class="td04">15.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tuberculosis (all forms)</td>
- <td class="td04">205.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tuberculosis (pulmonary)</td>
- <td class="td04">173.9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Alcoholism</td>
- <td class="td04">4.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07c">Diseases of the arteries, including atheroma, aneurysm, etc.</td>
- <td class="td04">17.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Pneumonia (lobar and undefined)</td>
- <td class="td04">77.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Intestinal obstruction</td>
- <td class="td04">5.9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Bright's disease</td>
- <td class="td04">96.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Suicide</td>
- <td class="td04">12.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Homicide</td>
- <td class="td04">7.0</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">The death rate for syphilis, locomotor ataxia and general
-paralysis of the insane, combined, was 14.3 per 100,000.
-The percentage of deaths due to diseases of the nervous
-system, many of which must be looked upon as probably
-having been associated with mental disturbances, is
-somewhat surprising, as shown by the following table:</p>
-
-
-<table class="c" width="80%" cellpadding="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Encephalitis</td>
- <td class="td01">1.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Meningitis</td>
- <td class="td01">7.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Locomotor ataxia</td>
- <td class="td01">1.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Acute anterior poliomyelitis</td>
- <td class="td01">3.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other diseases of the spinal cord</td>
- <td class="td01">4.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cerebral hemorrhage (apoplexy)</td>
- <td class="td01">68.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Softening of the brain</td>
- <td class="td01">.9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paralysis without specified cause</td>
- <td class="td01">5.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">General paralysis of the insane</td>
- <td class="td01">4.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other forms of mental alienation</td>
- <td class="td01">1.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Epilepsy</td>
- <td class="td01">3.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Convulsions (non-puerperal)</td>
- <td class="td01">.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Chorea</td>
- <td class="td01">.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Neuralgia and neuritis</td>
- <td class="td01">.6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other diseases of the nervous system</td>
- <td class="td01">2.5</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">This shows a total rate of 104.5 per 100,000 due to diseases
-of the nervous system. If to this we add those
-dying of senility and the suicides as probably representing
-psychoses it would bring the total up to 123.2 per
-100,000. It must be confessed, however, that such speculations
-mean comparatively little.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">Practically the only other source of information at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-our disposal relative to the incidence of general diseases
-in the community is the tabulation of communicable diseases
-by Boards of Heath. The annual report of the
-United States Public Health Service for 1919 shows a
-case rate for diphtheria of 137 per 100,000 of the population
-based on the reports of thirty-seven states. The case
-rate for measles in thirty-seven states was 170. Poliomyelitis
-in thirty states showed a rate of 2.5 and
-scarlet fever a rate of 110 in thirty-seven states. The
-smallpox rate was sixty-eight and represented thirty-six
-states. The typhoid fever rate for thirty-seven states
-was only forty. The case rate for tuberculosis, all
-forms, was 346.7 in 1918. It was 274.2 in New York,
-271.6 in the District of Columbia and 271.3 in New Jersey.
-These were the highest reported in the United
-States during that year. Unfortunately these statistics
-relate to communicable diseases only. This difficulty is
-due largely to the fact that comparatively few states have
-made attempts to keep elaborate records. The reports
-of Massachusetts are probably as comprehensive as any.
-The case rate per 100,000 of the population of all reportable
-diseases during the year 1920 was as follows:</p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="70%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Influenza</td>
- <td class="td01">938.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Measles</td>
- <td class="td01">830.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Pneumonia, lobar</td>
- <td class="td01">143.6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">German measles</td>
- <td class="td01">12.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Pulmonary tuberculosis</td>
- <td class="td01">173.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tuberculosis, other forms</td>
- <td class="td01">20.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diphtheria</td>
- <td class="td01">194.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Gonorrhea</td>
- <td class="td01">186.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Whooping cough</td>
- <td class="td01">258.3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Scarlet fever</td>
- <td class="td01">265.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Chicken pox</td>
- <td class="td01">138.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mumps</td>
- <td class="td01">154.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Syphilis</td>
- <td class="td01">77.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Ophthalmia</td>
- <td class="td01">42.3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Typhoid fever</td>
- <td class="td01">24.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Dysentery</td>
- <td class="td01">1.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis</td>
- <td class="td01">4.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Malaria</td>
- <td class="td01">1.6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Pellagra</td>
- <td class="td01">.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Smallpox</td>
- <td class="td01">.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Trachoma</td>
- <td class="td01">2.2</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-The case rates for influenza and pneumonia cannot be
-looked upon as representative, owing to the epidemic of
-1919 and 1920. During 1917 the death rate from influenza
-was 12.9 per 100,000 and from pneumonia 163.8.
-The death rate from heart diseases (organic diseases of
-the heart and endocarditis) in Massachusetts in 1920 was
-178 per 100,000 of the population, from apoplexy 108.4,
-cancer and other malignant diseases 116.7, Bright's
-disease and nephritis 92.4, diarrhea and enteritis 52.9,
-violence 76.3, automobile accidents and injuries 11.9 and
-suicides 10.1.</p>
-
-<p>It must be admitted that it is exceedingly difficult to
-establish a definite basis for a comparison of our statistics
-relating to mental disorders and those dealing with
-the frequency of other diseases in the community. As
-has been shown, our information on the latter subject,
-such as it is, has to do only with communicable diseases
-and the reported death rates. In making an analysis of
-the reports of mental diseases we are limited almost
-entirely to the institution population. It is true that
-these statistics are much more reliable than the others,
-as we are dealing with a stable population entirely under
-control. The cases, furthermore, are almost invariably
-subject to a prolonged observation and careful study.
-The diagnosis in almost every instance is based on elaborate
-mental examinations and exhaustive personal and
-family histories. It is, of course, true that there are
-innumerable cases of mental diseases outside of institutions.
-There were 18,268 patients at home on visit from
-the state hospitals alone on January 1, 1920. Those not
-requiring hospital treatment or custody in an institution
-can, however, be eliminated for the purpose of comparative
-studies. The fact that an analysis of death rates
-alone does not throw any light whatever on the frequence
-of psychoses for reasons already given will, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-think, be conceded. For statistical purposes, at least, it
-may be assumed that the frequence of mental diseases
-as shown by a study of the hospital population is fairly
-representative of conditions existing in the community.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">For purposes of comparison we may contrast the
-admission rate of mental diseases per 100,000 of the
-population in Massachusetts in 1920 with the case rate
-of communicable diseases as follows:</p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mental diseases</td>
- <td class="td01">101.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Chicken pox</td>
- <td class="td01">138.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diphtheria</td>
- <td class="td01">194.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">German measles</td>
- <td class="td01">12.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Gonorrhea</td>
- <td class="td01">186.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Measles</td>
- <td class="td01">830.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mumps</td>
- <td class="td01">154.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Scarlet fever</td>
- <td class="td01">265.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Syphilis</td>
- <td class="td01">77.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tuberculosis, pulmonary</td>
- <td class="td01">173.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Tuberculosis, other forms</td>
- <td class="td01">20.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Typhoid fever</td>
- <td class="td01">24.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Whooping cough</td>
- <td class="td01">258.3</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">The total institution population (mental cases) at the
-end of the year 1920 represented a rate of 395.49 per
-100,000 of the population. It should be borne in mind
-that, with the exception of tuberculosis and syphilis, the
-communicable diseases reported above represent, as
-a rule, the total number of cases in the state during the
-year. Comparative studies should, therefore, be based not
-on the number of mental cases in the hospitals at any
-one given time, but on the total number under treatment
-during the year. This would indicate <em>an incidence of
-mental diseases of 566.98 per 100,000 of the population</em>.</p>
-
-<p>On January 1, 1916, there were 147 state and federal
-institutions for the care and treatment of mental diseases
-in the United States, as shown by the Census
-Bureau reports. There were at this same time twenty-seven
-institutions for the feebleminded, nine for epileptics,
-three for inebriates, forty-five for tuberculosis,
-twenty-eight for the blind, thirty-three for the deaf,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-twelve for the blind and deaf and eighty-four for the
-dependent classes.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>The appropriations for the maintenance of these institutions
-for 1915 amounted to $33,557,058.29. This
-constituted 7.6 per cent of the appropriations made by
-those states for all purposes. In Massachusetts it represented
-14.8 per cent, in New Hampshire 10.1, in New
-York 12.7, in Ohio 12, in Indiana 10.7, in Illinois 13.4,
-and in a number of other states over ten per cent of the
-appropriations for all purposes. It was equivalent to an
-average of $431.16 per million of the total assessed valuation
-of these states. In Massachusetts it was as high
-as $653.62 and in New York $567.37. This means thirty-three
-cents per capita for all states, eighty-four cents for
-Massachusetts and sixty-eight cents for New York.</p>
-
-<p>The actual expenditure for the maintenance of these
-institutions was $36,312,662.20. For purposes of comparison,
-attention should be called to the fact that the
-maintenance of the tuberculosis hospitals of the United
-States for the same year cost $3,539,454.95, institutions
-for criminals $21,244,892.00, for the feebleminded
-$3,341,442.85, for epileptics $1,345,821.57, for the blind
-$1,066,973.14, for the deaf $1,893,490.09 and for the
-dependent classes $9,675,932.37.</p>
-
-<p>The value of the property invested in the state and
-federal hospitals for mental diseases in 1916 was estimated
-at $187,028,728.00. The valuation of these institutions
-per 100,000 of the population was $184,795.81. This
-does not include establishments for mental defectives.
-The average value per patient was $938.43. In Massachusetts
-it was $1,097.85 and in New York $1,039.85. In
-Arkansas it was as high as $2,264.00. The total acreage
-of land was 109,503.2, an average of 744.9 acres per hospital.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-There were 33,124 persons employed, an average
-of 226.9 for each institution. This represented one
-employee for every six patients.</p>
-
-<p>The census taken by the National Committee for
-Mental Hygiene<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> in 1920 shows 156 state hospitals
-for mental diseases, two federal institutions, 125 county
-or city hospitals and twenty-one institutions of a temporary
-care type. In the public and private hospitals
-for mental diseases on January 1, 1920, there were 232,680
-patients under treatment. Of these, 200,109 were in
-public and 9,238 in private hospitals. This represented
-an increase of 8,723 in two years. It is interesting to
-note that city and county institutions cared for 21,584
-persons.</p>
-
-<p>The first authoritative information relative to the
-institution care of mental diseases was obtained from
-the federal census reports of 1880. In that year there
-were 40,942 patients in the public hospitals. In 1890
-there were 74,028; in 1904, 150,151; in 1910, 187,791; in
-1917, 232,873 and in 1918, 239,820. The rate per 100,000
-of the population increased from 81.6 in 1880 to 229.6 in
-1918. From 1910 to 1918 the general population increased
-13.6 per cent and the hospital population 27.7
-per cent. The rate per 100,000 of the population in institutions
-in Massachusetts<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> on January 1, 1920, was
-373.8, in New York 374.6, in Connecticut 317.8, in Iowa
-248.1, in Wisconsin 300.6, in California 297.2, in Pennsylvania
-215.2, in Ohio 212.1, in Illinois 229.5 and in
-Michigan 210.8. The admission rate per 100,000 of the
-population in 1917 was 151.6 in Massachusetts, 109.2 in
-Illinois, 124.8 in Montana, 97.3 in New York, 80.9 in Connecticut
-and 85.7 in California.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The cost of maintenance in the state hospitals increased
-to $43,926,888.88 in 1917 with an average per
-capita cost of $207.28. The number of cases cared for
-in some of the more populous states is of interest. On
-January 1, 1920, the institution population of New York
-was 38,903, Pennsylvania 18,764, Ohio 12,217, Illinois
-14,884, Massachusetts 14,399 and California 10,184.</p>
-
-<p>Based on the estimated population of Massachusetts
-on July 1, 1920 (3,869,098), the 1,475 deaths in institutions
-for mental diseases would represent a death rate of
-38.12 per 100,000 of the population. The death rate for
-other diseases for that year was: diphtheria 15.4,
-measles 9.0, pulmonary tuberculosis 96.7, typhoid fever
-2.5, whooping cough 14.0, scarlet fever 5.5, syphilis
-5.8, lobar pneumonia 71.9 and influenza 43.9. The importance
-to be attached, however, to such comparisons is
-very uncertain at best. From the standpoint of social
-and economic importance to the community there is another
-factor under consideration which should not be
-overlooked. The duration of other diseases, as a general
-rule, is comparatively short. A study of over ten
-thousand deaths in New York state hospitals for mental
-diseases shows the average hospital residence of these
-cases to have been over six years. At the rate of admission
-to public institutions for 1917 (62,898) and the average
-per capita cost for that year ($207.28) the care of
-persons admitted annually, during their years of hospital
-life, would mean an expenditure of over seventy-eight
-millions of dollars.</p>
-
-<p>If we figured the earning capacity of the 62,000 persons
-admitted to institutions for mental diseases in the
-United States as averaging only one thousand dollars
-per year, it would represent an economic loss to the country
-of sixty-two millions of dollars annually. Estimated
-in the same way, the total population of the hospitals
-would represent the staggering sum of nearly two hundred
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-and forty million dollars. This, of course, does not
-take into consideration at all the cost of maintenance or
-the property investment represented by hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>To avoid any possibility of confusion, no reference
-has been made heretofore to statistical studies of mental
-deficiency or epilepsy. From a public health point of
-view, however, and as social and economic problems, they
-are questions which cannot be disregarded in a consideration
-of mental diseases. As a matter of fact, they
-are very closely correlated in many ways. A survey
-made by the National Committee for Mental Hygiene
-shows that on January 1, 1920, there were in this country
-thirty-two state institutions for mental defectives, eleven
-admitting both feebleminded and epileptics and twenty
-exclusively for the latter class.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> In addition to this,
-one city institution was reported. Of the private hospitals
-twenty-seven care for the feebleminded only, and
-six for epileptics, while nineteen admit either of these
-classes. The total number of mental defectives in institutions
-on January 1, 1920, was 40,519. At that time
-34,836 were in state, 2,732 in other public institutions and
-2,951 in private hospitals. In the following states they
-are cared for in hospitals for mental diseases, no other
-provisions having been made for their treatment:&mdash;Alabama,
-Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi,
-Nevada, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah and
-West Virgina. The states reporting the largest number
-are New York 5,762, Pennsylvania 4,281, Massachusetts
-3,192, Illinois 3,147, Ohio 2,435, Michigan 1,849, Iowa
-1,704, New Jersey 1,762, Wisconsin 1,624, Minnesota
-1,502, Indiana 1,264 and Missouri 1,047. At the same
-time there were 14,937 epileptics under treatment, 13,223
-in state, 859 in other public institutions and 855 in private
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-hospitals. Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Nebraska,
-New Mexico and Washington take care of the epileptics
-in their hospitals for mental diseases. The intimate
-relation between mental diseases and epilepsy is shown
-by the fact that as nearly as can be determined at this
-time approximately thirty per cent of all of the epileptics
-in our state institutions have been committed as
-insane. This, however, nowhere nearly includes all of
-the cases which actually show mental disorders of one
-kind or another. The states showing the largest numbers
-of epileptics are New York with 1,683, Ohio 1,680 and
-Massachusetts 1,227. No other states report over one
-thousand, although Michigan and Pennsylvania have
-over eight hundred and Illinois and Missouri over seven
-hundred.</p>
-
-<p>Although the incidence of mental as compared with
-other diseases prevalent in the community cannot be
-established with absolute accuracy, sufficient evidence
-has been presented to warrant the statement that from
-the standpoint of the public health we are dealing with
-no other problem of equal importance today. The state
-care of mental defects, epilepsy, tuberculosis and the
-deaf, dumb and blind is, for various reasons, of much less
-consequence to the community than the hospital treatment
-of mental diseases. The defective, delinquent,
-criminal and dependent classes combined do not equal
-in number the population housed in our state hospitals
-for mental diseases. Nor does the number of cases cared
-for in the general hospitals of the state, county or municipal
-type compare in any way with the mental cases
-coming under state or federal supervision. It can, I
-think, be said without any fear of contradiction that no
-other disease or group of diseases is of equal importance
-from a social or economic point of view. Perhaps
-nothing emphasizes this fact more strongly than the
-report recently issued from the Surgeon General's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-office relative to the second examination of the first million
-recruits drafted in 1917. Twelve per cent of these
-were rejected on account of nervous or mental diseases.
-The number disqualified for service finally reached a
-total of over sixty-seven thousand.</p>
-
-<p>Mental integrity is now looked upon as a military
-necessity and is insisted upon as one of the important
-requirements of the soldier. It has been demonstrated
-conclusively that only men of the most stable mental
-equilibrium can withstand the stress and strain of modern
-methods of warfare. Nor are peacetime requirements
-any less exacting. In commercial competition the
-law of the survival of the fittest is practically absolute.
-The feebleminded often inherit wealth, but they rarely
-acquire it. Vaccination for the prevention of smallpox
-is compulsory and the isolation of communicable diseases
-dangerous to the public welfare is rigidly enforced.
-At the same time we allow many paranoics the freedom
-of the country and they occasionally assassinate a President.
-Psychopaths are not infrequently elected to public
-office and epileptics are not disqualified from driving
-high-powered and dangerous motor vehicles. The engineers
-of our fastest trains must not be color blind,
-but they occasionally are victims of the most fatal of
-all mental diseases,&mdash;general paresis. The navigating
-officer of a transatlantic liner, responsible for the lives of
-hundreds of passengers, must pass an examination for a
-license, but he may be dominated by delusions which
-escape observation because they are not looked for. Important
-trials, where human lives were at stake, have
-been presided over by insane judges. Army officers in
-command of troops in time of war have been influenced
-by imaginary voices. Insurance companies issue large
-policies to individuals suffering from incipient mental
-diseases which could be detected by even a superficial
-psychiatric examination.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Serious consideration should be given to the advisability
-of subjecting to a careful mental examination such
-persons, at least, as are to be charged with an entire
-responsibility for the lives of others. It is a question as
-to whether this procedure is not indicated in the case of
-other important public trusts where the interest of the
-community should be safeguarded.</p>
-
-<p>The correlation of psychiatry and psychology as
-scientific aids to industrial efficiency promises to open
-up entirely new and important sociological fields of research
-which have only recently attracted attention.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
-This is a subject of far reaching importance. The extent
-to which the industrial classes of the country are
-affected is shown by the following analysis of the occupations
-represented by 104,013 admissions to New York
-state hospitals: 1. Professional&mdash;(clergy, military and
-naval officers, physicians, lawyers, architects, artists,
-authors, civil engineers, surveyors, etc.) 1,926 or 1.8 per
-cent; 2. Commercial&mdash;(bankers, merchants, accountants,
-clerks, salesmen, shopkeepers, shopmen, stenographers,
-typewriters, etc.) 7,572 or 7.2 per cent; 3. Agricultural&mdash;(farmers,
-gardeners, etc.) 5,942 or 5.7 per cent; 4. Mechanics&mdash;at
-Outdoor Vocations&mdash;(blacksmiths, carpenters,
-enginefitters, sawyers, painters, etc.) 8,564 or 8.2
-per cent; 5. Mechanics at Sedentary Vocations&mdash;(bootmakers,
-bookbinders, compositors, tailors, weavers,
-bakers, etc.) 7,501 or 7.2 per cent; 6. Domestic Service&mdash;(waiters,
-cooks, servants, etc.) 21,037 or 20.2 per cent;
-7. Educational and Higher Domestic Duties&mdash;(governesses,
-teachers, students, housekeepers, nurses, etc.)
-21,861 or 21 per cent; 8. Commercial&mdash;(shopkeepers,
-saleswomen, stenographers, typewriters, etc.) 1,140 or
-1.09 per cent; 9. Employed at Sedentary Occupations&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-(tailoresses, seamstresses, bookbinders, factory workers,
-etc.) 4,310 or 4.1 per cent; 10. Miners, Seamen, etc., 581
-or .56 per cent; 11. Prostitutes, 81 or .08 per cent; 12.
-Laborers, 12,962 or 12.4 per cent; No occupation, 7,820 or
-7.5 per cent; Unascertained, 2,715 or 2.6 per cent.
-<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
-This certainly indicates an enormous economic loss to the
-community.</p>
-
-<p>The intimate relation between mental diseases, alcoholism,
-ignorance, poverty, prostitution, criminality,
-mental defects, etc., suggests social and economic problems
-of far reaching importance, each one meriting separate
-and special consideration. These problems, while
-perhaps essentially sociological in origin, have at the
-same time an important educational bearing, invade the
-realm of psychology and depend largely, if not entirely,
-upon psychiatry for a solution.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE EVOLUTION OF THE MODERN HOSPITAL</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">The medical treatment of mental diseases had its inception,
-in this country, in the wards of the Philadelphia
-Hospital, established in 1732 and referred to officially
-for over a century as an almshouse. It included an infirmary
-for the "sick and insane," although it apparently
-had no distinct and separate hospital department
-for many years. "In 1742," to use the words of Dr. D.
-Hayes Agnew, "it was fulfilling a varied routine of
-beneficent functions in affording shelter, support and employment
-for the poor and indigent, a hospital for the
-sick, and an asylum for the idiotic, the insane and the
-orphan. It was dispensing its acts of mercy and blessing
-when Pennsylvania was yet a province and her inhabitants
-the loyal subjects of Great Britain." In 1772 it
-housed as many as three hundred and fifty persons. In
-1769 the General Assembly passed an act authorizing the
-"Managers of the Contributions for the Relief and Employment
-of the Poor," who had charge of the almshouse,
-to issue bills of credit for the purpose of relieving their
-indebtedness. This paper currency was issued in three
-denominations&mdash;one shilling, two shillings and a half
-crown. The law provided that counterfeiters or persons
-altering the denomination of these bills should be "sentenced
-to the pillory, have both his or her ears cut off and
-nailed to the pillory and be publicly whipped on his or
-her back with thirty-nine lashes, well laid on, and, moreover,
-every such offender shall forfeit the sum of one
-hundred pounds, to be levied on his or her land, tenements,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-goods and chattels."<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> This certainly must have
-discouraged counterfeiting. It was not until after the
-institution was removed to the Hamilton estate in
-Blockley (now a part of West Philadelphia) in 1834 that
-it came to be known as the "Philadelphia Hospital and
-Almshouse," although there was no change made in its
-organization or functions. In 1902, after one hundred
-and seventy years of continuous existence, it was finally
-divided officially for administrative purposes into The
-Philadelphia Home or Hospital for the Indigent, The
-Philadelphia General Hospital and The Philadelphia
-Hospital for the Insane. At that time the hospital was,
-as it is today, the largest on the American continent.
-The institution, which has admitted mental cases uninterruptedly
-since 1732, had over seventeen hundred patients
-in the department for the insane. In 1917 this
-number had increased to nearly three thousand.</p>
-
-<p>One of the reasons set forth by sundry petitioners in
-1751 for a "small Provincial Hospital" in Philadelphia,
-which at that time had made provision for the care of
-indigent cases only, was "THAT with the Numbers of
-People, the Number of Lunaticks or Persons distempered
-in Mind and deprived of their rational Faculties, hath
-greatly increased in this Province. That some of them
-going at large are a Terror to their Neighbours, who are
-daily apprehensive of the Violences they may commit;
-And others are continually wasting their Substance, to
-the great Injury of themselves and Families, ill disposed
-Persons wickedly taking Advantage of their unhappy
-Condition, and drawing them into unreasonable Bargains,
-etc. That few or none of them are so sensible of
-their Condition, as to submit voluntarily to the Treatment
-their respective Cases require, and therefore continue
-in the same deplorable State during their Lives;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-whereas it has been found, by the Experience of many
-Years, that above two Thirds of the Mad People received
-into Bethlehem Hospital, and there treated properly, have
-been perfectly cured."<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> This resulted eventually in
-the opening of the Pennsylvania Hospital in 1752. This
-institution is a general hospital supported by private
-funds and has always received mental cases. A separate
-department for mental diseases was established in West
-Philadelphia in 1841. Before this was done considerable
-difficulty was experienced on account of the annoyance
-of the patients by curious-minded citizens of the neighborhood.
-This developed into such a nuisance in 1760
-that it was suggested "That a suitable Pallisade Fence,
-either of Iron or Wood, the Iron being preferred, shall
-be erected in Order to prevent the Disturbance which
-is given to the Lunatics confined in the Cells by the great
-Number of People who frequently resort and converse
-with them."<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> It was also deemed advisable to employ
-"Two Constables or other proper Persons, to attend at
-such times as are necessary to prevent this Inconvenience
-until ye Fence is erected." The public was notified later
-"that such persons who come out of curiosity to visit
-the house should pay a sum of money, a Groat at least,
-for admittance."<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> The Pennsylvania Hospital has
-played a very important part in the history of the care
-and treatment of mental diseases in this country. In
-1919 it had over three hundred patients.</p>
-
-<p>The first institution designed and used exclusively for
-mental diseases in this country was the Eastern State
-Hospital at Williamsburg, Virginia. It was incorporated
-by the House of Burgesses in 1768 and opened for patients
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-on October 12, 1773. It is interesting to note that
-the act of incorporation, except in the title, makes no use
-of the word lunatic, refers frequently to the care and
-treatment of the patients, authorizes the appointment of
-physicians and nurses, and specifically designates the
-institution as a hospital and not an asylum. The original
-building was one hundred feet long by thirty-two
-feet two inches wide. During the first year thirty-six
-patients were admitted. The first pay patient was received
-in 1774 at a rate of fifteen pounds per annum. An
-allowance of twenty-five pounds per year was made by
-the legislature for the maintenance and support of each
-person admitted. Visiting physicians prescribed for the
-patients, and the "keepers" for the first few years were
-not graduates in medicine. The superintendents were,
-however, physicians after 1841. Known for many years
-as the "Publick Hospital," the legislature made the mistake
-of changing this designation to The Eastern Lunatic
-Asylum in 1841 and it was not until 1894 that it again
-officially became a hospital. Virginia opened its second
-institution, The Western State Hospital for the Insane,
-at Staunton on July 25, 1828. Its third hospital was
-opened at Weston on September 9, 1859. Virginia is thus
-entitled to the credit of being the first commonwealth to
-furnish state care for mental cases and make adequate
-provision for them.</p>
-
-<p>The next step in the evolution of hospital treatment
-of mental diseases was taken by Maryland in incorporating
-a hospital for "The Relief of Indigent Sick Persons
-and for the Reception and Care of Lunatics" in 1797.
-The hospital was formally opened in 1798 under the management
-of the city of Baltimore, which leased the establishment
-in 1808 to two physicians, who conducted it as a
-private institution until 1834. It then reverted to the
-state and was operated as the Maryland Hospital. The
-institution was removed to Catonsville in 1872 and is<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-now known as the Spring Grove State Hospital, the
-Johns Hopkins Hospital occupying the site of the original
-building in Baltimore. Another interesting event
-in the history of this institution was the founding of
-what subsequently became the Mount Hope Retreat by
-the Sisters of Charity, who withdrew from the Maryland
-Hospital in 1840.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest hospital care of mental diseases in New
-York was in the wards of the New York Hospital which
-was opened in 1791. A separate building for mental
-cases was ready for the reception of patients in 1808.
-The total number of cases treated up to July 1820 was
-1,553. The Bloomingdale Asylum replaced this in 1821,
-on a piece of property which now belongs in part to
-Columbia University. Public patients were cared for at
-the expense of the state until the opening of the New
-York City Asylum in 1839. Church services were inaugurated
-in 1819. The hospital buildings furnished accommodations
-for about three hundred patients. In 1894
-the property on Bloomingdale Road was abandoned and
-the hospital removed to White Plains in Westchester
-County. It is still known as the Bloomingdale Hospital
-and is supported entirely by public contributions and
-the income derived from the care of patients. It has
-about three hundred and fifty beds.</p>
-
-<p>The activities of the "Religious Society of Friends,"
-which were indirectly responsible probably for the inception
-of the Pennsylvania Hospital, ultimately led to the
-establishment of the Friends' Asylum for the Insane at
-Frankford, Pennsylvania, in 1817. It was under sectarian
-control until 1834, when its doors were thrown
-open to all, without regard to religious belief. It claims
-to be the first institution "erected on this side of the
-Atlantic in which a chain was never used for the confinement
-of a patient."<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> The hospital is still in a flourishing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-condition and has accommodations for over two
-hundred patients.</p>
-
-<p>Massachusetts at the beginning of the nineteenth century
-had no hospitals of any kind. In 1764, on the death
-of Thomas Handcock, it was found that provision had
-been made in his will for the establishment of a hospital
-for mental diseases in Boston. An expenditure of six
-hundred pounds was authorized for the purpose of
-"erecting and furnishing a convenient House for the
-reception and more comfortable keeping of such unhappy
-persons as it shall please God, in His Providence,
-to deprive of their reason in any part of this Province."
-<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href=
-"#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
-The Selectmen of Boston declined this legacy
-on the grounds that there were not enough mental
-cases in the vicinity to warrant the existence of
-such an establishment. This proved to be an error
-of judgment on their part. In 1811 the Massachusetts
-General Hospital was incorporated and a fund
-of over $93,000 was subscribed for building purposes.
-As it was deemed more urgent, the department for mental
-diseases in Charlestown was opened first. It was
-ready for the reception of patients on October 6, 1818,
-when it admitted a young man supposed to be possessed
-of a devil. This department became the McLean Asylum
-in 1826 as the result of a legacy of $25,000 left to the
-institution by a Boston merchant of that name. The
-corporation finally received in all an amount approximating
-$120,000 from the McLean estate. As early as
-1822 the first published report of the hospital<a name="FNanchor_15_15"
-id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> called
-attention to the fact that the various amusements offered
-the patients included "draughts, chess, backgammon,
-ninepins, swinging, sawing wood, gardening, reading,
-writing, music, etc." A carriage and pair of horses for
-the use of patients was purchased in 1828. In 1835 the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-first pianos and billiard tables were installed and a
-library of one hundred and twenty volumes placed in the
-wards. Hot water heating was introduced in 1848. It
-is interesting to note that in 1827 the visiting committee
-reported that the rates for the maintenance of patients
-should not be less than three dollars or more than twelve
-dollars per week. In 1882 the McLean Hospital established
-the first training school for nurses connected with
-any institution for mental diseases in this country. The
-first class was graduated in 1886. In 1895 the hospital
-was removed to Waverley, Massachusetts. A chemical
-laboratory was opened in 1900 and a psychological laboratory
-in 1904. Hydrotherapy was first used in 1899,
-and a gymnasium was built in 1904. In 1913 the hospital
-owned three hundred and seventeen acres of land and
-had a capacity of two hundred and twenty beds, with a
-plant valued at nearly two million dollars.</p>
-
-<p>The first provision for the care of mental diseases in
-Connecticut was a direct result of the activities of the
-State Medical Society. It was on their petition that the
-Hartford Retreat was chartered in 1822. Over two
-thousand persons subscribed to a fund for the opening
-of the hospital. These subscriptions included "$30 payable
-in medicine," "One gross New London bilious pills,
-price $30" and two lottery tickets.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> About fourteen
-thousand dollars was subscribed in all, the citizens of
-Hartford contributing four thousand. The hospital
-building, designed to accommodate forty patients, was
-opened on April 1, 1824, and has always been conducted
-on an unusually high plane. It now averages about one
-hundred and seventy-five patients.</p>
-
-<p>Mental cases were first provided with hospital care
-in Kentucky when the Eastern State Hospital was opened
-in Lexington on May 1, 1824. Governor Adams, who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-suggested the establishment of this institution, in a message
-written in 1821 expressed the opinion that it would
-be of great benefit to the students of Transylvania University,
-"which would in time repay the obligation by
-useful discoveries in the treatment of mental maladies."</p>
-
-<p>The State Hospital at Columbia, South Carolina, was
-opened in December, 1828. A curious fact in connection
-with its history is that in 1829 the management, having
-received no patients as yet, advertised for them in the
-newspapers of South Carolina and adjoining states.</p>
-
-<p>In 1829 the necessity of making further provision for
-mental diseases in Massachusetts became the subject of
-a legislative investigation and a committee was appointed
-"to examine and ascertain the practicability and
-expediency of erecting or procuring, at the expense of
-the Commonwealth, an asylum for the safe keeping of
-lunatics and persons furiously mad."<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> The report
-of this committee, of which Horace Mann was Chairman,
-is exceedingly interesting. The following is an
-<span class="no-break">illustration:&mdash;</span>"To him whose mind is alienated, a prison is a
-tomb, and within its walls he must suffer as one who
-awakes to life in the solitude of the grave. Existence
-and the capacity for pain alone are left him. From every
-former source of pleasure or contentment he is violently
-sequestered. Every former habit is abruptly broken off.
-No medical skill seconds the efforts of nature for his
-recovery, or breaks the strength of pain when it seizes
-him with convulsive grasp. No friends relieve each other
-in solacing the weariness of protracted disease. No
-assiduous affection guards the avenues of approaching
-disquietude. He is alike removed from all the occupations
-of health, and from all the attentions everywhere
-but within his homeless abode bestowed upon sickness.
-The solitary cell, the noisome atmosphere, the unmitigated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-cold and the untempered heat, are of themselves
-sufficient soon to derange every vital function of the body,
-and this only aggravates the derangement of his mind.
-On every side is raised up an insurmountable barrier
-against his recovery. Cut off from all the charities of
-life, endued with quickened sensibilities to pain, and
-perpetually stung by annoyances which, though individually
-small, rise by constant accumulation to agonies
-almost beyond the power of mortal sufferance; if his
-exiled mind in its devious wanderings ever approach the
-light by which it was once cheered and directed, it sees
-everything unwelcoming, everything repulsive and hostile,
-and is driven away into returnless banishment."<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>
-The investigation conducted by this committee led to
-the establishment of the Worcester Lunatic Hospital,
-later the Worcester State Hospital, opened on January
-19, 1833. The original building was designed to care for
-one hundred and twenty patients. After many years of
-agitation on the part of the public, the hospital was
-removed to a site overlooking Lake Quinsigamond in the
-outskirts of Worcester in 1877. It was soon found that
-it was impracticable to dispense with the use of the old
-building on Summer Street and it became the Worcester
-Insane Asylum, later the Worcester State Asylum, and
-finally the Grafton State Hospital. In 1919 it again
-became a part of the Worcester State Hospital. The
-original building is in excellent condition today and
-promises an indefinite continuation of an unusual career
-of usefulness. Many men destined to occupy positions of
-importance in the psychiatric world were trained within
-its walls.</p>
-
-<p>The death of a prominent politician in 1806 is said
-to have led indirectly to the establishment of the first
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-hospital for mental diseases in Vermont.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> His medical
-advisers treated him for some form of mental alienation
-by submerging him in water until he became unconscious.
-It was thought that this "would divert his
-mind and, by breaking the chain of unhappy associations,
-thus remove the cause of his disease." As this plan
-failed he was given opium as "the proper agent for the
-stupefaction of the life forces." In spite of this vigorous
-treatment he died. The immediate event which
-made possible the incorporation of the Vermont Asylum
-for the Insane in 1835 was a legacy of ten thousand dollars
-rendered available for this purpose by the will of
-Mrs. Anna Marsh of Hinsdale. The hospital was
-opened in Brattleboro in 1836 and became the Brattleboro
-Retreat after the establishment of the State Hospital
-at Waterbury. The state care of mental diseases
-began in Ohio with the establishment of the Columbus
-State Hospital, which was opened on November 30, 1838.
-This was the first of a number of institutions now under
-the supervision of the Ohio Board of Administration.</p>
-
-<p>The study of the development of the state hospital
-system of care now takes us back to Massachusetts. Notwithstanding
-the fact that the state already had two
-institutions for mental cases, McLean and the Worcester
-Lunatic Hospital, further accommodations were urgently
-indicated. This was largely on account of the needs of
-the metropolitan population centering in the city of Boston.
-To meet this situation the city established a hospital
-of its own in South Boston in 1839,&mdash;the first
-municipal institution for this exclusive purpose in America.
-Originally known as the Boston Lunatic Hospital
-and afterwards as the Boston Insane Hospital, it finally
-became the Boston State Hospital in December, 1908.
-Charles Dickens on the occasion of his visit to America
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-was very profoundly impressed by the hospital and made
-the following references to it in <span class="no-break">1842<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>:&mdash;</span>"At South
-Boston, as it is called, in a situation excellently adapted
-for the purpose, several charitable institutions are clustered
-together. One of these is the hospital for the
-insane; admirably conducted on those enlightened principles
-of conciliation and kindness which 20 years ago
-would have been worse than heretical, and which have
-been acted upon with so much success in our own pauper
-asylum at Hanwell...." "At every meal, moral influence
-alone restrains the more violent among them from
-cutting the throats of the rest; but the effect of that
-influence is reduced to an absolute certainty, and is found,
-even as a measure of restraint, to say nothing of it as a
-means of cure, a hundred times more efficacious than all
-the straight waistcoats, fetters and handcuffs that ignorance,
-prejudice and cruelty have manufactured since the
-creation of the world." ... "In the labor department
-every patient is as freely trusted with the tools of his
-trade as if he were a sane man. In the garden and on the
-farm they work with spades, rakes and hoes. For amusement
-they walk, run, fish, paint, read, and ride out to take
-the air in carriages provided for the purpose. They have
-among themselves a sewing society to make clothes for
-the poor, which holds meetings, passes resolutions, never
-comes to fisticuffs or bowie-knives as sane assemblies
-have been known to do elsewhere; and conducts all its
-proceedings with the greatest decorum. The irritability
-which would otherwise be expended on their own flesh,
-clothes and furniture is dissipated in these pursuits.
-They are cheerful, tranquil and healthy." ... "It is
-obvious that one great feature of this system is the
-inculcation and encouragement, even among such unhappy
-persons, of a decent self-respect." The institution
-was removed to the Dorchester district of Boston in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-1895, where it now houses in the neighborhood of two
-thousand patients. The Boston State Hospital was the
-first institution of its kind in the United States to establish
-a separate psychopathic department, which was
-opened in 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Influenced doubtless by the attention given to this
-subject in other states, Maine opened its first state hospital
-at Augusta in 1840. There were between two and
-three hundred mental cases in the state at that time. A
-second hospital was opened at Bangor in 1889. This
-humanitarian movement naturally extended to New
-Hampshire. Governor Dinsmore in 1832<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> called attention
-to the condition of the insane, seventy-six of whom
-were in confinement. Of this number seven were in cells
-or cages, six in chains and irons and four in jail. Of
-those not in confinement at the time, some had been handcuffed
-previously, while others had been in cells or
-chained. After much unavoidable delay the New Hampshire
-State Hospital was opened at Concord on October
-29, 1842. The next hospital development appeared in
-Georgia. After an active campaign inaugurated by the
-physicians of the state and continued for several years,
-the Georgia State Sanitarium was opened in Milledgeville
-in December, 1842. It now houses over four thousand
-patients.</p>
-
-<p>By this time it became evident that further procedures
-on behalf of the persons requiring treatment for
-mental diseases in New York were imperative. The
-Bloomingdale Hospital, although taxed to its utmost
-capacity, was not able to meet the needs of the situation.
-In 1830 the population of the state had increased to
-nearly two million. The report of a legislative committee
-showed that there were 2,695 insane persons in the state
-in 1830, with hospital accommodations at Bloomingdale
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-and one other private hospital at Hudson for only two
-hundred and fifty of these cases. An extensive system of
-state care was inaugurated by the opening of the Utica
-State Hospital on January 16, 1843. In addition to
-numerous other industries and occupations, a printing
-office was established in the hospital and the publication
-of the "American Journal of Insanity" was undertaken
-in 1844. This was the first journal in the world to be devoted
-exclusively to the subject of mental diseases.
-"The Opal," edited, published and printed by the patients
-of the hospital, was started at the same time. In
-the early days, strong rooms, padded cells and mechanical
-restraint of all kinds were used extensively. The
-"Utica Crib" has received a great deal of attention.
-This consisted of an ordinary ward bed enclosed in
-wooden slats, making it impossible for the patient to
-escape. These were eliminated for all time by Dr. G.
-Alder Blumer in 1887. Attendants were first required to
-wear uniforms in 1887. During the following year
-female nurses were assigned for the first time to male
-wards. Annual field day exercises for the benefit of the
-patients have been held since 1887. Baseball games,
-steamboat excursions, Fourth of July celebrations and
-Christmas entertainments have been in vogue since 1888.
-With the development of a large department on the
-"Marcy" site, nine miles from the city, the Utica State
-Hospital promises to add new accomplishments to an
-already dignified history.</p>
-
-<p>The early care of mental cases in Rhode Island, as
-shown by a report to the legislature by Thomas R.
-Hazard in 1851, was perhaps no worse than that of other
-states, although the conditions he described so graphically
-have not been attributed to other New England
-communities by historians. The following extract from
-a codicil to the will of Nicholas Brown, who died in 1843,
-is proof of the fact that this unfortunate state of affairs<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-had not entirely escaped notice<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>:&mdash;"And whereas it has
-long been deeply impressed on my mind that an insane
-or lunatic hospital or retreat for the insane should be
-established upon a firm and permanent basis, under an
-act of the Legislature, where that unhappy portion of
-our fellow beings who are, by the visitation of Providence,
-deprived of their reason, may find a safe retreat
-and be provided with whatever may be most conducive
-to their comfort and to their restoration to a sound state
-of mind: Therefore, for the purpose of aiding an object
-so desirable and in the hope that such an establishment
-may soon be commenced, I do hereby set apart and give
-and bequeath the sum of $30,000 towards the erection or
-endowment of an insane or lunatic hospital or retreat for
-the insane, or by whatever other name it may be called,
-to be located in Providence or its vicinity." Supplemental
-contributions by Cyrus Butler made it possible
-for the incorporators to found the Butler Hospital in
-Providence. The first patients were received on December
-1, 1847.</p>
-
-<p>More than any other one person, Miss Dorothea L. Dix
-of Massachusetts was undoubtedly directly responsible
-for the inauguration of the state care of mental diseases
-in this country. She is credited with having memorialized
-twenty-two different state legislatures on this subject.
-One of her first accomplishments consisted in inducing
-the New Jersey legislature to make an appropriation
-for the establishment of the state hospital at
-Trenton. This institution was opened in 1848, after some
-of the hardest campaigning that Miss Dix conducted.
-The last years of her life were spent as an honored guest
-of the hospital and she died there in 1887 at the advanced
-age of eighty-five.</p>
-
-<p>Indiana inaugurated a system of state care by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-establishment of the Central Hospital for the Insane in
-1848. The East Louisiana Hospital at Jackson was
-opened in the same year. Missouri made its first provision
-for mental cases by opening a hospital at Fulton
-in 1852. Notwithstanding the fact that the first hospitals
-for mental diseases in this country were located in
-Philadelphia, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania did
-not make any provision for a state institution until the
-State Hospital at Harrisburg was opened in 1851. This
-was only undertaken after a vigorous campaign on the
-part of Dorothea Dix had made some legislative action
-almost imperative. This is probably the only hospital in
-the country which has found it necessary to demolish all
-of the original buildings and replace them by others. In
-1847 Miss Dix visited Tennessee and started a movement
-which resulted in the opening of The Central Hospital
-for the Insane at Nashville, the first institution of the
-kind in the state. California entered the state hospital
-field in 1853 with the establishment of an institution at
-Stockton. The St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington,
-D.C., the first federal institution for mental diseases,
-was opened for patients in 1855. It receives cases from
-the United States Government Services and from the
-District of Columbia. Dorothea Dix was largely instrumental
-in its origin. The St. Elizabeths Hospital was an
-early invader of the field of scientific research. A pathologist
-was appointed in 1883. It was one of the first
-institutions to use hydrotherapy extensively. It now
-cares for nearly four thousand patients. Mississippi
-established its first state hospital for mental diseases
-in 1856, North Carolina in 1856, West Virginia in 1859,
-Michigan in 1859, Wisconsin in 1860, Texas in 1861,
-Kansas in 1866, Minnesota in 1866, Connecticut in 1868,
-Rhode Island in 1870 and Vermont in 1891. The Sheppard
-and Enoch Pratt Hospital, a well known private
-institution in Baltimore, was also opened in 1891.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It is hardly worth while at this time to emphasize
-the fact that the necessity of providing adequate facilities
-for the care and treatment of mental diseases, a
-problem which received little consideration of any kind
-for many years, gradually led to the elaboration of an
-extensive system of state hospitals. These are to be
-found now in every part of the country. They have long
-since passed through the purely custodial stage and have
-developed into highly specialized modern hospitals of
-most advanced type. Their function is to provide proper
-treatment for persons who cannot for financial or other
-reasons be cared for in the private hospitals which are
-to be found in almost all localities. These institutions,
-originating in Virginia in 1773, now represent one of the
-most important activities conducted by any state government.
-The extent of the field which they cover is
-illustrated by the fact that Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska,
-North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Washington,
-West Virginia and Wisconsin each maintain three
-state hospitals for mental diseases; Iowa, Maryland,
-Missouri and Virginia each have four institutions of this
-type, Minnesota five, California, Indiana and Michigan
-six, Pennsylvania seven, Ohio and Illinois nine, Massachusetts
-twelve and New York fifteen. In addition to
-this eight other states have two hospitals each and seventeen
-find one such institution sufficient for their needs.
-It is worthy of note that every state without any exception
-has now recognized the necessity of making provision
-for the care and treatment of mental diseases.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">LEGISLATION AND METHODS OF
-ADMINISTRATION</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">The administration of the earlier hospitals for mental
-diseases was placed very wisely in the hands of local
-boards of directors, managers or trustees. These were
-made up of persons prominent in the community in
-which they lived, well known as having a keen interest in
-humanitarian movements, and fully deserving of the
-confidence reposed in them by the public. They received
-no compensation other than the satisfaction of
-having served in a worthy cause. The state hospital at
-Williamsburg, Virginia, the first of its kind in America,
-was controlled by a court of directors which was made up
-of some of the most prominent Virginians of colonial
-days. It included Thomas Nelson, Jr., a signer of the
-Declaration of Independence who served with distinction
-in the Revolutionary War, Peyton Randolph, the
-President of the first Continental Congress, and George
-Wythe, the preceptor in law of both Marshall and Jefferson,
-as well as a signer of the Declaration of Independence
-and professor of law at William and Mary
-College, together with various other distinguished citizens,
-some perhaps of less prominence, but all men of the
-highest standing in Virginia. The first "court" consisted
-of fifteen members. The second state institution,
-the Maryland Hospital, under the management of the city
-of Baltimore for some years, was eventually placed
-under the control of a board of visitors in 1828. Kentucky's
-first hospital was from the beginning in the
-charge of a board of ten commissioners. When the second<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-Virginia institution was opened at Staunton, the
-form of organization adopted at Williamsburg was duplicated
-and a court of directors appointed. There were,
-however, thirteen instead of fifteen members. The state
-hospital at Columbia, South Carolina, was originally, and
-still is, under a board of regents. The Massachusetts
-hospitals, dating from the opening of Worcester in 1833,
-have always had trustees. The Vermont Asylum, later
-the Brattleboro Retreat, was also managed by a board
-of trustees, as was the New Hampshire State Hospital
-at Concord. The Georgia State Sanitarium, opened in
-the same year, adopted a similar form of control. The
-Utica State Hospital has been conducted from the first
-by a board of managers, a term which is generally used
-by the New York institutions. When the Trenton State
-Hospital was founded it was placed under a board of
-ten managers, more or less along the lines followed at
-Utica. The State Hospital at Raleigh, North Carolina,
-had a board of directors. For many years the earlier
-institutions for mental diseases were under no other form
-of control, the powers of the trustees being absolute.
-This is still the case in a few states. Usually, however,
-there is some additional form of supervision.</p>
-
-<p>Boards of trustees, managers, directors, or some other
-local governing body, exist in the following states but
-without exclusive control:&mdash;Alabama, California, Connecticut,
-Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Louisiana
-(administrators), Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi,
-Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York,
-Pennsylvania, South Carolina (regents), Texas and Virginia.
-<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23"
-class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the following states the hospitals have no local
-boards of any <span class="no-break">kind:&mdash;</span>Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado,
-Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire,
-North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma,
-Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah,
-Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and
-Wyoming.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<p>As the state hospitals increased in number and importance,
-steps were taken to coordinate their activities
-and for various obvious reasons they were soon grouped
-together in departments. In the states having a sufficient
-number of hospitals to warrant such a procedure,
-separate specialized administrative units were established
-under lunacy commissions, etc. In less populous
-communities where there were only a few hospitals there
-soon developed a tendency to associate them with the
-charitable, correctional and, in some instances, penal institutions.
-Seventeen states, as has been shown, now
-have only one hospital for mental diseases, eight have
-two and ten only three institutions. This led either to
-placing the hospitals under boards of charities and corrections
-or to the organization of new departments
-known as boards of control. The hospitals for mental
-diseases are under the supervision of boards of charities
-and corrections in the following states:&mdash;Colorado,
-Connecticut, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska, North
-Carolina, South Carolina, South Dakota and Virginia.
-<a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-<p>Boards of control exist in Arkansas, California, Iowa,
-Kentucky, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oregon, Vermont,
-West Virginia and Wisconsin. California has, in addition
-to this, a board of charities and corrections and a
-commission in lunacy. Vermont has a director of state
-institutions. In New Hampshire the board of trustees
-of the state hospital constitutes a commission in lunacy.
-A number of states have special departments for the
-supervision of hospitals for mental diseases and in some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-instances for the control of all institutions. Delaware
-has a board of supervisors of state institutions. This
-is essentially a board of control. This is true of the
-board of commissioners of state institutions in Florida.
-Illinois has a department of public welfare, which places
-the control of the charitable, penal and corrective institutions,
-as well as the hospitals for mental diseases,
-largely in the hands of one man, a layman. Michigan and
-Pennsylvania also have departments of public welfare.
-Kansas has placed its hospitals under the control of a
-board of administration of state charitable institutions.
-Maryland has a lunacy commission and Missouri a board
-of managers. Montana and Nevada each have a board
-of commissioners for the insane. New Jersey has a state
-board of control of institutions and agencies, the direction
-of the state hospitals being delegated to a commissioner
-of charities and corrections. New York has the
-largest department in the country having exclusive state
-hospital functions. It is under the supervision of a hospital
-commission. Ohio has a board of administration
-which manages and governs all of the charitable, corrective
-and penal institutions of the state. This is, of
-course, a board of control pure and simple. Oklahoma
-has a commissioner of charities and corrections who is an
-elective officer, and has, in addition, a lunacy commission
-and a board of public affairs. Rhode Island has a penal
-and charitable commission of nine members. Utah has a
-board of insanity and Wyoming a board of charities and
-reform. Massachusetts has a department of mental diseases
-under the direction of a medical commissioner,
-with four unpaid associates. In addition to the hospitals
-for mental diseases the department has under its
-jurisdiction the institutions for the feebleminded and
-the epileptics.</p>
-
-<p>The necessity of some form of central supervision
-or control, of state institutions in general and hospitals<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-for mental diseases in particular, has long been a subject
-of serious consideration and discussion. The administration
-of hospitals, prisons, reformatories, etc.,
-by a central board of control may be indicated in states
-where there are only a few institutions and the creation
-of highly specialized and expensive departments obviously
-would not be warranted. The question may very
-properly be raised as to the necessity of any supervision
-other than that by local boards of trustees in such communities.
-A study of methods of supervision made some
-years ago by the medical director of the National Committee
-for Mental Hygiene<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> shows that the board of control
-system leaves much to be desired. He has expressed
-himself on this subject in no uncertain terms, as is shown
-by the following:&mdash;"Under Boards of Control, politics
-influence the care of the sick to a degree unknown under
-different types of supervision and the scientific and humane
-aspects of the work undertaken are generally subordinated
-to doubtful administrative advantages. With
-hardly an exception, these Boards of Control have not
-endeavored to secure better commitment laws, to lead
-public sentiment so that higher standards of treatment
-will be demanded or to deal with the great problems of
-mental disease in any except their narrowest institutional
-aspects. There has been striking absence of evidences
-of any feeling of personal responsibility in these matters;
-indeed many members of these boards would doubtless
-unhesitatingly state that their duties do not involve
-such considerations. What the results would have been
-if efficient and fearless local boards of managers had been
-retained when these states created Boards of Control
-cannot be stated. It is an essential part of the policy
-which places the care of the insane under this form of
-administration that there shall be no "division of responsibility"
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-and, seemingly, there is no place in such
-a scheme for bodies which are as much interested in the
-personal welfare of the wards of the State as they are in
-governmental "efficiency" and, which, moreover, are directly
-accountable to their neighbors&mdash;the friends and
-relatives of patients. It is interesting to compare some
-of the conditions mentioned with those existing in States
-in which the care of the insane is entrusted to Boards
-created for that special purpose. In these States,&mdash;California,
-Maryland, Massachusetts and New York,&mdash;it can
-be said truly that the care of the insane reaches its highest
-level."</p>
-
-<p>The experience of the past has shown that the injection
-of politics into the administration of state institutions
-is almost invariably due to the over-centralization
-of power in state departments, the local boards of trustees
-or managers either being abolished or largely deprived
-of their authority. The greatest menace to the future
-welfare of the hospitals for mental diseases is, in
-the opinion of many, the unfortunate result of a popular
-and more or less legitimate demand for the reorganization
-of state governments, reducing their administrative
-activities to a few separate departments, each one under
-the entire charge of a director responsible only to the
-Governor. The argument for this procedure is that it
-does away with innumerable commissions, boards and
-departments working along independent lines without
-any reference to the desirability of coordinating the activities
-of the state as a whole and places the affairs of
-the commonwealth on an efficient, systematic and economical
-basis. There is no question as to the theoretical
-advisability of such methods. The difficulty is, that in
-putting into practical operation this unquestionably commendable
-undertaking, the humanitarian aspect of the
-charitable enterprises conducted by state governments
-for more than a century, is likely to be lost sight of. It
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-is almost invariably urged that the directors of these
-various departments should be experienced business men
-of recognized ability and that in only such a way can the
-affairs of the state be put on a "businesslike basis." It
-must be confessed that this argument is one which appeals
-very strongly to the taxpayer, who naturally has
-not given the matter very careful thought. There are
-other important considerations, however, where the question
-of administering hospitals is involved. As Commissioner
-Kline<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> has said:&mdash;"If it be conceded that the
-care and treatment of the mentally sick is a highly specialized
-medical problem, requiring the services of medical experts,
-and that the institutions function primarily for the
-welfare of the patient, then the supervision and control
-of institutions should be in the hands of medical men
-especially trained for the purpose."</p>
-
-<p>In some instances where the state governments have
-been reorganized and the proposed consolidation of departments
-effected, the administration of the state hospitals
-has come under the direction of a single individual
-without hospital or institution experience of any kind
-and without any special knowledge of medicine or psychiatry.
-There is no escaping the fact that the administration
-of a hospital is a medical problem. Nor is there
-any question as to the advisability of some central supervision
-and financial control of institutions. The hospital
-departments in our more populous states are, however,
-so extensive and so important that they cannot be merged
-with other interests without sacrificing to a considerable
-extent the welfare of the patients. It should be remembered,
-moreover, that the administration of hospitals for
-mental diseases is a specialty and a large one, not specifically
-related to the problems arising in the management
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-of charitable institutions or prisons. The best results
-have been obtained where there is a division of responsibility
-between local boards of trustees or managers and
-a central body charged with the supervision, and a limited
-or complete financial control, of institutions for mental
-diseases only. The head of such a department should
-unquestionably be a medical man with psychiatric hospital
-experience. This policy has been responsible for the
-high standards maintained in the state hospitals of Massachusetts
-and New York.</p>
-
-<p>It is, unfortunately, true that the care of mental diseases
-is not exclusively a function of the state or private
-hospitals. In thirteen states, county or municipal institutions
-are maintained and in twenty-five, persons
-suffering from mental diseases may legally be cared for
-in almshouses or poorhouses.</p>
-
-<p>There is little uniformity in the laws of the various
-states relative to the hospital care of mental diseases,
-aside from the fact that almost without any exception
-they are designed to provide solely for the legal custody
-of the so-called "insane" and the protection of the public.
-"Insanity," as a matter of fact, is a purely legal and
-not a medical term, and may be said to relate to mental
-diseases only in so far as they come within the jurisdiction
-of the courts.</p>
-
-<p>Statutory enactments relative to the forms of mental
-disease which render the individual subject to legal custody
-and detention in an institution are illustrated by the
-provisions of the Civil Code of Illinois. This defines an
-"insane" person as one "who by reason of unsoundness
-of mind is incapable of managing his own estate, or is
-dangerous to himself or others, if permitted to go at
-large, or in such condition of mind or body as to be a fit
-subject for care and treatment in a hospital or asylum for
-the insane." In Alabama a person is legally insane "if
-he has been found by a proper court deficient or defective<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-mentally so that for his own or others' welfare his removal
-is required for restraint, care, and treatment."
-As a general rule, provision by law is made 1, for an
-application for commitment; 2, for a medical certificate
-of two or more properly qualified physicians showing the
-person to be insane and a proper subject for care and
-treatment in an institution, and 3, for the order of the
-Judge of a Court of Record for commitment to a state
-hospital. The necessity of some form of legal authorization
-for detention is a result of the fundamental principle
-in English procedure that no man, against his will, may
-be deprived of his liberty without due process of law.
-This right was recognized and perpetuated by the Magna
-Charta signed by King John in 1215 and is very definitely
-referred to in at least two different articles in the Constitution
-of the United States.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule the application for commitment can be made
-only by certain persons definitely specified in the law,&mdash;parents,
-near relatives, the guardian or various public
-officials such as overseers of the poor. In Massachusetts
-any person may sign such a petition. In Florida a request
-must be jointly made by five reputable citizens.
-This would not appear to be a material point in law.
-Some courts require that a notice of the application be
-served upon the person whose commitment is requested.
-In New York a notice must be served at least one day
-prior to the hearing of the case unless the judge personally
-certifies that substituted service has been made upon
-some other person or that personal service was considered
-inadvisable for some adequate reason noted and has
-therefore been dispensed with. The Arizona law requires
-the judge to hold a hearing and have the alleged insane
-person before him for examination. In California a jury
-trial may be requested and a commitment made only on
-a verdict of insanity requiring a vote of at least three-fourths
-of the jurors. A trial by jury may be asked for<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-in Colorado, Connecticut and many other states and must
-be granted. Trial by jury is necessary in all cases in
-Georgia. Provision is usually made for an appeal to
-some higher court. In many states hearings are mandatory,
-in others they are optional with the court. In
-Iowa each county has a board of three commissioners of
-insanity, one of whom must be a physician. They have
-full authority under the law to make commitments to
-institutions. Hearings are required in Kansas but inquests
-in lunacy may be either by jury or commission at
-the discretion of the court. In Kentucky inquests in
-lunacy must be held by the Circuit Court of a county.
-The hearings are always in the presence of a jury. In
-Louisiana two physicians must examine the patient in the
-presence of the court. If the physicians do not agree
-the judge himself decides the case. In Maine parents
-and guardians may send insane minors to an institution
-without a commitment. Other insane persons are subject
-to examination by the municipal officers of towns. In
-Mississippi the Chancery Courts have jurisdiction over
-writs of lunacy and an inquest may be made by jury. Nebraska
-has three commissioners in insanity in each
-county, appointed by the judge of the District Court. In
-the case of persons found insane they issue a warrant
-authorizing admission to a state hospital. Each county
-in New Jersey has a commissioner in lunacy, who has
-jurisdiction over the steps relating to admission to institutions.
-Commitments are made by the judge of a Court
-of Record. All orders for commitments in North Carolina
-must be made by the clerk of a Superior Court. No
-person who has moved into the state while insane is
-deemed a resident. North Dakota has a board of three
-commissioners of insanity in each county, the county
-judge being a member. The commissioners authorize
-hospitals to receive persons found to be insane. Appeal
-may be made to a commission of three persons to be appointed<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-by the county judge. A jury trial is provided
-for, on demand, in Oklahoma. In cases of appeal the
-county judge must appoint a commission of three,
-one of whom is a physician, for the examination of
-the patient. Examination by a commission of three
-is required in Pennsylvania before commitment by
-a justice of a Court of Common Pleas or Quarter
-Sessions. South Dakota has a board of three commissioners
-of insanity in each county, the county judge being
-a member. An insane person may be received in a hospital
-in Vermont on the certificate of two physicians
-or by the order of a County or Supreme Court without
-a physician's certificate. Appeal may be made to the
-state board of control. In Virginia the committing judge
-and two physicians constitute a commission for the examination
-of alleged insane persons. In West Virginia
-there is a county commission of lunacy composed of the
-president and clerk of the County Court and the prosecuting
-attorney. Commitments are ordered by the commission.
-On the arrival of the patient at a hospital a
-board composed of the Superintendent and assistant
-physicians must be convened for the examination of the
-patient. Application for commitment must be made in
-Wisconsin by three reputable citizens. The determination
-of insanity in Wyoming must be made in all instances
-by a jury of six men.</p>
-
-<p>When an insane person has been committed to an institution
-it is sometimes the duty of an officer of the court
-to accompany the patient to the hospital. The order of
-the court in Massachusetts includes the following:&mdash;"Now,
-Therefore, You, the said Sheriff, Deputies, Constables
-or Police Officers, and each of you, with necessary
-assistance, ... are hereby commanded, in the name
-of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, forthwith to
-convey the said &mdash;&mdash; to the hospital aforesaid, and
-to deliver h&mdash; to the Superintendent thereof, and make<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-due return of a copy of this precept with your doings
-therein." This practically amounts to a warrant of
-arrest and makes the removal of the patient to the hospital
-to all intents and purposes analogous to a criminal
-proceeding.</p>
-
-<p>Attention should be called to one of the very excellent
-and humane provisions of the New York Law:&mdash;"All
-county superintendents of the poor, overseers of the
-poor, health officers and other city, town or county authorities,
-having duties to perform relating to the poor,
-are charged with the duty of seeing that all poor and indigent
-insane persons within their respective municipalities,
-are timely granted the necessary relief conferred
-by this chapter. The poor officers or authorities
-above specified, except in the city of New York and in
-the county of Albany, shall notify the health officer of
-the town, city or village of any poor or indigent insane
-or apparently insane person within such municipality
-whom they know to be in need of the relief conferred by
-this chapter. When so notified, or when otherwise informed
-of such fact, the health officer of the city, town or
-village, except in the city of New York and the county
-of Albany, where such insane or apparently insane person
-may be, shall see that proceedings are taken for the
-determination of his mental condition and for his commitment
-to a state hospital. Such health officer may direct
-the proper poor officer to make an application for such
-commitment, and, if a qualified medical examiner, may
-join in making the required certificate of lunacy. When
-so directed by such health officer it shall be the duty of
-the said poor officer to make such application for commitment.
-When notified or informed of any poor or
-indigent insane or apparently insane person in need
-of the relief conferred by this chapter such health officer
-shall provide for the proper care, treatment and nursing
-of such person, as provided by law and the rules of the<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-commission, pending the determination of his mental condition
-and his commitment and until the delivery of such
-insane person to the attendant sent to bring him to the
-state hospital, as provided in this chapter."</p>
-
-<p>In New York City these responsibilities are delegated
-to the trustees of Bellevue and Allied Hospitals and in
-the county of Albany to the Commissioner of Public
-Charities. In New York City a medical examiner or
-nurse from the psychopathic wards of Bellevue Hospital,
-or both, may be sent "to the place where the alleged insane
-person resides or is to be found." If in the opinion
-of this examiner medical care is necessary, the patient
-is taken to the psychopathic ward for observation for
-a period of not to exceed ten days. When a person has
-been committed to a state hospital in New York, the
-Superintendent is required by law to send a trained nurse
-or attendant to bring the patient to the institution. The
-desirability of having such cases under the immediate
-care of nurses who have had psychiatric training would
-seem to be obvious. There is no reason why persons
-suffering from mental diseases should be subjected to
-the same form of supervision that is given to criminals.
-The New York plan of holding the health officer responsible
-for providing proper hospital care and treatment
-for mental cases not coming directly under the legal jurisdiction
-of other persons or officials is well worthy of
-serious consideration. There would appear to be no
-reason why the health officer should not be responsible
-for mental conditions in somewhat the same way that
-he is for communicable diseases. Nor is there any public
-official to whom the supervision of the insane pending
-commitment can more logically be delegated.</p>
-
-<p>In twenty-nine states voluntary patients may be received
-by state hospitals. The provisions of the law
-usually are that the patient must make application on
-his own initiative, that his mental condition must be<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-such as to understand the purpose of this proceeding
-and the need of treatment and that he must be released
-on a demand in writing in from three to seven days of
-such request. In the twelve following states the temporary
-care of the insane in jails, usually as an emergency
-measure, is still authorized:&mdash;Arkansas, Colorado,
-Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
-South Dakota, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin.
-Arrangements of some kind for the emergency
-care of cases pending examination and commitment are
-provided for in Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts,
-Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North
-Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee,
-Washington and Wisconsin. Massachusetts has
-the most comprehensive provisions for temporary care
-and observation. The Superintendent of a state hospital
-may receive and detain, for not more than five days without
-a court order, any person whose case is "certified to
-be one of violent and dangerous insanity or of other
-emergency" by two qualified medical examiners. Officers
-authorized to serve a criminal process, or police officers,
-must, on the request of the applicant or one of the examining
-physicians, bring such a person to the hospital.
-The applicant for this form of admission must within
-five days arrange for the commitment of the person so
-received, or for his removal from the hospital.</p>
-
-<p>Under the provisions of the Massachusetts Law a
-person found by two qualified examiners to be in such
-mental condition that his admission to a hospital for the
-insane is necessary for his proper care or observation
-may be committed for a period of thirty-five days "pending
-the determination of his insanity." The superintendent
-must discharge such a person within thirty days
-if not insane or report to the committing judge his opinion
-that the patient's mental condition is such as to require
-a further residence in the hospital necessary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Under the provisions of the so-called "Boston Police
-Act" (chapter 307 of the Acts of 1910) all persons suffering
-from delirium, mania, mental confusion, delusions or
-hallucinations, under arrest or "who come under the care
-or protection of the police of the city of Boston" shall
-be taken to the Psychopathic Hospital "in the same
-manner in which persons afflicted with other diseases are
-taken to a general hospital." Cases suffering from delirium
-tremens or drunkenness may be refused by the
-hospital authorities; otherwise, all such persons are admitted,
-observed and cared for "until they can be committed
-or admitted to the hospital or institution appropriate
-in each particular case" unless the patient recovers
-or is discharged.</p>
-
-<p>Under the provisions of the Massachusetts Law "No
-person suffering from insanity, mental derangement, delirium
-or mental confusion, except delirium tremens and
-drunkenness, shall, except in case of emergency, be placed
-or detained in a lockup, police station, city prison, house
-of detention, jail or other penal institution, or place for
-the detention of criminals. If, in case of emergency,
-any such person is so placed or detained, he shall forthwith
-be examined by a physician and shall be furnished
-suitable medical care and nursing and shall not be so detained
-for more than twelve hours." In Boston these
-cases are sent to the Psychopathic Hospital. In other
-parts of the state they are cared for by the board of
-health of the city or town in question until they can be
-committed to a hospital or cared for by relatives or
-friends.</p>
-
-<p>The superintendent of a state hospital, under the
-authority of chapter 123 of the General Laws, "When requested
-by a physician, by a member of the board of
-health or a police officer of a city or town, by an agent of
-the institutions registration department of the city of
-Boston, or by a member of the district police 'may' receive<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-and care for in such hospital as a patient, for a
-period not exceeding ten days, any person who needs immediate
-care and treatment because of mental derangement
-other than delirium tremens or drunkenness." Such
-cases are received on application in writing filed at the
-time of the reception of the patient or within twenty-four
-hours thereafter and must be discharged or committed
-within ten days unless they make a request for
-voluntary care. During 1920 there were 1,929 temporary
-care cases reported by the various Massachusetts state
-hospitals, as follows:</p>
-
-<p>Boston State Hospital (Psychopathic Department)
-1,049, Danvers 217, Northampton 188, Worcester 159,
-Taunton 154, Westborough 68, Foxborough 56, Medfield
-33, Grafton 2, and Gardner State Colony 3.</p>
-
-<p>Nowhere else in the country has this particular form
-of legislation been used so extensively. It is something
-more than a mere authorization for the reception of mental
-cases in observation or detention wards. Under its
-provisions, at the request of any reputable practicing
-physician and without further legal formalities, mental
-cases may be cared for in a state hospital until their condition
-can be definitely determined and arrangements
-made for their proper disposition and treatment. The
-criticism to which this plan is open is that the period of
-time, ten days, is not long enough. It should be extended
-to thirty days at least.</p>
-
-<p>The provision of the Massachusetts Law for the determination
-of the mental condition of persons under arrest
-or held under criminal charges is an excellent one
-and well worthy of consideration. This is covered by
-chapter 123 of the General Laws:&mdash;"If a person under
-complaint or indictment for any crime, is, at the time
-appointed for trial or sentence, or at any time prior
-thereto, found by the Court to be insane or in such mental
-condition that his commitment to a hospital for the insane<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-is necessary for the proper care or observation of
-such person pending the determination of his insanity,
-the Court may commit him to a State hospital for the
-insane under such limitations as it may order." The
-Court may in its discretion employ one or more experts
-to examine such persons. These cases are on recovery
-returned by the hospital authorities to the custody of
-the Court. One of the interesting features of the Massachusetts
-Law is the provision relating to persons indicted
-for murder or manslaughter but acquitted by a jury by
-reason of insanity. Such cases are committed to a state
-hospital for life and can be discharged only by the Governor
-of the state, with the advice and consent of the
-Executive Council, when he is satisfied, after an investigation
-by the Department of Mental Diseases, that such
-a person may be discharged "without danger to others."
-Persons charged with a crime "other than murder or
-manslaughter" and acquitted by a jury by reason of
-insanity may also be committed by the Court to a state
-hospital "under such limitations as it deems proper" and
-such orders may be revoked at any time.</p>
-
-<p>A recent enactment (Chapter 415, Acts of 1921) provides
-that "Whenever a person is indicted by a grand
-jury for a capital offense or whenever a person, who is
-known to have been indicted for any other offense more
-than once or to have been previously convicted of a
-felony, is indicted by a grand jury or bound over for
-trial in the superior court, the clerk of the court in which
-the indictment is returned, or the clerk of the district
-court or the trial justice, as the case may be, shall give
-notice to the department of mental diseases, and the department
-shall cause such person to be examined with a
-view to determine his mental condition and the existence
-of any mental disease or defect which would affect his
-criminal responsibility. The department shall file a report
-of its investigation with the clerk of the court in<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-which the trial is to be held, and the report shall be accessible
-to the court, the district attorney and to the
-attorney for the accused, and shall be admissible as evidence
-of the mental condition of the accused."</p>
-
-<p>The whole question of methods of commitment was
-made the subject of an extended study by the National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene in 1919. A comprehensive
-report covering such legislation as was deemed necessary
-was submitted by a committee consisting of the
-following:&mdash;Dr. George M. Kline, Commissioner, Massachusetts
-State Department of Mental Diseases; Dr.
-Charles W. Pilgrim, Chairman of the New York State
-Hospital Commission; Dr. Owen Copp, Superintendent,
-Pennsylvania Hospital, Department for Nervous and
-Mental Diseases: Dr. Frank P. Norbury, of the Board
-of Public Welfare Commissioners of Illinois; and Dr.
-Frankwood E. Williams, Associate Medical Director, National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene. In addition to the
-ordinary form of commitment by a court of record in a
-civil proceeding, they recommended legislation in all
-states authorizing temporary and emergency care, observation
-pending the determination of insanity, and
-voluntary admissions. In a general way, the legislation
-recommended followed the lines of the present laws
-of Massachusetts and New York.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE STATE HOSPITALS&mdash;THEIR ORGANIZATION
-AND FUNCTIONS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">The efficiency of the hospital is very largely a reflection
-of its organization, administration and personnel,
-but the material equipment of the institution and the financial
-resources available are factors of no less importance.
-The future of a hospital is often settled for all
-time by the degree of judgment exercised in determining
-its location. The founders must be guided to a very great
-extent by the purposes which they hope to accomplish.
-In the location of a public institution of any considerable
-size, however, there are certain considerations which, if
-overlooked, will eventually lead to serious difficulties.
-The initial cost of the property is unfortunately a factor
-which cannot be disregarded. It is usually considered
-desirable for obvious reasons to choose a site somewhat
-removed from great centers of population. A sufficient
-acreage must be obtained to guarantee an adequate
-amount of land for farming and gardening on a fairly
-large scale. This not only insures a ready occupation for
-patients, but will materially reduce the cost of maintenance.
-A point which should never be lost sight of
-is the necessity of choosing a location which can be
-reached easily by railroads, trolley cars and motor trucks.
-The hospital must be readily accessible to the relatives
-and friends of patients. It is equally important that it
-should be convenient for employees; otherwise an adequate
-force of nurses and attendants can only be maintained
-with great difficulty. Above all, the hospital
-should be in the community which it is destined to serve.<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-The patients should not be removed to any great distance
-from their homes. In numerous instances severe
-hardships have been inflicted upon all persons concerned
-owing to the fact that state institutions have been located
-in districts where they are not needed by the community
-and where they cannot be easily reached.</p>
-
-<p>Every large public hospital should be in almost immediate
-contact with a railroad. Otherwise thousands of
-dollars must be expended annually for the transportation
-of coal, food and other necessary supplies. The
-fertility of the soil to be used for agricultural purposes
-is only second in importance to the necessity of obtaining
-satisfactory building sites. A practically unlimited supply
-of pure water is absolutely essential. The possibility
-of utilizing some existing system of sewerage or providing
-the institution with one of its own should be given
-serious consideration. Drainage must be provided for
-and sanitary surroundings obtained. There should always
-be opportunity for future expansion of the plant.
-Practically every state of any importance has at least
-one institution which has been seriously handicapped
-throughout its entire existence by an unfortunate neglect
-of one or more of these important considerations.</p>
-
-<p>In 1917 a special commission was appointed by the
-Governor of New York for the purpose of preparing an
-intelligent and comprehensive plan for the future development
-of the institutions of the state. In a report
-presented during the following year the commission
-called attention to a phase of hospital construction the
-importance of which cannot be too strongly emphasized.
-<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
-"Nearly all of the state hospitals suffer from the fact
-that as originally planned they were smaller institutions
-and of a different type from those that are now desired,
-and the additions which have been made from time to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-time during the past twenty-five years, in order to meet
-the immediate demands for increased space, have not always
-been made with a completed and well rounded institution
-in mind. The results are badly balanced institutions,
-lacking in efficiency and ease of administration....
-In planning a hospital for the insane the ultimate
-maximum capacity should be decided upon even if it is
-not possible to build the entire institution at once. A
-well co-ordinated plan should then be developed, which
-would permit the building of various sections as appropriations
-become available, with the idea of finally having
-a complete institution, harmonious in arrangement,
-and so planned as to attain the most desirable classification
-and the maximum of efficiency and economy in administration."
-The classification of the population which
-an average state hospital should provide buildings for
-is shown by the commission as follows:&mdash;Reception building,
-six per cent; convalescents, four per cent; hospital
-buildings, two per cent; buildings for the infirm, eight
-per cent; noisy, disturbed, etc., twenty per cent; epileptics,
-three per cent; working patients, forty per cent;
-quiet, clean and appreciative chronic class, fourteen per
-cent; and tuberculous, three per cent. They also suggest
-that every hospital should have a small isolation building
-for the care of contagious diseases. Their recommendation
-as to the amount of floor space per patient in
-the various buildings is exceedingly interesting and no
-less important. "First, That single rooms should have
-about eighty square feet of floor space. A room seven
-feet by eleven or eight by ten, while large enough for one
-bed, a bureau and a chair, is not large enough to permit
-placing two beds end to end or alongside of each other.
-If a room measures ten feet by twelve, there is always a
-temptation to place two beds in it if the hospital becomes
-crowded, and the advantage of single rooms is wholly
-lost. The number of single rooms in an institution should<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-be from fifteen per cent to twenty per cent of the population,
-varying with the character of the cases to be cared
-for. Second, Dormitories should have above fifty square
-feet of floor space per patient, and no dormitory should
-have more than fifty beds nor less than six. This, of
-course, applies to the wards for the chronic cases. An
-adequate system of ventilation throughout the hospital
-is presupposed. Third, The day space allotted should
-provide forty to fifty square feet per patient. Fourth,
-The dining room allowance should be from fourteen to
-sixteen square feet per patient, in order to permit the
-use of small tables and to provide adequate passages
-for the expeditious service of food."</p>
-
-<p>In former years much time and space was devoted to
-a discussion of the respective merits of the congregate
-type of hospital construction, the so-called "Kirkbride"
-or block plan (although it was in use long before Kirkbride
-described it) and the arrangement of buildings in
-groups. There is no question but what an institution
-that is all under one roof can be administered much more
-economically and operated at a lower maintenance cost.
-Very little, if any, advantage is derived by the patient
-from the group scheme. In its practical operation in
-the state hospitals almost the only point of difference,
-as far as the patient is concerned, is that he must go out
-of doors as a rule to get to the dining room in the summer
-as well as in the winter, in good weather and bad.
-This has been responsible for much discomfort and has
-resulted in a great increase in the number of escapes.
-When buildings are arranged in groups they should be
-connected with a central dining room either by corridors
-or tunnels. Small cottages, except for special purposes,
-are out of the question as far as state institutions are
-concerned, on account of the cost involved. As a matter
-of fact, in the development of a large hospital all types
-of construction must be ultimately employed. The reception<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-building should be separate and detached from
-the other parts of the hospital, as should, of course, the
-wards for the tuberculous cases, the contagious building,
-the building for convalescents, the farm cottages, etc.
-The noisy and violent patients certainly should be in
-separate buildings far enough away so that they will not
-disturb others. The hospital wards, for the exclusive
-care of bed patients, may well be detached. The larger
-part of the hospital population, consisting of the quiet,
-orderly, chronic, custodial cases, can be cared for just as
-well in the large buildings as in groups or cottages.</p>
-
-<p>The reception building, from the standpoint of the
-patient, is the most important building in the hospital.
-It should be equipped to care for from five to ten per
-cent of the hospital population, depending entirely upon
-the location and special problems of the institution in
-question and the community which it serves. In any
-event it should include both large and small dormitories,
-the larger accommodating from fifteen to thirty patients,
-and the smaller not more than six or eight, adequate day-room
-space, numerous single rooms and commodious
-enclosed verandas. There should, of course, be ample
-dining room facilities as well as diet rooms to provide
-for those whose condition makes it necessary or advisable
-for them to be served in the wards. Special provision
-should be made for the separate care of the noisy,
-violent, disturbed, etc., and they should be in a part of the
-building which can be isolated. The suicidal cases must
-be given special care and separate supervision. A well
-equipped hydrotherapeutic department is an essential
-part of the reception building. Continuous bath and pack
-rooms are equally necessary. No less important are admission
-and examination rooms, a pharmacy, laboratories,
-rooms for the special treatment of eye, ear, nose
-and throat conditions, recreation rooms, a library, space
-for occupational therapy, provision for social service and<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-psychological departments, etc. At least two physicians
-should reside in the building. It is unfortunate that reception
-buildings as a rule are entirely too small. They
-should be large enough so that the acute and recoverable
-cases, as well as those found on observation not to require
-hospital treatment, can be returned to their homes without
-any further contact with the hospital or the necessity
-of a protracted residence with the chronic and purely
-custodial cases.</p>
-
-<p>The experience of many years has shown quite conclusively
-that the supervision and general direction of a
-hospital for mental diseases should be delegated to a
-medical superintendent with such clinical and administrative
-assistants as the nature and size of the institution
-may indicate. The dual system of management frequently
-suggested by politicians, with a layman as the
-executive head and a medical director subordinated to his
-authority, has proved to be a failure in every instance in
-which it has been tried. The administrative details necessary
-to the successful operation of a large institution are
-such as to require the entire time and attention not only
-of the superintendent but usually of an assistant superintendent.
-In a large hospital the activities of the medical
-staff should be under the immediate supervision of a
-specialist whose training and experience qualify him to
-direct the clinical and psychiatric work of others. This
-is a quite sufficient task to require the constant attention
-and undivided energies of a clinical director who has no
-other interests or responsibilities. In this way recent
-graduates with proper qualifications may be interested
-in entering the psychiatric field. Every state hospital,
-in addition to fulfilling its entire duty to the patients in
-its charge, should be a training school for psychiatrists,
-social workers, psychologists, occupational therapists
-and psychiatric nurses. The hospital staff, as well as
-providing for the services of physicians well trained in<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-psychiatry, must include other specialists. A hospital
-of any size should have a staff of consulting and visiting
-physicians including several internists and surgeons, a
-gynecologist, a neurologist, a dermatologist, an ophthalmologist,
-a laryngologist and an otologist. These consultants
-should visit the hospital regularly and direct
-and supervise the work of the resident staff along the
-lines of their specialty. It is hardly necessary to suggest
-today that a hospital of any size without a resident
-dentist is one which is not properly equipped to care for
-its patients.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is more important in the modern hospital
-than the training school for nurses. It is the nursing
-care of the patients more than any other one thing perhaps
-that has made the difference between the old time
-asylum and the psychiatric hospital of the highest type.
-The state hospital training school of the present day
-offers its pupils a three years' course of instruction, including
-a year of practical experience in an affiliated general
-hospital. Its graduates, moreover, are trained not
-only in psychiatric and general nursing, as well as the
-care of neurological cases, but in hydrotherapy, occupational
-therapy, reeducational, industrial and social work.
-The nurse of the future who has had no psychiatric training
-and experience is one whose education is not complete.
-Every effort should be made to encourage the
-training schools of general hospitals to send their senior
-nurses to a hospital for mental diseases for a service of
-at least three months. The specialized care and treatment
-of cases suffering from tuberculosis has been neglected
-in many institutions. It should not be necessary
-to suggest that such cases have no place in a ward with
-other patients who have not contracted that disease, and
-yet in many of our large and important hospitals there
-are no separate buildings for that purpose. It has been
-shown by statistical studies that persons suffering from<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-dementia praecox have an unusual and remarkable susceptibility
-to tuberculosis. Unfortunately, it has never
-been possible to completely segregate the epileptics in
-our public hospitals for mental diseases. They constitute
-a special problem and should receive a different diet
-as well as an entirely different type of treatment. Their
-presence in the wards with mental cases is highly detrimental
-to both. This is equally true of drug cases and
-mental defectives, and especially the so-called defective
-delinquents.</p>
-
-<p>There are many reasons why every hospital of any
-consequence that is engaged in the care of mental diseases
-should be provided with a well trained and experienced
-pathologist. Examinations of urine and sputum
-must be made daily. Widal tests are sometimes necessary
-for the diagnosis of typhoid fever. Analyses of
-water and milk should be made at frequent intervals.
-Bacteriological vaccines should be available at any time.
-Only laboratory investigations can throw any light on
-the source of the frequent infections which are found in
-large institutions. Diphtheria is a disease which must
-be guarded against constantly. Lumbar punctures, Wassermann
-tests, the colloidal gold reaction, cell counts,
-etc., are daily necessities in a large hospital. We lose
-much information of value to us if autopsies are neglected.
-A definite program of pathological research
-work should be carried on in every hospital for mental
-diseases. It has been suggested frequently that the
-microscope has no part to play in studying the etiology
-of the psychoses and that they are purely functional in
-origin. Many of them are functional. It is nevertheless
-equally true that we have a definite pathological basis
-for the traumatic psychoses, the senile conditions, cerebral
-arteriosclerosis, general paresis, brain syphilis, cerebral
-growths, mental deficiency and many other brain and
-nervous diseases. The psychosis most clearly understood<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-from the standpoint of etiology, pathology, symptomatology
-and diagnosis is general paresis. Our definite
-knowledge of that condition was obtained entirely
-from the laboratory. Further information may be secured
-in the same way. While it is true that we have
-not had any great amount of success as yet with the
-treatment of general paresis with salvarsan, the positive
-knowledge that the disease is of syphilitic origin should
-encourage us in our efforts to solve the problem of
-curing it. Histological, pathological, bacteriological,
-chemical, clinical and psychological researches must be
-pushed vigorously if psychiatry is to keep pace with
-the general progress shown by modern medicine in other
-fields.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with this subject some reference should
-be made to the general neglect of statistical studies.
-They should be based on detailed, accurate and exhaustive
-clinical records, which unfortunately are not now
-available to the extent that they should be. It is true
-that in a general way some progress has been made. The
-studies instituted by the American Psychiatric Association
-will ultimately tell us quite definitely the frequency
-of the various psychoses, the recovery and death rates
-to be expected, etc. We should not be satisfied with that
-alone. The great wealth of material which we have in
-our hospitals, together with the excellent clinical and
-laboratory facilities at our disposal, should enable us to
-accomplish much more. An analysis of our case records,
-if properly made, would give us definite information
-as to the clinical aspects of the mental diseases we are
-dealing with. These should be made the subject of exhaustive
-study by the scientific institutes and other
-research departments conducted by the various state
-authorities to an extent never yet undertaken or even
-attempted. If it cannot be done by the states it should
-be instituted by the federal government.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The fact that the field of influence of our public institutions
-should extend far beyond the walls of the hospital
-is one which has received general recognition only
-within the last few years. Every hospital has a large
-number of patients still within its legal custody but who
-have been allowed to return temporarily to their homes
-or occupations while still under observation pending
-their final discharge. These are now, to a very limited
-extent, under the supervision of social workers. The
-hospitals have unfortunately, owing to a lack of funds,
-never had a sufficient number of social workers to look
-after them properly. The hospitals as a rule now
-maintain out-patient departments where those who
-have been allowed to go home on visit or resume
-their occupations are encouraged to come for assistance
-and advice. The public is gradually learning
-to take advantage of this opportunity to obtain
-expert advice on matters relating to mental hygiene and
-secure professional opinions as to the disposition and
-treatment of members of the family showing symptoms
-of incipient mental disorders. This field of influence extends
-even further. Clinics have been established in
-various locations outside of the hospitals in the larger
-cities in several states. In New York they are conducted
-by state hospital physicians in Binghamton, Brooklyn,
-Buffalo, Plattsburg, Dunkirk, Jamestown, Olean, Salamanca,
-Poughkeepsie, Peekskill, Yonkers, Mount Vernon,
-Mineola, Newburgh, Kingston, Rochester, Middletown,
-Ogdensburg, Malone, Watertown, Utica, Schenectady,
-Ovid, Ithaca and New York City. Physicians and social
-workers are in attendance at all of these places. The
-last published report of the New York State Hospital
-Commission (1919) shows that 7,203 visits were made to
-these clinics during the year. Paroled patients made
-5,102 of these, discharged patients 265 and others who
-had no connection with the hospitals at all, 1,836. In<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-addition to this the hospital social workers made 3,496
-visits to paroled patients as well as four hundred and
-sixty-two visits to other patients for the purpose of preventing
-mental diseases. Situations were obtained for
-one hundred and sixty-seven discharged patients. An
-enormous amount of work was also done in history taking,
-etc. Numerous clinics have been established in
-Massachusetts by the Department of Mental Diseases.
-<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>
-During the year ending November 30, 1919, a total of
-4,333 visits were reported. Of these 3,057 were first
-visits. The number reported by the various hospitals
-was as follows:&mdash;Worcester State Hospital 1,278, Taunton
-State Hospital 182, Northampton State Hospital
-458, Danvers State Hospital 282, Westborough State
-Hospital 177, Grafton State Hospital 129, Gardner Colony
-65, Monson State Hospital 70, Foxborough State
-Hospital 27, Massachusetts School for the Feebleminded
-541, Boston State Hospital (Psychopathic Department)
-2,112. Clinics were maintained in the following localities:&mdash;Athol,
-Boston, Brockton, Danvers, Fitchburg,
-Foxborough, Gardner, Grafton, Gloucester, Greenfield,
-Haverhill, Lawrence, Lynn, Malden, Medfield, Monson,
-New Bedford, Newburyport, Northampton, Pittsfield,
-Salem, Springfield, Taunton, Waverley, Westborough,
-Worcester and Wrentham.</p>
-
-<p>This is a gratifying evidence of progress. There are
-indications of an awakening. The hospital treatment of
-mental diseases will eventually be conducted on a much
-higher plane and along lines more nearly comparable to
-those of the general hospital. A study of legislation
-relating to mental disease shows that efforts are being
-made very generally to make their treatment a medical
-problem rather than a legal question. It has been no
-easy matter to obtain treatment for mental diseases, assuming
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-a desire on the part of the individual to take
-advantage of such an opportunity. A review of our
-legal enactments shows that as a general rule it means
-a formal application, properly verified, an elaborate examination
-by two qualified physicians, an order of commitment
-by the judge of a court of record, a legal notice
-and an opportunity for a hearing if one is demanded.
-Pennsylvania as early as 1883 made provision for the
-immediate admission of such cases as required it, pending
-the usual court procedure. As has been shown in another
-chapter, arrangements have been legalized in many
-states for the emergency reception of mental cases, at
-least for those persons who are known to be dangerous
-to themselves or others. Temporary care enactments
-have been written into the law in various communities,
-making it possible to keep mental cases under observation
-for a limited period of time. In a large number of
-states it is now possible for a person requesting treatment
-voluntarily to receive it on his own application
-without any other legal formalities. Perhaps the greatest
-advance is the custom, not so infrequent now, of sending
-persons held by courts under a criminal process to a
-hospital for observation as to their mental condition. The
-fact should not be lost sight of that it is still possible to
-find "insane" persons in jails, poorhouses and county
-institutions in many parts of the country. Worse than
-this, however, is the custom of delegating their care to
-police officers. Nevertheless, distinct progress has been
-made.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">As has already been shown, a study of methods of
-care in this country indicates that every state has passed
-through several very definite preliminary stages. These
-may be summarized as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="p8b">1. &nbsp;A period of home care only. During the colonial days mental
-cases were cared for at home or not at all. There was
-nothing else that could be done for them at the time.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p8b">2. &nbsp;Confinement with criminals. In cases of unusual violence,
-dangerous persons were confined in jails, lockups and prisons.
-If necessary, under certain circumstances the law
-in some states even authorized the use of chains.</p>
-
-<p class="p8b">3. &nbsp;Almshouse care. There has been a time in practically every
-state when the poorhouse has been looked upon as the proper
-place for the insane.</p>
-
-<p class="p8b">4. &nbsp;Asylum care. As a result of the agitation of Dorothea Dix
-and others, mental diseases were eventually given custodial
-care in asylums.</p>
-
-<p class="p8b">5. &nbsp;Modern hospital care.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">In 1894 Dr. S. Weir Mitchell<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> delivered the annual
-address at the semi-centennial meeting of the American
-Medico-Psychological Association in Philadelphia. It
-was a very painful occasion for many. His remarks may
-be summed up as a vigorous arraignment of the asylum
-methods of that day. He severely criticized the public,
-the state legislatures, boards of management and the hospital
-superintendents. His principal charge was that
-they were operating asylums along the lines of the past
-and were perfectly satisfied with what they had accomplished.
-He pointed out the necessity of properly qualified
-physicians, more scientific methods and modern treatment.
-"We have done with whip and chains and ill
-usage, and having won this noble battle have we not
-rested too easily content with having made the condition
-of the insane more comfortable?" It seems incredible
-that in the case records of that day he should have found
-no evidences "of blood counts, temperatures, reflexes,
-the eye-ground, color fields, all the minute examinations
-with which we are so unrestingly busy." One institution
-was unable to furnish Dr. Mitchell with a stethoscope
-or an ophthalmoscope! One of his criticisms was that
-few institutions for mental diseases had a training school
-for nurses or any provisions for hydrotherapy. His last
-words were almost a prophecy: "Fifty years hence,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-when we must all have been swept away, another will
-possibly stand in my place and tell your history, and to
-him and the bountiful wisdom of time I leave it to be
-declared whether I was right or wrong." Dr. Mitchell's
-description of the asylums and their methods was bitterly
-resented. Who is there today who would not feel
-that he was fully justified?</p>
-
-<p>The time has come when we must again look to the
-future and prepare for it. The purely custodial care of
-mental diseases has led to a dread of asylums on the
-part of the public. There are unfortunately too many
-hospitals that are asylums in everything but name. The
-establishment of psychopathic hospitals and psychiatric
-clinics and the way in which they have been welcomed by
-the public is suggestive. The problems of mental diseases,
-as far as possible, must be approached from a
-general hospital point of view and the psychiatric hospital
-of the future must have a modern equipment, an
-efficient staff and adequate facilities for the employment
-of the latest methods. Above all, the institutions must
-be such that they will be looked upon by the community
-not merely as a place to which the insane may be sent
-for final disposition, but as hospitals where the development
-of mental diseases may be prevented and where recoveries
-may be reasonably expected if the patient is
-given early treatment. This should be the principal object
-of the state hospital of the future. "The concept of
-its beneficent ministration to the mind diseased as any
-physical part of the human body," as Copp<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> has
-pointed out, "is just appearing in shadowy outline in
-public consciousness. The effacement of this barrier to
-early treatment is slowly but steadily progressing. Its
-pace will be hastened if every mental hospital continues
-to become, as speedily as may be, the real hospital in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-broadest sense, with emphasis laid upon its treatment
-function and subordination of its control relation within
-the reasonable limit of caution. The mental hospital and
-the general hospital are essentially alike. Mental factors
-predominate in the former, but are potent influences
-in the latter. The difference is one of degree only. All
-the imperative requirements of the one must be met by
-the other. They are supplementary agencies in curing
-and alleviating disease and must be, eventually, viewed
-in the same light and administered in the same spirit on
-even planes of humaneness and efficiency."</p>
-
-<p>One thing should be made clear at the outset. A comprehensive
-and progressive program for further development
-means an expenditure of money. If the state hospitals
-are to fulfill their obligations to the community
-which they serve they must have more physicians. Provisions
-must be made for directors of clinical psychiatry,
-pathologists, internists, surgeons, dentists, and specialists
-of various kinds. Experts in hydrotherapy, massage
-and electrical treatments are necessary, as well as dietitians,
-industrial instructors, occupational teachers, specialists
-in reeducational work, psychologists, social workers,
-etc. Furthermore, they must be provided in sufficient
-numbers if anything is to be accomplished. As a matter
-of fact, no very great outlay of funds would be required
-in making a tremendous increase in efficiency. Although
-the institutional expenditures have increased enormously
-of late years, largely as a result of war conditions, increased
-costs, higher wages, etc., the amount actually
-invested in this humanitarian movement by the various
-states is not commensurate in any way with the results
-which are to be obtained. If we leave out of consideration
-everything except the saving in dollars and cents to
-be effected by methods which will in many instances
-render a protracted hospital residence unnecessary, the
-outlay involved would be well warranted. It should be<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-brought to the attention of the public that very few
-states are expending as much as one dollar per day for
-the maintenance of the individual patient. Modern hospital
-treatment of the highest type, under these circumstances,
-is manifestly impossible. The time has come
-when we should no longer be satisfied with the purely
-custodial care of mental cases.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE HOSPITAL TREATMENT OF MENTAL
-DISEASES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">The responsibility of the hospital for the future of the
-patient begins with his arrival at the institution and the
-ultimate outcome of the case often depends entirely upon
-the developments of the first few weeks of his residence
-in the wards. A complete understanding of the patient's
-mental condition, the prospects of an ultimate recovery
-and the line of treatment to be followed can only be
-determined by a thorough and accurate examination on
-admission. This constitutes the basis for all further procedure.
-If satisfactory results are to be obtained this
-task should be delegated to a medical officer who has had
-an extended psychiatric experience. For purposes of
-completeness, as well as uniformity, a definite plan should
-be followed. The form used in writing the initial history
-and in recording the results of the routine mental and
-physical examinations at the Boston State Hospital are
-described in full in the "Medical Staff Manual" which
-is furnished to all assistant physicians entering the service.
-This has been found to be of great assistance in
-the training of new men along proper lines and insures
-a uniformity of hospital records which is indispensable.
-In a general way the form of examination employed by
-Meyer and Kirby<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> for some years has been followed.
-As this scheme is fairly representative of the method of
-procedure used by hospitals for mental diseases throughout
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-the country it has been thought worth while to reproduce
-it in full.</p>
-
-
-<div class="pagebreak"><p class="st2">HISTORY</p></div>
-
-
-<p class="p11">
-<i>Name of Physician</i>: <span class="date"><i>Date</i>:</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="p11"><i>Name of Informant, Address, Relation to Patient</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">It is often desirable to make a note on the intelligence and
-apparent reliability of the informant.</p>
-
-<p class="p11"><i>Residence and Citizenship of Patient</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Birthplace? Date of birth? Time in Massachusetts? If
-foreign born, date of arrival in U. S.? Naturalized or alien?</p>
-
-<p class="p11"><i>Family History</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">It is not sufficient to ask simply the general question: Has
-any member of the family been insane or nervous? A great
-many persons will answer in the negative, whereas a detailed
-inquiry will often bring out a number of instances of nervous
-or mental troubles.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Specific inquiry must be made concerning the persons of the
-direct ancestral lines as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="phl">(a) Paternal grandparents&mdash;nervous or mental disease?</p>
-
-<p class="phl">(b) Maternal grandparents&mdash;nervous or mental disease?</p>
-
-<p class="phl">(c) Father: Age, nervous or mental disease, alcoholism?
-If dead, age at death and cause of death?</p>
-
-<p class="phl">(d) Mother: Age, nervous or mental disease, alcoholism?
-If dead, age at death and cause of death?</p>
-
-<p class="phl">(e) Number of children in family (brothers and sisters of
-patient). Nervous or mental trouble in any of these
-besides patient? Psychopathic personality, alcoholism,
-criminality, etc.?</p>
-
-<p class="phl">(f) Collateral branches: mention any known cases of insanity
-or nervous diseases in uncles, aunts or cousins.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="st2">PERSONAL HISTORY OF PATIENT</p>
-
-
-<p class="p11">1. <i>Early Development</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Birthplace and age, unusual incidents attending birth, retardation
-in talking or walking, infantile convulsions, night
-terrors, fits of temper, etc.&mdash;Severe illness or infectious diseases
-in infancy or childhood&mdash;Sequella? Frights, shocks or injuries?
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p11">2. <i>Education, Intellectual and Moral Development</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Educational opportunities, time spent in school, interest in
-studies, progress, marks, behavior, truancy, etc.?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">As an adult, regarded as bright, intelligent or dullminded?
-Well informed or ignorant? Reading, memory, judgment?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Moral responsibility, reliability, religious interests? Church
-affiliations?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Criminal traits, tramp life, police record?</p>
-
-<p class="p11">3. <i>Sexual Life</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Precocious interests in childhood, masturbation, abnormal
-practices, assaults or seduction?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Love affairs and disappointments? Age at marriage or reasons
-for single life. Moderate or excessive sexual desires, irregularities
-or prostitution.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Miscarriages, number of children, date of birth of youngest?
-If barren, what explanation; what effect on patient?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Frigidity, loss of power, refusal of partner, infidelity, measures
-to prevent conception. Treatment of partner, abuse,
-separation, divorce.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Perversions, abnormal methods of gratification with same or
-opposite sex.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">In women, unusual symptoms at menstrual periods; age at
-menopause, nervous symptoms accompanying climacterium?</p>
-
-<p class="p11">4. <i>Diseases and Injuries</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Any previous nervous affection or symptoms, such as headaches,
-nervous prostration, chorea, epilepsy, hysterical attacks,
-etc.?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Mention severe infections diseases and sequella, if any.
-Inquire concerning tuberculosis, rheumatism, heart disease,
-nephritis, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Venereal disease, <i>syphilis and gonorrhea</i>, full account, if possible,
-of how acquired, age, treatment and after affects.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Severe injuries, particularly head traumata, should be described
-as regards their immediate and subsequent effects.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">5. <i>Occupation</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Kinds of work undertaken, ambition, efficiency, wages, etc.
-Length of time in different positions, reasons for change, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">6. <i>Alcoholism and Other Toxic Influences</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Intemperate, moderate or total abstainer? If intemperate,
-age at which drinking began, apparent cause of same, kind
-of beverage consumed and approximate amounts. Periodic or
-steady drinker? Usual reaction to alcohol?
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="ph">Inquire about attacks of neuritis, delirium, hallucinatory
-episodes, suspicions, ideas of jealousy.</p>
-
-<p class="ph"><i>Other toxic influences</i>: Drug habits, occupational poisons,
-lead, arsenic, phosphorus, mercury, etc. Illuminating gas poisoning,
-nicotine intoxication.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">7. <i>Mental Make-up or Type of Personality</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Very important because certain of the non-organic psychoses
-appear to be a further development of mental traits or tendencies
-early recognized as personal peculiarities or deviations
-from the normal. In addition to the points already covered
-under the preceding headings, the following important types
-should always be borne in mind and appropriate inquiries made:</p>
-
-<p class="ph"><i>Manic make-up</i>: Lively, active, sociable, pushing, talkative,
-cheerful, optimistic; may be domineering, irritable and inclined
-to cruelty; sometimes not very efficient, may be noted as changeable,
-lacking in persistence, concentration and application.
-May show transient blue spells or lowering of spirits.</p>
-
-<p class="ph"><i>Depressive make-up</i>: Gloomy, worrisome, blue natures who
-feel continuously inhibited or restrained and unable to make decisions;
-easily discouraged.</p>
-
-<p class="ph"><i>Cyclothymic make-up</i>: Emotionally unstable, either up or
-down, have blue spells or are unduly cheerful and care-free.</p>
-
-<p class="ph"><i>Shut-in make-up</i>: Shy, retiring, self-conscious, bashful,
-quiet, secretive, seclusive and unsociable. Lack of interest in
-opposite sex or definite aversion; often prudish and over-particular.
-Unusual religious interest frequent. Inclined to day-dreaming,
-show fondness for the abstract and mystical. Odd
-habits, hobbies or cranky pursuits are common.</p>
-
-<p class="ph"><i>Paranoid make-up</i>: Mistrustful, suspicious, tend to misunderstand;
-unduly sensitive, feel discriminated against and have
-feelings of self-importance. (These traits may be related to
-shut-in tendencies.)</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Other types of make-up include the psychasthenic, neurasthenic
-and hysterical; also the mentally retarded or undeveloped
-(feebleminded).</p>
-
-<p class="p11">8. <i>Previous Attacks of Mental Disorder</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Obtain dates, places where treated, apparent cause, duration
-of attacks and general character of symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">9. <i>Precipitating Cause of Present Psychosis</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Try to determine what occurrence or situation appeared to
-bring about the mental breakdown. Emotional strains, excitement,
-quarrels, worries, griefs, disappointments, sexual episodes,
-separation, deaths, childbirth, etc., financial loss, overwork,
-physical disease, etc.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p11">10. <i>Onset and Symptoms of the Psychosis</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Take as far as possible a spontaneous account beginning
-with date when first symptoms were noticed in the patient. In
-this connection particular attention should be given to changes
-in behavior, in mood, in manner of speech, in attitude towards
-others and towards work.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Appearance of suspicious, unusual interests, peculiar ideas
-and delusions?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Hallucinations in various fields and reaction to them?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Obtain as much as possible regarding trend of patient's
-ideas, topics of conversation and content of hallucinations.
-What did voices say? What was seen in visions?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Forgetfulness, impairment of memory, loss of orientation
-and clouding of sensorium.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Always inquire regarding suicidal inclinations or attempts,
-threats of violence, assaults or homicidal tendencies.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Compare informant's statement with those given in the commitment
-certificate.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">What treatment was given at home? Name of physician
-in attendance?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Date on which patient was taken to hospital.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st2">PHYSICAL EXAMINATION</p>
-
-<p class="st3">I. <i>GENERAL TYPE, APPEARANCE AND CONDITION</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">1. Weight (with or without clothes).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">2. Height and general frame.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">3. Malformations (wherever possible state the origin); asymmetries
-of skull, face, body, spine, thorax; form of palate (low,
-high, asymmetrical, saddle or V-shaped, longitudinal torus).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Ears (adherent lobules, prominent anthelix, satyr-points,
-large, angle, asymmetry, length, etc.).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Abnormalities of hands, feet, sexual organs.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">4. Color of the skin.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Color and quantity of the hair.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Color of the eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">General complexion.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">5. General nutrition (panniculus and muscles).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">6. Condition of the skin and mucous membranes; anemia,
-jaundice, dropsy, pallor, flushing and cyanosis; eruptions
-(describe in detail). Trophic disorders.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">7. Scars, bruises and moles (size, location, color and origin).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">8. Evidence of syphilis: scars, including those of the penis,
-back of tongue (patches devoid of villi and fissures) and palate;
-tibial crests; glands of elbow, groins and neck.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="ph">9. Signs of gout and rheumatism, goitre or nodes of the thyroid,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">10. Temperature, general, and various parts of the body
-(both sides if indicated as in hemiplegia).</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">II. <i>NERVOUS SYSTEM</i>:</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph">1. <i>General and subjective sensations and facial expression</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">General feeling of well-being or exhaustion, general complaints,
-weakness, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Vertigo: (constant, occasional, or occurring when the patient
-walks, or in the dark).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Headache: Whole head or limited space; frontal, vertical,
-occipital, unilateral, bilateral, deep or superficial; constant or
-periodic, aggravated at night or by some special cause, as with
-heat, with or without tenderness of head or spine to touch or
-pressure. Backache (general or localized).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Ovarian, infra-mammary, lumbar and vertex pains (in hysteria).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Neuralgic pains: (fifth nerve, intercostal nerves, sciatic
-nerve, with pain points, etc.) and muscular pains.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">General or wandering pains: Pains in bones (legs) afternoon
-or night. Girdle pains. Precordial pains (with or without
-anxiety).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Zones of hyperesthesia: See below.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">2. <i>Eyes</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Expression: lids: obliquity, mongol type, lagophthalmus,
-protrusion of eyeballs (with or without the Graefe symptom),
-ptosis; spasm of palpebral muscles.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Movement of eyes, nystagmus, strabismus (divergent or convergent);
-position and extent of movement of the eyes; double
-vision (in what direction does the second object move and incline?).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Weakness of the internal rectus (in close focussing).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Conjunctiva, lachrymal canal. Scars of cornea. Arcus
-senilis. Reflectory iridoplegia.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Size and form of pupils. Residuals or formation of adhesion
-of iris. Contraction of iris on exposure to strong light;
-on accommodation (for near vision) and after shutting the eye.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Imperfect sight (reading print), improved or not by glasses,
-dimness of sight, limitation of field of vision, scotoma, hemianopsia,
-loss of color sense; anomalies of refraction. Condition
-of apparatus (cornea, lens, vitreous body). Ophthalmoscopy
-where indicated (for choked disc, optic atrophy, lesions of the
-fundus). Field of vision where indicated and possible (reversal
-of color fields in hysteria; scotomata).
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="p11">3. <i>Ears</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Discharge, otoscopy. Defect of hearing on one or both sides
-(use watch and tuning fork).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Conduction through skull. Tinnitus aurium (auscultation
-for actual sound, over the head).</p>
-
-<p class="p11">4. <i>Taste</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Test separately the anterior two-thirds of tongue and the
-posterior third with weak solution of sugar, quinine, acid, salt.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">5. <i>Smell</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Test each nostril with oil of cloves, bergamot, peppermint,
-wintergreen and lemon. Note the actual answers.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Parosmia. Put down the actual extent of discrimination and
-recognition, with explanation of defect (mental, local, or nervous).</p>
-
-<p class="p11">6. <i>Cutaneous Sensibility</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">1. Tactile sensibility (use the finger-tip, feather, or pin).
-Compare both sides of face, arms, hands, fingers, breasts, inner
-and outer aspects of thighs and legs. (Never omit the ulnar
-side and the area outside and above the knee). Sole and dorsum
-of feet.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">2. Localization of touch (time and space) and tickle.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">3. Sensibility to pain (cautious pricks with a pin, localization
-in time and space), with or without the attention of the
-patient.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">4. Sensations of heat and cold (cold water and warm water
-in a glass tube).</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">(a) Sense of position: See below.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">(b) Stereognostic sense.</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph">5. Subjective sensations (formication, feeling of needles and
-pins, numbness).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">6. Tenderness of nerve trunks and muscles on pressure and
-percussion. The distribution to be noted on the drawings of the
-body surface.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">7. Biernacki's sign (analgesia of the ulnar nerve); anesthesia
-of eyeball; of testicles.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">7. <i>Vasomotor and Trophic Conditions</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Salivation, seborrhea.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Cyanosis or pallor; scaliness or loss of hair; change of nails.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Blushing, dermatographia. General or localized perspiration.
-Temperature of paralyzed or anesthetic parts.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p11">8. <i>Motor Functions</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Mobility of facial muscles (laugh) (wrinkle the forehead
-and the nose; move the ears; show the teeth and shut the eyes);
-tongue; palate.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Muscles of the neck, trunk and extremities; gait.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Functions of the successive segments: In case of paresis
-or paralysis define the limits of the condition and indicate the
-results of the following tests: For loss of power: for the coordination
-of movement (writing, buttoning coat); for muscular
-sense (discriminating difference in weight; with eyes shut tell
-the position of the limbs and show with one side the position
-of the other). Balancing power: (walking along a straight
-line, stand upright with heels and toes together and eyes
-closed).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Never forget the test of equality of grip, flexor and extensor
-strength of elbow, knees and toes. For test of weakness of one
-lower extremity have both lower extremities raised and hold to
-fatigue limit. The weaker limb will sink a certain number of
-seconds before the other.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">9. <i>Reflexes</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">1. Deep reflexes.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Masseteric: elbow, wrist, knee-jerk with or without Jendrassic,
-with clonus, or contralateral adductor reflex, knee-cap
-reflex; ankle clonus and Achilles tendon reflex.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">2. Superficial reflexes:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Plantar (with full description as to the Babinski reflex),
-gluteal, cremasteric, abdominal, epigastric, scapular, corneal,
-palmar, sneezing.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">10. <i>Condition of the Paralyzed Muscles</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Firm and of good tone, or flaccid or deficient in tone. Rigid
-and contracted. Note attitude of limb and the limitation of the
-motion, active and passive. Atrophy, hypertrophy, electric reaction
-of nerve and muscle (galvanic and faradic irritability
-when required).</p>
-
-<p class="p11">11. <i>Fibrillary Twitching</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Its distribution.</p>
-
-<p class="p11">12. <i>Tremor</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Of what parts; rhythm, intensity, rapidity. Condition at
-rest during sleep; when first observed. Condition during motion,
-how influenced by will.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p11">13. <i>Organic Reflexes and Their Control</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Bladder; delay of micturition. Dribbling from empty bladder,
-from distended bladder. Peculiar sensations on micturition.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Sexual reflexes: Frequent involuntary contraction and
-evacuation.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Defecation: Is the patient conscious of evacuation?</p>
-
-<p class="p11">14. <i>Convulsions</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Distribution: Extending over head, trunk, extremities, one
-side, one member.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Character: Which parts first and most attacked, and how
-do the waves of the tonic and clonic spasm spread; what movements
-predominate?</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Average duration, frequency, occurring night or day, or
-early in the morning.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Breathing; pupils; vasomotor condition; froth and bites.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Sphincters: Consciousness totally or partially lost.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Aura.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Equivalents: with or without what automatic movements.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Physical and nervous symptoms before and after attack.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Hysterical attacks.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">III. <i>THORACIC ORGANS</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Respiratory organs: Is there any difficulty of breathing,
-permanent or in attacks? Sleep with mouth open? Any pain
-on deep inspiration? Any cough or expectoration (where
-from). Nose and larynx. Shape of chest. Frequency of respiration.
-Respiratory movements. (Compare both sides in
-deep inspiration and expiration).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Lungs: Percussion. Auscultation. Expansion.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">In case of dullness or other abnormalities: Fremitus.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">Contents of pleura.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Circulatory organs: Is there any palpitation? In attacks?
-Due to what? Subjective sensation of arhythmia? Heart:
-The impulse seen and felt in what area? Relative dullness
-(right, upper and lateral borders). Sounds and bruits (localized).
-Pay special attention to muffling of the first sound, to
-duplication; to change of murmurs in inspiration and by position.
-Rhythm and accentuation.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Radial pulse: Rate, quality, on lying and sitting and standing.
-Special attention to variability through position or motion
-or exertion. If desirable, sphygmogram.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Condition of radial, brachial and temporal arteries.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Arcus senilis.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="ph">Sclerosis of veins. Varicosities.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Blood pressure.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">IV. <i>DIGESTIVE AND ABDOMINAL ORGANS</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Appetite, thirst, anorexia, nausea: Relative to quantity
-and quality of food. Vomiting (time and form), eructations
-and brashes; pain (locality, irradiation and time).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Mouth and teeth. Fetor. Fauces and pharynx. Stomach
-(position, etc.). Digestion. Movement of bowels. Any subjective
-feeling of obstacle? Form of stools. Flatulence and distensions.
-Hemorrhoids and fistulas.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Liver and spleen.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">If indicated, examination of stomach contents.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">V. <i>URINARY APPARATUS</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Micturition: Urine, amount in 24 hours, specific gravity,
-color, reaction, odor, albumen, sugar and indican, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Macroscopic and microscopic examinations of sediment,
-clouds and threads; casts, epithelia, erythrocytes, leukocytes,
-bacteria, threads, crystals, amorphous substances.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">VI. <i>GENITAL ORGANS</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Scars of genital organs. Menstruation: regular; profuse;
-scanty; accompanying symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Discharges at intervals; constant; profuse; color.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Internal examination.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">In men: Frequency and character of the sexual functions.
-Frequency of emissions, their occasional exciting causes and correlated
-symptoms.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Diagnostic summary and indications for further observation
-and treatment.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st2">MENTAL EXAMINATION</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">I. <i>ATTITUDE AND MANNER</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">General appearance of the patient, adaptation to surroundings,
-patient's general attitude and behavior, attention and cooperation.
-Note any peculiarities of conduct or demeanor (peculiarity
-of dress, mannerisms, grimacing, affectations, etc.).
-Note the manner, gestures, form of intonation, rapidity or slowness
-of speech, or special peculiarities. Facial and general expression
-(sadness, anxiety, fear, restlessness, excitement, etc.).
-Psychomotor retardation or excitement (violence, destructiveness),
-care of person (whether cleanly or untidy, etc.).
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">II. <i>STREAM OF MENTAL ACTIVITY</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">1. <i>Flow of thought</i>: Give sample of spontaneous expression
-or productivity, if possible. If not, give reaction to questioning.
-Show any disturbance of train of thought (retardation,
-confusion, incoherence, poverty of ideas, volubility, flight of
-ideas, distractibility, rhyming, desultoriness, circumstantiality,
-perseveration, fabrication, coinage of words, verbigeration, echolalia).</p>
-
-<p class="ph">2. <i>Abnormalities in the motor reactions</i>: Negativism, catalepsy,
-echopraxia, stereotypy, automatism, mutism, etc. Show
-loss of initiative, lack of spontaneity or slowness in action, etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">III. <i>EMOTIONAL TONE</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Moods and affects. Show the presence of cheerfulness,
-laughter, mischievousness, excitement, exaltation, depression,
-anxiety, fear, perplexity, tendency to be startled, irritability,
-constraint, confusion, indifference or apathy. Show sensitiveness,
-seclusiveness, suspicion, emotional instability or suggestibility.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">IV. <i>MENTAL CONTENT</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">1. Hallucinations; hearing, vision, taste, smell, sensation, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">2. Delusions; persecution, suspicion, infidelity, poisoning,
-electricity, hypnotism, mind-reading, self-accusation, grandeur,
-etc. Show whether permanent or transitory, systematized or
-unsystematized.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">3. Illusions.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">4. Obsessions, phobias, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">5. Nature of sleep, dreams, etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">V. <i>ORIENTATION</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">Time, place and person.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">VI. <i>MEMORY AND MENTAL GRASP</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">1. Recent past.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">2. Remote past.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">3. Retention of school knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">4. Fund of general information.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">5. Data of personal identification.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">6. Counting and calculation.</p>
-
-<p class="ph">7. Reading and writing.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="st3">VII. <i>INSIGHT AND JUDGMENT</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="ph">The judgment concerning the situation, insight concerning
-physical and mental health and efficiency, financial status,
-plans in case of discharge? In discussion of abstract and complicated
-topics? To what extent is he sensitive to his own errors
-and to comments?</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">VIII. <i>SUMMARY</i>: Physical and mental.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st3">IX. <i>DIFFERENTIAL AND PROVISIONAL DIAGNOSIS</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">The question as to what benefit is to be derived by
-the patient from a residence in a hospital for mental diseases
-is one which is often raised by relatives and
-friends. They are quite inclined to feel that if no medicines
-are being prescribed nothing is being done for the
-patient and that he could be cared for just as well at
-home. In considering this question it should be borne
-in mind that the persons under treatment in a hospital
-for mental diseases are there, either because they appreciate
-the need of hospital care themselves, or because,
-as a result of mental disorders, they are incapable
-of directing their own affairs, or are, in the eyes of the
-law, dangerous to themselves or others. Their property
-and other legal interests must be protected during their
-period of incompetence. Such persons are liable, if
-not adequately safeguarded, to enter into improper contracts
-or make legal conveyances that mean financial
-ruin to themselves as well as others. Unfortunate sexual
-irregularities frequently occur. Conduct disorders
-of various kinds are to be expected and a tendency
-towards criminal acts is common to several of the psychoses.
-It is a well-known fact that every mentally unbalanced
-individual is potentially dangerous, no matter
-how harmless he may appear. The suicide rate of the
-country as shown in one hundred of the largest cities has
-not fallen below fourteen per hundred thousand of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-sane population at any time during the last twenty
-years. The homicide rate in thirty-one of our large
-cities has not dropped below eight per hundred thousand
-of the population since 1909. Many of these crimes were
-undoubtedly committed by persons who should not have
-been at large and who were not responsible for their
-acts. The most important benefit derived by the patient
-in the hospital is the constant personal supervision given
-him by experts throughout the twenty-four hours of the
-day, whether he is asleep or awake. He gets the benefit
-of regular hours of rest and exercise, a properly regulated
-diet adapted to his needs, a sufficient amount of
-fresh air, and amusement and entertainments suited to
-his mental condition. He receives competent medical,
-dental and nursing care and is provided with opportunities
-for occupying himself in many different ways.
-Reading matter is always available for those who care
-for it. Even religious services are held for his benefit.</p>
-
-<p>The tendency of late years is to dispense with the
-use of drugs as far as possible and resort to other methods
-of accomplishing the same results. One of the most
-important therapeutic procedures in common use in the
-modern hospital for mental diseases is hydrotherapy.
-This should be used intelligently if any results are expected.
-Sending the patient to the hydriatic department
-where identically the same treatment is applied to all
-cases whether of excitement, depression, exhaustion, etc.,
-by an attendant who has no knowledge of either medicine,
-psychiatry or nursing may be referred to as the application
-of water to the exterior, but it is not hydrotherapy.
-Hydriatic treatments should be prescribed by a physician
-who has a thorough familiarity with that particular
-therapeutic procedure and every patient should receive
-the form adapted to his individual needs. The
-treatment should be given by an expert hydrotherapist.
-The equipment should provide for hot air, electric light,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-vapor and saline baths, Sitz baths, circular, rain, fan, jet
-and Scotch douches, dry, hot and cold packs, etc. Much
-can be accomplished by tonic, stimulating and eliminative
-therapy. Sedative treatments are much used in
-hospitals for mental diseases. The hot air bath<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> is
-given at from 134 to 170 degrees Fahrenheit for from
-four to ten minutes, preceded by a foot bath at from
-104 to 110 degrees. The patient enters the electric light
-and vapor bath at the room temperature, the baths being
-continued from four to eight minutes usually. The
-needle spray is given at a temperature ranging from 96
-to 102 degrees, with a pressure of from twenty to thirty
-pounds, and continued from one to two minutes. The
-fan douche starts at 90 degrees, is reduced gradually
-with a pressure of from twenty to twenty-five pounds and
-is continued for from fifteen to twenty seconds. The
-jet douche is first used at 90 degrees and gradually reduced,
-with a pressure of from fifteen to twenty-five
-pounds, for from ten to twenty seconds. The Scotch
-douche is used at a temperature of 80 degrees alternating
-with 110, with from fifteen to thirty pounds pressure.
-It should be used with extreme care. The same is true
-of vapor douches. The saline bath contains five pounds
-of ordinary salt to sixty gallons of water at a temperature
-of 94 degrees and is continued from ten to thirty
-minutes. The dry pack is usually continued from twenty
-to forty-five minutes, although it may be used longer
-with safety. In the use of the hot blanket pack the inner
-blanket is wrung out of water at from 140 to 160 degrees
-and must be applied with great care. Depending on the
-condition of the patient, etc., the cold wet pack is given
-with sheets wrung out of water at a temperature ranging
-from 50 to 60 degrees, although lower temperature
-may be used. "Neutral" wet sheet packs are often used
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-at a temperature of from 100 to 116 degrees for approximately
-three-quarters of an hour, as preparatory treatments.
-These measures should never be attempted by
-anyone who has not had an extended practical experience.
-Much can be accomplished by hydrotherapy in
-the alcoholic and toxic conditions, infective and exhaustive
-psychoses, manic excitements, involutional melancholia,
-hysterical and neurasthenic conditions, as well as
-in occasional cases of dementia praecox. Occupational
-therapy has been used to great advantage in connection
-with the hydrotherapeutic treatments.</p>
-
-<p>In the reception service and in the buildings for the
-noisy and violent cases ample facilities should be at
-hand for the continuous bath treatments. Pack rooms
-are also desirable. There is no means at our disposal
-equal in any way to the efficacy of the continuous bath
-in controlling excitements. The patient is usually kept
-in the tub from five to eight hours at a temperature
-varying from 92 to 97 degrees and averaging 96 degrees.
-In some hospitals they are kept in the tubs for periods
-of from two to three weeks. The continuous bath is
-of no value unless it means what the name implies&mdash;the
-continuous submersion of the body in water. In dealing
-with very excited cases this necessitates the use of a
-tub cover and a hammock, although sheet coverings are
-often used satisfactorily. Not much is to be gained by
-the tub bath if the patient is to be allowed to get out
-and in as he pleases and only come into partial contact
-with the water. The continuous bath is not without
-drawbacks. There is danger of chilling, scalding and
-drowning either by accident or with suicidal intent, etc.
-Too much care cannot be exercised in the supervision of
-the bath rooms. Every tub room in the Boston State
-Hospital has the following rules conspicuously <span class="no-break">displayed:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="pagebreak"><p class="sta">THE CONTINUOUS BATH ROOM</p></div>
-
-<p class="ph3">1. The nurse on duty in the bath room will be held personally
-responsible for the safety of the patients and must be
-thoroughly familiar with these rules. The nurse must
-never leave the room unless relieved by some other nurse.
-Eternal vigilance is necessary to prevent the chilling, scalding
-or drowning of the patient.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">2. Patients are to be given continuous baths only on the written
-order of a physician.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">3. Patients going to or from the bath room must wear a nightdress
-or bathrobe and slippers when not fully clothed.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">4. Tubs not in good condition or not properly equipped must
-not be used.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">5. Only patients under treatment are allowed in the room.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">6. Toilet each patient just before the bath. Patients may be
-removed from the tub for toilet purposes when necessary.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">7. In preparing for the bath, warm the tubs with hot water
-and then regulate the temperature so that a small amount
-of water at 96 degrees will be flowing continually.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">8. Adjust the hammock to the tub and place the patient in the
-bath resting on the hammock. Adjust the cover to the
-tub, with patient's head through the neck opening unless
-sheets or other covers are used.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">9. The temperature of the water must be taken in each tub at
-least every half hour. Feel the water in each tub frequently.
-If it seems too warm or too cold, take the temperature
-at once. If you find it varying from 96 degrees
-adjust to that temperature by adding a small amount of hot
-or cold water. If the temperature cannot be kept between
-95 and 97 degrees, let the water out of the tub and remove
-the patient immediately. The physician in charge and
-the chief engineer should be notified at once. The bath
-tub key must be fastened to a special cord worn by the
-nurse on duty. It must be delivered to the nurse in charge
-of the ward when the bathroom is closed.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">10. If the patient is very noisy, restless or flushed, fasten an
-ice poultice to the tub cover so that as the patient lies in
-the water the back of the head or neck will rest upon it.
-Replace with a fresh one before the ice is entirely melted.</p>
-
-<p class="ph4">Intensely excited patients may have cold compresses to
-the neck, changed often, for periods of 20 minutes.</p>
-
-<p class="ph4">Sponge all faces with cold water once an hour.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">11. Patients are to be permitted to drink as much cool water
-(not iced) as they desire, and must be offered a drink at
-least once an hour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="ph3">12. The nurse must record the following: 1. The water temperature
-and the patient's pulse rate (temporal or facial)
-every half hour. 2. The amount of sleep in the bath. 3.
-Bowel movements. 4. Nourishment. 5. Medicine administered.
-6. Hours of each patient in the tub. 7. The name
-of each nurse and the exact time of going on or off duty.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">13. In case the patient shows symptoms of fainting or convulsions,
-makes any attempt at drowning, shows suicidal tendencies
-or becomes too violent to remain in the tub with
-safety, let the water out and remove the patient at once.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">14. In the event of any serious accident or injury or sudden
-illness the patient should be removed from the tub at once
-and the physician notified.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">15. Patients are not to be allowed to feed themselves but must
-always be fed by the nurse. The inlets to the bath may be
-closed for twenty minutes while patients are being fed.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">16. During the day the warming closet must always contain
-one sheet and one towel for each patient in preparation for
-drying. It must also contain washable rugs for patients
-coming out of the tubs to step upon; also two blankets for
-emergencies.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">At least one hour before the patients are to be removed
-from the baths the garments they are to wear after the
-bath must be placed in the closet.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3">17. The temperature of the room should be kept as nearly as
-possible at 76 degrees Fahrenheit. If the temperature of
-the room cannot be kept above 68 degrees discontinue the
-bathing.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">When the care and treatment of mental diseases was
-first undertaken in our state institutions it was soon
-found necessary to take advantage in every way of such
-material assistance as could be offered by the more
-intelligent class of ablebodied patients in carrying on the
-routine work of the hospital. There were never employees
-enough to dispense with their services. In this
-way it came about that they were employed in the farms
-and gardens, assisted with the kitchen and housework,
-shared the tasks of the nurses and attendants in the
-wards and were busily engaged in almost every department
-of the hospital activities. It became apparent that
-occupation, undertaken originally for purely economical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-purposes, constituted one of the most important therapeutic
-agents at the disposal of the institution. The
-next step was the development of industries. Patients
-were taught by instructors to make clothing, underwear,
-stockings, shoes, brooms, mats, brushes, mattresses, furniture
-and many other useful products needed by the
-hospital. The end products were in every instance utilitarian.
-These accomplishments led to a still further
-development&mdash;purely occupational in character. Women
-were encouraged to take up such activities as rug making
-of all varieties, basketry, weaving, crocheting, embroidery,
-and needlework of every description. Men
-usually make towelling on looms, weave rugs, renovate
-mattresses, do repairing of all sorts and manufacture
-small articles which interest the masculine mind. Brass
-work, clay modelling and making jewelry of various kinds
-have been extensively employed.</p>
-
-<p>All of these forms of employment mean, of course,
-that the patient must leave the ward and go to some
-place designed for the purpose. The others, however,
-have not been overlooked and occupational therapists,
-who devote their entire time to stimulating the interest
-of the patients who cannot leave the wards, on account of
-their mental or physical condition, in some absorbing
-and diverting occupation, are an important part of the
-personnel of every institution. No other form of treatment
-employed in hospitals for mental diseases has been
-so productive of results. It is interesting to note that
-the medical officers of all of the forces engaged in the
-recent war found that occupational therapy was of great
-value in cases of shell shock and war neuroses.</p>
-
-<p>The highest development perhaps of occupational
-therapy has been in its application to strictly reeducational
-work in dementia praecox. This consists in a
-graduated and systematized reeducation of interests in
-apparently deteriorated individuals. The success of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-these efforts depends largely on the fact that very simple
-lines are followed at first. The patients are interested
-in marching to music, simple drills, calisthenics,
-games, basketball and purely physical exercises. Some
-can be induced to sort out raffia and ultimately take part
-in basket making. Others cut out pictures or put puzzles
-together. The women sometimes are willing to do
-plain sewing or make paper flowers. They progress by
-easy stages to more advanced and elaborate undertakings
-leading eventually to occupational work in the wards
-or possibly in the industrial rooms. Some of the apparently
-most hopeless cases have, as a result of these
-reeducational efforts, been able to return to their homes
-greatly improved. The mental improvement goes hand
-in hand with a resumption of their interests in their
-former work or some new occupational venture which
-may have proved attractive.</p>
-
-<p>Every effort should be made to avoid the possibility
-of long hours of idleness in the wards. When not actively
-employed in occupational work, ward games,
-reading, etc., the patients should be taken out of doors
-for fresh air and exercise. This, of course, suggests the
-necessity and importance of attractive surroundings.
-Nothing can be more depressive or detrimental to the
-welfare of the patient than a prisonlike appearance either
-inside of the buildings or on the grounds. The successful
-operation of a hospital is dependent in no small
-measure on the amount of attention devoted to the preparation
-of food. There must be a general dietary for
-the active ablebodied class, one for the working patients,
-an entirely different one for the tuberculous and epileptic
-cases and a special diet for the strictly hospital
-wards. In an institution of any size this requires the
-constant supervision of several dietitians.</p>
-
-<p>The advances of recent years in our knowledge as
-to the etiology and nature of general paresis have led<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-to the introduction of highly specialized therapeutic
-methods in the treatment of that disease and of cerebro-spinal
-syphilis. This is an important feature of the work
-of our hospitals at the present time. The interest recently
-shown in the study of the endocrine system has
-already brought about a new line of therapy which is
-destined to receive much attention in the future.</p>
-
-<p>Even the amusements necessary for the individual
-are given special attention in the treatment of mental
-diseases. This refers not only to methods of recreation
-and diversion in the wards day by day but includes moving
-picture shows, dances and various other special
-entertainments. Not the least important consideration
-is the patient's bodily health. This is often a determining
-factor in bringing about a restoration of mental integrity.
-It very often happens that there are diseases
-of the eye, ear, nose, throat, skin, nervous system, etc.,
-which may require attention. Dental, surgical, gynecological
-and other special treatments sometimes prevent
-ordinarily acute and recoverable psychoses from terminating
-unfavorably.</p>
-
-<p>In a word, the modern hospital treatment of mental
-diseases may be said to consist of a direct personal
-supervision of the mental and physical hygiene of the
-patient, supplemented by such specialized therapeutic
-procedures as may be indicated in the individual case.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PSYCHOPATHIC
-HOSPITAL</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">As has already been shown, the modern hospital treatment
-of mental diseases in this country is a development
-which represents the progress of nearly two centuries.
-Satisfactory as this has been in many respects, it nevertheless
-leaves much to be desired. All indications point
-to much greater accomplishments in the future. We are
-emerging from an era of custodial care and entering
-one of prevention, scientific investigation, and highly
-specialized treatment along entirely different lines. The
-interest of the public has been aroused in a subject which
-has heretofore been one to be avoided by common consent.
-Mental hygiene societies are no longer viewed
-with suspicion and curiosity. We are approaching a
-time when mental diseases can be dealt with, as other
-conditions are, without prejudice or unjust discrimination.
-Psychiatric wards promise to become integral
-parts of a completed medical organization. Psychopathic
-hospitals will soon be found in all of our great
-centers of population. The outlook for specialized institutes
-for purely research purposes, unfortunately, is
-not so encouraging at this time.</p>
-
-<p>At last there is some evidence of progress in the
-teaching of psychiatry in medical schools, hospitals and
-clinics, although only a beginning has been made as yet.
-More noteworthy advances have been made in other
-countries. The appointment of Heinroth as a professor
-of psychiatry at Leipsic in 1811 promised developments
-which did not materialize to any great extent for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-many years. According to Sibbald,<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> psychiatric wards
-or clinics were established at Würzburg in 1833,
-Jena in 1848, Vienna in 1853, Berlin in 1865 and at
-Göttingen in 1866. Scholz made provision for observation
-wards in a general hospital in Bremen in 1875.
-Fürstner opened a psychiatric clinic at Heidelberg in
-1878. Hitzig accomplished the same thing at Halle in
-1891 and Siemerling at Kiel in 1901. The inception of the
-modern psychiatric clinic has generally been attributed
-to Griesinger.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> In his preface to volume one of the
-"Archiv für Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten" in
-1868 he advocated the establishment of small hospitals in
-cities for the intensive treatment of acute and recoverable
-mental cases. He recommended a large staff of physicians
-and accommodation for from sixty to eighty patients,
-according to the needs of the community, but not
-to exceed one hundred and fifty under any circumstances.
-"In close connection with the organization of such institutions
-there is a crying need and a new, most important
-interest&mdash;the question of psychiatrical instruction.
-This is absolutely indispensable." This he proposed to
-accomplish by establishing a highly specialized clinic to
-be maintained largely by the teaching staff of a university.
-Griesinger's ideas were eventually carried out
-in full by Ziehen in Berlin, Sommer in Giessen and Bleuler
-in Zurich. Perhaps nothing has had more to do with
-the development of psychopathic hospitals in the United
-States than the well-known clinic established by Kraepelin
-at Munich in 1905. It occupies a three-story building
-accommodating one hundred patients and cares for
-between fifteen hundred and two thousand cases annually.
-Hydrotherapeutic and electrical treatments are used extensively.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A certain number of beds are reserved for
-research purposes. Psychological studies receive a
-great deal of attention. The out-patient department
-is a prominent feature. The teaching of
-psychiatry is one of the important purposes of
-the clinic. Kraepelin's methods have been followed
-rather closely here. The remarks made by Pliny
-Earle<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> in 1867 were almost prophetic in character.
-"Carbon agglomerated is charcoal, carbon crystallized
-is diamond. What charcoal is to the diamond,
-such, I believe, is the psychopathic hospital of the present
-compared with the psychopathic hospital of the
-future.... When the defects which I have mentioned
-shall have been thoroughly remedied by a comprehensive
-curriculum, a complete organization, a perfect systematization,
-an efficient administration, the charcoal now
-just ready to begin the process of crystallization will
-have become the diamond and the world will possess the
-psychopathic hospital of the future."</p>
-
-<p>Psychiatric research was inaugurated in this country
-by the establishment of the Pathological Institute of the
-New York State Hospitals in New York City in 1896.
-Its original field of investigation was limited to the laboratory.
-The name was changed to "Psychiatric Institute"
-on the appointment of Dr. Adolf Meyer as director
-in 1902 and the establishment was removed to Wards
-Island, where it was provided with clinical facilities by
-the Manhattan State Hospital. It thus became the precursor
-of the psychiatric clinic movement in America.
-The observation wards for the examination and commitment
-of mental cases, at the Philadelphia Hospital
-(1890) and at Bellevue in New York City were probably
-the first of the kind in this country. In 1902 the first
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-psychopathic wards connected with a general hospital
-were opened by the Albany Hospital. Pavilion F, as it
-was designated, admitted 3,132 patients during its first
-twelve and one-half years. These included persons
-awaiting examination and commitment, voluntary patients
-and cases of delirium, stupor, etc., transferred
-from other wards of the hospital. Of 1,038 cases admitted
-during a period of six years, only 17.6 per cent
-were committed to state hospitals. In a total of 1,855
-cases, twenty-five per cent were found to be suffering
-from some form of alcoholism and twenty-six per cent
-from chronic mental conditions, while thirty-five per
-cent were cases of the acute and recoverable class.
-About fourteen per cent were psychoses associated with
-renal conditions, neurasthenia, hysteria, tuberculosis or
-traumatism.</p>
-
-<p>The Psychopathic Hospital at the University of Michigan,
-the first of its kind on this continent, was established
-at Ann Arbor in 1906 as a direct result of the
-activities of Dr. William J. Herdman. The objects and
-purposes of the hospital were shown by the provision of
-the legislature for the appointment of "an experienced
-investigator in clinical psychiatry, who shall be placed
-in charge of the psychopathic ward, whose duty it shall
-be to conduct the clinical and pathological investigations
-therein; to direct the treatment of such patients as are
-inmates of the psychopathic ward; to guide and direct
-the work of clinical and pathological research in the several
-asylums of the state, and to instruct the students of
-the State University in diseases of the mind." It was
-thus an integral part of the hospital of the University
-of Michigan but fully coordinated with the state institutions.
-A subsequent act of the legislature changed its
-status to that of a "State hospital, specially equipped
-and administered for the care, observation and treatment
-of insanity and for persons who are afflicted mentally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-but are not insane." It also provided that a clinical
-pathological laboratory should be maintained for the
-benefit of the state hospitals. During a period of eleven
-years it admitted an average of 168.82 patients per
-year. Twenty-four per cent of these were voluntary
-cases. The psychoses represented were: manic-depressive
-insanity, twenty-four per cent; dementia praecox,
-seventeen per cent; paranoid conditions, two per cent;
-hysteria, seven per cent; psychopathic personality, two
-per cent; alcoholic psychoses, four per cent; morphine
-intoxication, one per cent; imbecility, two per cent; general
-paralysis, eight per cent; cerebral syphilis, one per
-cent; epilepsy, two per cent; senile psychoses, one per
-cent; cerebral arteriosclerosis, three per cent; unclassified
-conditions, five per cent; and not insane, two per
-cent. Seventy-four per cent of all the cases admitted
-were discharged after a residence of three months or
-less and eighty-two per cent after a residence of four
-months or less. Fourteen and eight-tenths per cent of
-all cases were discharged as recovered and 32.7 per cent
-as improved. Owing to the fact that it has only sixty-two
-beds at its disposal, the number of admissions is
-necessarily limited and cases are carefully selected.</p>
-
-<p>The Psychopathic Hospital in Boston, the first institution
-of the kind established in this country as a department
-of a state hospital (The Psychopathic Department
-of the Boston State Hospital), was opened for the
-reception of patients in 1912. The purposes of the institution
-were very clearly shown by the Twelfth Annual
-Report of the Massachusetts State Board of Insanity
-(1910):&mdash;"The psychopathic hospital should receive all
-classes of mental patients for first care, examination and
-observation, and provide short, intensive treatment of
-incipient, acute and curable insanity. Its capacity should
-be small, not exceeding such requirement. An adequate
-staff of physicians, investigators and trained workers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-in every department should provide as high a standard
-of efficiency as that of the best general and special hospitals,
-or that in any field of medical science. Ample
-facilities should be available for the treatment of mental
-and nervous conditions, the clinical study of patients
-on the wards, and scientific investigation in well-equipped
-laboratories, with a view to prevention and cure of mental
-disease and addition to the knowledge of insanity and
-associated problems. Clinical instruction should be
-given to medical students, the future family physicians,
-who would thus be taught to recognize and treat mental
-disease in its earliest stages, when curative measures
-avail most. Such a hospital, therefore, should be accessible
-to medical schools, other hospitals, clinics and laboratories.
-It should be a center of education and training
-of physicians, nurses, investigators, and special
-workers in this and allied fields of work. Its out-patient
-department should afford free consultation to the poor,
-and such advice and medical treatment as would, with
-the aid of district nursing, promote the home care of
-mental patients. Its social workers should facilitate
-early discharge and after care of patients, and investigate
-their previous history, habits, home and working
-conditions and environment, heredity and other causes
-of insanity, and endeavor to apply corrective and preventive
-measures."</p>
-
-<p>The building has a capacity of one hundred and ten
-beds. The institution may be said to differ from other
-psychopathic hospitals in being an establishment essentially
-of the temporary care type, not designed primarily
-either for the reception or for the care and custody
-of obviously committable cases, but rather for the
-observation and treatment of incipient mental disorders
-as well as psychopathic conditions not properly coming
-within the scope of the state hospitals. It has been as
-a rule the policy of the court to commit directly to other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-institutions for the insane all cases showing clearly the
-necessity of an extended hospital residence. The fact
-that only forty per cent of the temporary care cases have
-been committed shows that a preliminary period of observation
-before these cases are definitely disposed of is
-unquestionably warranted. The legal status of cases
-admitted may be described as follows:&mdash;1. Temporary
-care (not to exceed ten days); 2. Boston Police cases
-(Persons suffering from delirium, mania, mental confusion,
-delusions or hallucinations, or who come under
-the care or protection of the police); 3. Observation
-cases (for a period of thirty-five days, pending commitment);
-4. Cases pending examination and hearing;
-5. Emergency commitments (not more than five days);
-6. Voluntary admissions; 7. Cases held under complaint
-or indictment.</p>
-
-<p>An analysis of the work done by the Psychopathic
-Department from 1912 to 1920 shows a total of 14,922
-admissions to the wards,&mdash;an average of 1,865 per year.
-Of these, 59.77 per cent were temporary care (10 day)
-cases, 18.56 per cent "Boston Police" cases, 1.38 per
-cent observation cases (thirty-five days), .50 per cent
-emergency cases, .61 per cent committed "pending examination
-and hearing," 1.02 per cent under complaint
-or indictment and 16.96 per cent were voluntary cases.
-The entire temporary care group, including all of the
-above classes except the voluntary and criminal cases,
-constituted 81.34 per cent of the admissions. It is interesting
-to note that the principal psychoses represented
-by the cases coming into the hands of the Boston Police
-are dementia praecox, alcoholic psychoses and mental
-deficiency. The number of emergency cases is very
-small, as is the number committed by courts for observation.
-The number of voluntary admissions, an average
-of 316 per year, constituting 16.96 per cent of the total,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-is very significant as showing the response to be expected
-from the public to an opportunity for hospital
-treatment without the formality of any legal procedure.
-Of the 14,922 cases admitted between 1912 and 1920,
-38.45 per cent were subsequently committed as insane and
-3,797, or 25.44 per cent, were returned to the community
-as not requiring further hospital care or treatment.</p>
-
-<p>It has been shown that the special field covered by
-the Boston Psychopathic Hospital consists of temporary
-care cases. The principal psychoses represented by
-12,252 admissions of that class were as follows: alcoholic
-psychoses, 9.25 per cent; dementia praecox, 25.0 per cent;
-senile psychoses, 3.16 per cent; general paresis, 6.06 per
-cent; manic-depressive psychoses, 10.14 per cent; arteriosclerosis,
-3.23 per cent; epilepsy, 1.85 per cent; and
-without psychoses, 20.63 per cent.</p>
-
-<p>This latter class (without psychosis) is looked upon
-by some as constituting the most important field of a
-psychopathic hospital. It is exceedingly interesting to
-note the conditions which bring such individuals to the
-institution. An analysis of 1,430 cases shows the principal
-mental types represented to be as follows:&mdash;mental
-deficiency, thirty-four per cent; psychopathic personality,
-15.17 per cent; hysteria, neurasthenia and other
-psychoneuroses, 11.2 per cent; epilepsy, 8.04 per cent;
-alcoholism, 6.08 per cent; conduct disorders, 4.2 per cent;
-syphilis, 2.03 per cent; organic brain diseases, 1.68 per
-cent; neurosyphilis, 1.26 per cent; drug addictions, 1.4
-per cent; somatic conditions, 1.19 per cent, etc.</p>
-
-<p>No less interesting and instructive is a study of the
-voluntary cases. An analysis of 1,807 admissions of
-this type shows the following distribution of psychoses:
-alcoholic psychoses, 5.64 per cent; dementia praecox,
-18.43 per cent; manic-depressive, 6.81 per cent; involution
-melancholia, .99 per cent; senile psychoses, 1.11 per<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-cent; general paresis, 7.9 per cent; epilepsy, 1.05 per
-cent; psychoneuroses, 3.59 per cent; and without psychosis,
-34.64 per cent.</p>
-
-<p>The work of the out-patient service includes in a general
-way the study of cases referred to that department
-from the wards of the hospital or by its social service
-staff; cases referred by courts, schools, social agencies,
-and other institutions, as well as those sent by practicing
-physicians and individuals coming on their own initiative.
-The response on the part of the public to the facilities
-offered by the out-patient department is shown by
-the fact that 9,273 new cases were reported during a
-seven-year period, an average of 1,324.7 per year.
-Fifty-seven and six hundredths per cent of these cases
-were adults, 17.8 per cent were classified as adolescents,
-24.25 per cent as children and .89 per cent as infants.
-The source of origin of these cases is exceedingly interesting.
-Four and eighty-seven hundredths per cent were
-referred to the out-patient service by courts; 4.65 per
-cent, by schools; 11.77 per cent, by hospitals; 9.77 per
-cent, by physicians; and 3.55 per cent, by individuals.
-Fifteen and five tenths per cent came from the wards
-of the Psychopathic Hospital; 9.96 per cent, from the
-social service department and 13.3 per cent came on
-their own initiative. The question as to why these cases
-are sent to an institution of the psychopathic hospital
-type can now be answered. Fourteen and fifty-two hundredths
-per cent were examined solely for the purpose
-of determining the existence of probable mental diseases
-and 21.88 per cent on account of suspected mental
-defects. Four and fifty-two hundredths per cent were
-sex offenders. In 8.64 per cent the only question at issue
-was the possibility of a psychoneurosis and in 7.97 per
-cent the purpose of the examination was to ascertain
-whether or not syphilis was present. The diagnoses
-show the nature of the cases encountered in an out-patient<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-mental clinic. Four and eighteen hundredths per
-cent were cases of dementia praecox; 1.7 per cent of alcoholism;
-2.26 per cent of alcoholic psychoses; 2.39 per
-cent of epilepsy; 15.72 per cent of mental deficiency;
-9.0 per cent of psychoneuroses; 2.14 per cent of manic-depressive
-insanity; 2.09 per cent of psychopathic personality;
-1.21 per cent of general paresis; and 2.94 per
-cent were unclassified. Two and thirty-two hundredths
-per cent were diagnosed as suffering from syphilis in
-some form and 6.27 per cent were either delinquent,
-defective, subnormal, retarded or distinctly feebleminded.
-In 3.76 per cent no disease was found, either
-mental or physical. The great bulk of these cases were
-diagnosed either as mental deficiency, psychopathic personality
-or epilepsy. The ultimate disposition of 2,741
-cases, covering a period of two years, serves as an index
-of the practical operation of such a department. In
-42.03 per cent of these cases no care or observation other
-than that of the out-patient department was required.
-In 1.69 per cent of the cases commitment was recommended
-to hospitals for mental diseases, in 7.15 per cent,
-to schools for the feebleminded and in .11 per cent, to
-penal institutions. General or psychopathic hospital
-care was recommended in 11.31 per cent. In 2.74 per
-cent of the cases a report was made to courts; in 1.61
-per cent, to schools; in 18.75 per cent, to social agencies;
-and in 1.13 per cent, to physicians.</p>
-
-<p>The functions of the social service department in a
-general way may be summarized as follows:&mdash;1. The
-after care and supervision of patients at home; 2. Advice
-to families of patients in regard to their cases; 3. Advice
-given other members of the family; 4. Financial relief;
-5. Reference to other social agencies or institutions;
-6. Information obtained for case histories; 7. Inquiries
-relative to home conditions when discharge of a patient
-is under consideration, etc. The routine operation of<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-the department is well illustrated by the annual report
-of the Boston State Hospital for 1920. The number
-under social service supervision during the year was 428.
-Of these, 278 were new cases. Thirty-two and thirty-seven
-hundredths per cent were referred by the out-patient
-physicians; 59.71 per cent by the ward service;
-7.19 per cent by other social agencies; and .73 per cent
-were brought by relatives or friends. The principal
-reasons for their reference to the social service workers
-were shown as follows:&mdash;For medical history, 50.36 per
-cent; assistance in securing employment, 9.35 per cent;
-financial aid, 3.6 per cent; supervision, 7.2 per cent;
-advice, 19.42 per cent; convalescent care, 2.87 per cent;
-home care, 2.87 per cent, etc. An analysis of the cases
-under supervision shows the principal psychoses represented
-to be as follows:&mdash;Arteriosclerosis, 1.8 per cent;
-general paresis, 4.68 per cent; alcoholic psychoses, 1.8
-per cent; manic-depressive psychoses, 4.68 per cent;
-dementia praecox, 16.55 per cent; paranoid conditions,
-4.31 per cent; psychoneuroses, 9.35 per cent; undiagnosed
-psychoses, 6.84 per cent; and without psychoses, 44.24
-per cent. This latter group was made up mostly of psychopathic
-personalities (28.45 per cent) and mental
-deficiency (26.29 per cent). The purely social problems
-presenting themselves in connection with these cases
-were reported as follows:&mdash;Mental disease, 75.54 per
-cent; physical disease, 2.16 per cent; poverty, 2.88 per
-cent; criminality, 3.24 per cent; juvenile delinquency,
-2.52 per cent; sex offenses, 2.16 per cent; alcoholism, 2.16
-per cent; family dissension, 6.12 per cent; ignorance,
-2.52 per cent; and bad environment, .36 per cent. In
-addition to this, 299 discharged soldiers and 543 out-patient
-cases were reported as being under the supervision
-of the department, as well as 532 special cases
-studied in connection with the investigation of syphilis.</p>
-
-<p>The Psychopathic Hospital in Boston started on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-new chapter in its history on December 1, 1920, at which
-time it was formally separated from the Boston State
-Hospital and became a separate institution under the
-direction of Dr. C. Macfie Campbell.</p>
-
-<p>The Phipps Psychiatric Clinic at the Johns Hopkins
-Hospital in Baltimore was established in 1913. An
-integral part of a large general hospital and intimately
-associated with a medical school, it conforms rather
-closely to the plan of the German psychiatric clinics.
-A study of its activities shows that during a period of
-five years (ending January 31, 1918) the admission rate
-averaged 403.8 per year. Fourteen and three-tenths per
-cent of the cases were diagnosed as dementia praecox
-or schizophrenic reaction and 13.7 per cent conform apparently
-to the classification of manic-depressive psychoses.
-Ten and five-tenths per cent were diagnosed
-as neuroses or psychoneuroses; 6.1 per cent as general
-paresis; fifteen per cent as agitated depressions; 2.3 per
-cent as alcoholic psychoses; and 6.1 per cent as constitutional
-inferiority or constitutional psychopathic states.
-Seven and nine-tenths per cent were cases of anxiety
-neuroses, agitated depressions or anxiety psychoses;
-2.3 per cent were paranoic states or reactions; 3.5 per
-cent were cases of alcoholism, and 3.7 per cent of drug
-habits. The dispensary service of the Phipps Clinic has
-reported an average of 565 cases per year, representing
-a total of 2,260.5 visits annually.</p>
-
-<p>The work of Drs. Meyer, Hoch and Kirby at the Psychiatric
-Institute, of Dr. Barrett at the Psychopathic
-Hospital at the University of Michigan, of Dr. Southard
-at the Psychopathic Department of the Boston State
-Hospital, and that of Drs. Meyer and Campbell at the
-Phipps Psychiatric Clinic in Baltimore has brought the
-subject of psychopathic hospitals very prominently before
-the public. Various other establishments of a similar
-nature have been planned and some are in process<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-of construction, or already in operation. The State
-Psychopathic Institute at Chicago and the Psychopathic
-Hospital of the University of Iowa should be mentioned
-in this connection. Psychopathic hospitals have been
-planned for New York City and one is to be built by the
-State of California. The legislature of Colorado has
-already made an appropriation of $350,000 for the establishment
-of an institution of this type in the city of
-Denver.</p>
-
-<p>The work already done in this field shows quite conclusively
-that general hospital methods are not inconsistent
-with the developments of modern psychiatric
-progress. The large percentage of voluntary cases received
-and the number of persons consulting the physicians
-in the out-patient departments shows an
-unexpected demand on the part of the public for institutions
-of a new type. As Dr. Adolf Meyer<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> has
-pointed out, "Our organized system for the care of
-mental disorder is in many respects forbidding. It
-throws together all kinds of diseases, and shocks in that
-way the already sensitive patient who fears the worst
-for himself or herself. It comes at once with an outspoken
-declaration of insanity in the very commitment
-to a hospital, an expression which carries a humiliation
-to the patient and adds insult to injury. It often means
-carrying the patient off to a remote asylum which is too
-widely supposed to have the inscription, 'Leave hope
-behind all ye that enter here.' Helpfulness rather than
-coercion must take the place of all this." What the psychiatric
-clinic may be expected to accomplish in remedying
-this difficulty was summarized by Dr. Meyer<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> in
-the following words:&mdash;"It is eminently necessary to get
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-model institutions in which medical students and physicians
-can learn how to deal with the many problems
-of the disorders of the organ of behaviour from their
-inceptions into all their ramifications. The clinic must
-do the work for at least one limited district, with its out-patient
-and social service and consultation department,
-and with its hospital wards. Everything must be done
-to make help in mental disorders more acceptable and
-convincingly helpful. More patients must learn to look
-to it for help and the organization must be so as to give
-the patient and the physician and the public at large a
-conception very different from that to-day associated
-with insanity. It is not so much the issue of more help
-to the curable, but the issue of more work near where
-the troubles begin, and work against that which breeds
-trouble. For this we must learn to put the chief weight
-on hospitals and organizations for natural districts for
-intensive work rather than upon the mere economy of
-large hospitals far away from where the troubles develop."</p>
-
-<p>Southard has raised the question as to the correct
-designation of institutions of the psychopathic hospital
-type:&mdash;"A word is again necessary as to the meaning
-of the term 'psychopathic hospital.' For various reasons
-the term has become so attractive in propaganda
-that a comparatively large number of institutions of
-whatever scope have been founded or recommended to
-receive the term 'psychopathic hospital,' 'institute,'
-'department' or 'ward.' Thus there is developing a tendency
-in state hospitals to denominate the receiving ward
-'psychopathic.' There can be no advantage in this designation
-other than that of calling old ideas by new names.
-The idea of the receiving ward for committed cases
-destined to receive the ordinary probate court group of
-cases is not altered or improved in any manner by the
-designation 'psychopathic.' The best opinion seems to<span class="pagenum">
-<a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-be that a psychopathic hospital or institute shall be an
-institution in which all types of mental cases, from the
-probate court group on the one hand up to the most
-dubious and difficult cases of mental disorder on the
-other, may be examined; but if an institution is primarily
-or chiefly concerned with patients of the medicolegal,
-committable or custodial group, to serve merely as a vestibule
-through which committed cases pass, such an institution
-has by no means the broad scope which the very
-general term 'psychopathic' implies. The institution
-is not a modified or sublimated form of receiving ward
-for a great district hospital."</p>
-
-<p>There is, of course, no reason why the reception service
-of an ordinary state hospital should be spoken of
-as constituting a psychopathic ward. This accomplishes
-nothing more, perhaps, than to raise some question as to
-what the functions of the rest of the institution may
-be. The designation psychopathic hospital has been
-rather loosely used and is, as Southard has definitely
-shown, of American origin. It has been applied somewhat
-indiscriminately from time to time to practically
-every form of activity related to the care and treatment
-of mental diseases outside of the generally recognized
-state hospital field. These may be summarized as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>1. Detention wards, pavilions, etc. Intended for
-no purpose other than the custody of the "insane" pending
-commitment.</p>
-
-<p>2. Psychiatric wards of general hospitals&mdash;such as
-Pavilion F in Albany. There would appear to be no
-reason for the use of the word psychopathic in such
-cases, the term psychiatric being much more clearly
-applicable.</p>
-
-<p>3. Institutes designed primarily for research only
-or for research and instruction, with or without clinical
-facilities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>4. Psychopathic hospitals. Independent units or integral
-parts of a general hospital&mdash;with or without
-facilities for research and instruction. Designed exclusively
-for mental cases, without regard to legal status,
-whether committed or voluntary, their detailed examination
-and careful observation with intensive treatment
-in the wards for limited periods when indicated, or their
-supervision and direction in out-patient departments,
-serving also in some instances as receiving and distributing
-centers supplying other institutions.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to their limited size, the necessity of treating
-large numbers in a short space of time, and the fact that
-institutional care is already amply provided for in the
-existing state hospitals, the obvious field of the psychopathic
-hospital is primarily the acute and recoverable
-psychoses and the milder forms of mental disorder which
-may or may not require a residence in the wards. Only
-a thorough examination and a brief period of observation
-can determine whether or not that is needed. The question
-at issue is largely that of determining the necessity
-of a more or less indefinite committed status. These
-problems arise particularly in dealing with the so-called
-psychogenic disorders and the psychopathic states&mdash;hysteria,
-neurasthenia, psychasthenia, the psychoneuroses
-in general and the episodes which characterize the
-psychopathic personalities. Traumatic psychoses often
-come into consideration, as well as cases of cerebrospinal
-syphilis, toxic conditions, drug addictions, the
-psychoses of infection and exhaustion, and above all, of
-course, manic-depressive insanity and incipient forms of
-dementia praecox. Many of these cases require only a
-brief hospital treatment and are able in a short time
-to return to home surroundings and resume their former
-occupations. Often a contact with the chronic and custodial
-classes is not only without advantage but actually
-detrimental. The psychopathic hospitals thus exercise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-a sort of clearing house function and return to the community
-many patients who otherwise would be subjected
-to the stigma, if there is one, of a legal commitment.
-While questions relating to the public health cannot be
-analyzed in terms of dollars and cents, the saving to the
-state which is made by substituting a short period of
-supervision and treatment, for a protracted residence in
-an institution of the custodial class amounts to millions.
-In view of the difficulties encountered in obtaining adequate
-appropriations for the proper maintenance of the
-enormous population now housed in our state hospitals,
-this is a factor which cannot be disregarded.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE MENTAL HYGIENE MOVEMENT</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>As the result of an intimate personal knowledge of
-the subject, acquired during an extended hospital residence
-as a patient in both public and private institutions,
-Clifford W. Beers, having recovered his health, resumed
-his place in the world profoundly impressed with the
-feeling that the question of mental diseases as a public
-health problem was one which demanded immediate consideration.
-In no position financially to institute a campaign
-for the purpose of interesting the public in the
-importance of topics which had not been made the subject
-of general discussion in the past, he was confronted
-with the necessity of securing the cooperation and support
-of persons who had the means to launch such an
-undertaking. With this object in view he wrote his
-book&mdash;"A Mind That Found Itself,"<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> now in its fourth
-edition and destined, to use the words of the "American
-Journal of Insanity,"<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> "to become one of the classics
-of psychological literature." There is some question
-as to the accuracy with which Mr. Beers analyzed the
-experiences through which he had passed. Although there
-is no reason for questioning his mental condition when
-the book was written, his conclusions were apparently
-formulated when he had not as yet had sufficient time in
-which to readjust himself and recover his perspective.
-Some of his viewpoints certainly reflect a morbid coloring
-of which he was probably unconscious, although at
-the time he recognized in himself "symptoms hardly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-distinguishable from those which had obtained eight
-months earlier when it had been deemed expedient temporarily
-to restrict my freedom." His work was referred
-to as an "autopathography" by Farrar,<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> who
-made a detailed study of the various psychological
-trends manifested. These are more or less immaterial.
-The interesting feature of his book is the elaborate description
-of a common but exceedingly important psychosis
-written by a well educated observer with a
-collegiate training. Its greatest value, however, lies in
-the fact that he brings home to us so graphically the
-overwhelming importance of the personal element so
-often overlooked by those who are accustomed to dealing
-with mental cases in large numbers. "It carries the
-reader away from the technical dissertations, and brings
-him face to face with the feelings and reactions of a
-distorted mind, showing him the patient as a human
-being with a sentient soul and not as a case."<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
-
-<p>That the plan which Mr. Beers had formulated for
-an organized mental hygiene movement had a practical
-application was recognized at once by Dr. Adolf
-Meyer,<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> who expressed the following views on the subject
-as early as 1907:&mdash;"It will be a difficult task to
-find the not very common level-headed and well-informed
-persons in various parts of the country capable of organizing
-the public conscience of the people. Neglected
-by physicians and dreaded by the fiscal authorities, the
-facts are not available today, except in fragments, mixed
-up with innumerable extraneous considerations; the hospitals
-are closed corporations, the press injudicious in
-inquiry and reform, and those capable of judgment
-unable to get the facts. The crying needs persist in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-meantime. Instead of a land fund (the 12,225,000 acres
-bill and ideal of Dorothea Dix) we must have a permanent
-survey of the facts and efficient handling of what
-is not prevented. The experience with what remains as
-inevitable experiments of nature, as well as with people
-who should know better, must be put into practical form
-for communication and teaching, and brought home
-where it will tell; in opportunities of work and education
-for physicians, and cooperation between our educational
-forces and those who labor for physical hygiene and
-prophylaxis. Most of us are already under too definite
-obligations to meet the call for devoted work for the
-maintenance of an organization as well as can Mr. Beers.
-In my judgment, he deserves the assistance which will
-make it possible for others to join in the work which will
-be one of the greatest achievements of this country and
-of this century,&mdash;less sensational than the breaking of
-chains but more far-reaching and also more exacting in
-labor. A Society for Mental Hygiene with a capable
-and devoted and judicious agent of organization will
-put an end to the work of makeshift and short-sighted
-opportunism, and initiate work of prevention and of helping
-the existing hospitals to attain what they should
-attain, and further of adding those links which are needed
-to put an end to conditions almost unfit for publication.
-What officialism will never do alone must be helped along
-by an organized body of persons who have set their
-hearts on serious devotion to the cause. If Mr. Beers
-gets the means to pursue his aim he will secure the
-body which will guarantee proper judgment in a cause
-which has been a mere foster-child in the field of charitable
-donations merely because it seemed too difficult.
-Here is a man who is not afraid of the task. May he get
-the help to enable him to surround himself with the best
-wisdom of our nation!"</p>
-
-<p>Encouraged by this and many other such expressions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-of opinion, Mr. Beers proceeded to the organization of
-the first state mental hygiene society, that of Connecticut,
-which began its activities in 1908. The National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene was formally organized
-on February 19, 1909. The first few years were devoted
-to raising funds and making comprehensive preparations
-for further activities which did not start until 1912. In
-the meanwhile the cooperation of many prominent philanthropists,
-educators, physicians, etc., was assured. The
-importance of this movement is illustrated by the
-prominence of the persons who were willing to associate
-themselves with an undertaking of this nature. The
-membership of the committee has included, in addition
-to many others, Professor William James, Dr. Lewellys
-F. Barker, Dr. Rupert Blue, Dr. George Blumer, Dr. G.
-Alder Blumer, Professor Russell H. Chittenden, Ex-President
-Charles W. Eliot, President W. H. P. Faunce,
-President John H. Finley, Professor Irving Fisher, Dr.
-Charles H. Frazier, Cardinal Gibbons, President Arthur
-T. Hadley, Chancellor David Starr Jordan, President
-Cyrus Northrop, Dr. Stewart Paton, Dr. Frederick
-Peterson, Professor Gifford Pinchot, President Jacob
-G. Sherman, Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes, Mrs. William K.
-Vanderbilt, Professor Henry VanDyke, Dr. William H.
-Welch and Ex-President Benjamin Ide Wheeler. Important
-financial contributions were made by Professor
-William James, Mr. Jacob A. Riis, Mr. Henry Phipps,
-Mrs. Elizabeth M. Anderson, Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt,
-Mrs. E. H. Harriman, Mrs. Willard Straight, the
-Rockefeller Foundation, etc. With the appointment of
-Dr. Thomas W. Salmon as Medical Director in 1912 the
-committee commenced active operations with its future
-success assured in every way.</p>
-
-<p>The objects and purposes of the National Committee
-have been very adequately summarized in the following
-language used in one of its publications:&mdash;"The National<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-Committee for Mental Hygiene and its affiliated
-state societies and committees are organized to work for
-the conservation of mental health; to help prevent nervous
-and mental disorders and mental defect; to help
-raise the standards of care and treatment for those suffering
-from any of these disorders or mental defect;
-to secure and disseminate reliable information on these
-subjects and also on mental factors involved in problems
-related to industry, education, delinquency, dependency,
-and the like; to aid ex-service men disabled in the war;
-to cooperate with the federal, state, and local agencies
-and with officials and with public and private agencies
-whose work is in any way related to that of a society or
-committee for mental hygiene. Though methods vary,
-these organizations seek to accomplish their purposes by
-means of education, encouraging psychiatric social service,
-conducting surveys, promoting legislation, and
-through cooperation with the many agencies whose work
-touches at one point or another the field of mental
-hygiene. When one considers the large groups of people
-who may be benefited by organized work in mental
-hygiene, the importance of the movement at once becomes
-apparent. Such work is not only for the mentally
-disordered and those suffering from mental defect, but
-for all those who, through mental causes, are unable so
-to adjust themselves to their environment as to live
-happy and efficient lives." The first few years of the
-committee's existence have demonstrated conclusively
-that it is the most powerful factor in promoting the welfare
-and interests of the insane in this country since the
-time of Dorothea Dix. The elaborate surveys which it
-has made of conditions existing in various states have
-resulted in beneficial legislation which had been needed
-for years. Surveys have been completed in California,
-Tennessee, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Texas, Connecticut,
-Georgia, Wisconsin and South Carolina, and others<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-are under way. It has brought about an interest in
-mental diseases and mental defects such as has never
-been manifested before in this country. Its activities
-during the early part of the war were responsible
-largely, if not entirely, for the attention given by the
-Army and Navy to matters relating to psychiatry. The
-National Committee has taken a very active part in encouraging
-the establishment of psychiatric clinics in
-connection with the state hospitals. It has been largely
-responsible for the psychological and psychiatric examination
-of defectives in penal institutions and reformatories
-now generally recognized as being of vital importance.
-Its activities have emphasized the importance of
-a preliminary mental examination of obviously defective
-individuals brought before the courts. One of its accomplishments
-has been the publication of a very successful
-quarterly magazine, "Mental Hygiene," which was
-undertaken in 1917 and has long since passed the experimental
-stage. A summary of its activities would not be
-complete without a reference to the valuable work which
-the committee has done in standardizing the reports made
-of institutions and compiling accurate statistics relating
-to mental diseases and defects which will be of inestimable
-value to all who are interested in the progress of
-psychiatry in this country.</p>
-
-<p>State mental hygiene societies now exist in Alabama,
-California, Connecticut, the District of Columbia,
-Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana,
-Maryland, Massachusetts, Maine, Mississippi, Missouri,
-North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
-Tennessee and Virginia. The committee on mental hygiene
-in New York is a department of the State Charities
-Aid Association, which has been actively interested in
-matters relating to the care and treatment of the insane
-for many years. The chief purposes of the state organizations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-have been officially described as follows:&mdash;<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> "To
-work for the conservation of mental health; for the prevention
-of mental diseases and mental deficiency and for
-improvement in the care and treatment of those suffering
-from nervous or mental diseases or mental deficiency."
-The interest of the public is stimulated by pamphlets,
-reports and publications of various kinds, mental
-hygiene exhibits of an educational nature, public lectures,
-mental hygiene conferences, etc. The local societies
-have as a definite object, moreover, the encouragement
-of<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> "(a) Out-patient departments for mental
-cases in connection with hospitals for mental diseases and
-general hospitals, and independent of either of these
-agencies, such, for instance, as dispensaries and mental
-hygiene clinics, (b) Systematic psychiatric as well as
-psychological examination of school children, (e) Provision
-for incipient and emergency cases in psychopathic
-wards of general hospitals, (d) Psychopathic hospitals
-in which cases of mental disorder may be treated
-in their earliest and most curable stages and where practical
-work in prevention and social service may be done,
-(e) Increased institutional provision for the feebleminded
-and epileptic." One of their most important
-objects is the enactment of laws in the various states
-which will take care of the insane pending commitment
-out of the hands of the poor authorities and delegate it
-to health officers or physicians. As Dr. William L. Russell<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>
-has pointed out, the mere provision of institutional
-care for the mental diseases of a community is not
-the only thing to be considered, "Unless the vital issues
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-occasioned by mental disorders in the homes, the schools,
-the industries, and in social relations are intelligently
-grasped and dealt with by means of the state system,
-state institutions are liable to be looked upon as a resource
-which is only to be appealed to when complete
-separation of the patient from his usual environment has
-become imperative. They will still be regarded as
-asylums. In such case, their development is likely to be
-in the direction of great custodial centers, and economic
-and so-called business consideration in their management
-are likely to prevail over those dictated by science
-and humanity. This has happened in more than one
-state in which state care has been adopted under conditions
-of great promise. A system of state care must, to
-be effective, not only be adopted, but it must be planned
-and developed with reference to the known needs of the
-sufferers from mental disorder."</p>
-
-<p>The Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene,
-the second national organization of this type, was
-established at Ottawa on April 26, 1918, largely as a
-result of the activities of Dr. Clarence M. Hincks of
-Toronto University. Arrangements were at once
-effected for an active participation in war work, a comprehensive
-study of immigration, elaborate statistical
-institutional studies, the establishment of a library,
-special investigation of delinquency and a series of lectures
-to be given in various parts of the Dominion. This
-organization has been an exceedingly active one from the
-beginning. The first number of the "Canadian Journal
-of Mental Hygiene" appeared early in 1919. A survey
-was made of Manitoba and its needs during the first year.
-The University of Toronto announced an extension
-course beginning April, 1919, for the special training of
-social workers desiring to enter the mental hygiene field.
-Instruction was given in psychiatry, social and economic
-problems, neurology, mental tests, case work, social institutions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-occupational therapy, child welfare, home economics
-and recreation. In 1919 a mental hygiene survey
-was made of British Columbia. Alberta, New Brunswick
-and Nova Scotia have already requested similar
-surveys with the intention of improving the methods of
-caring for mental diseases and defects in those provinces.
-Psychiatric clinics have been established in connection
-with the Toronto University and the Royal Victoria
-Hospital in Quebec. New institutions have been planned
-in British Columbia and a psychopathic hospital is to be
-built in Toronto. In 1920 a mental hygiene committee
-was instituted in France<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> by the Minister of Hygiene,
-Assistance and Social Providence. The committee is
-made up of about forty members, psychiatrists, pathologists,
-physiologists, managers and magistrates. Dr.
-Dron, Senator and Mayor of Tourcoing, was elected
-chairman. The committee is to make a study of all questions
-relating to mental hygiene and psychiatry. It will
-consider particularly methods of coordinating the activities
-of various organizations already at work, the creation
-of new interests and spreading broadcast information
-on mental hygiene topics. A representative of this
-society has already made a visit to this country to study
-methods employed here. The mental hygiene movement
-has even reached South Africa. "Mental Hygiene"<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>
-has called attention to the fact that the Cape Province
-Society for Mental Hygiene has actively interested itself
-in the provisions discussed by the government for the
-care, education and training of the feebleminded. Two
-institutions are to be opened for this purpose. The Cape
-Province Society has already instituted a campaign for
-the purpose of organizing other local societies as well as
-a national council.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Beers wrote his well-known book he evidently
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-had in mind more particularly the amelioration of
-material conditions existing in institutions. He was
-looking forward to provision for the more humane and
-scientific care of mental diseases. This is unquestionably
-a consideration of vital importance and these
-objects have not been neglected in the practical operation
-of the mental hygiene organizations. Mental hygiene
-in its broadest sense, however, has come to mean much
-more than that. The foundation of the present-day conception
-of mental hygiene may be said to have been laid
-by Adolf Meyer in 1906, when he described the fundamental
-principles which he believed to be concerned in
-the development of dementia praecox. He saw in this
-disease a disorder of the personality due to a deterioration
-of mental habits, in other words, to faulty mental
-hygiene. While his views as to the etiology of dementia
-praecox have not been generally accepted, they suggested
-an entirely new avenue of approach to the problem of
-mental diseases in general. Hoch's "shut in" personality
-and Bleuler's "autismus" were more or less comparable
-hypotheses which do warrant to a certain extent
-the tenability of such theories as were advanced by
-Meyer. The same may be said of some of the mental
-mechanisms advocated by Freud and others of the more
-purely psychological school of psychiatrists. This viewpoint
-is reflected somewhat by White<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> in his conception
-of childhood as the golden period for mental
-hygiene. "The outstanding fact that present-day psychiatry
-emphasizes is that mental illness is a type of
-reaction of the individual to his problems of adjustment
-which is conditioned by two factors&mdash;the nature of those
-problems and the character equipment with which they
-are met.... Mental illnesses, defects of adjustment at
-the psychological level, are therefore dependent upon
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-defects in the personality make-up, and as this personality
-make-up is what it is as a result of its development
-from infancy onward, it follows that the foundation of
-those defects which later issue in mental illness are to
-be found in the past history of that development." He
-protests very properly against accepting the theory that
-the characteristics of the personality are entirely the
-products of germ-plasm determiners moulded in strict
-accordance with the laws of heredity and therefore immutable.</p>
-
-<p>Copp<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> has called attention to the fact that the
-dominant figure in mental hygiene activities must eventually
-be the family physician, who has an opportunity
-to see the beginnings of mental disorders when they first
-manifest themselves. He must, therefore, be qualified to
-intelligently understand such conditions and be prepared
-to suggest a remedy. His is inevitably the first point of
-contact. Mental hygienists have found a fertile and
-almost untouched field in our public school system. As
-Professor Burnham<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> suggests, "It is a grave reflection
-upon the schools that so many of their graduates
-have to be reeducated in the sanitarium or the hospital."
-The hygiene movement in the school population, as suggested
-by Professor Gesell,<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> means something more
-than psychological examinations and mental tests, important
-as they are. It means a study of the individual.
-He would have a new type of school nurse or social
-worker, one interested particularly in "the child with
-the night terrors, the nail biter, the over-tearful child,
-the over-silent child, the stammering child, the extremely
-indifferent child, the pervert, the infantile child, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-unstable choreic, and a whole host of suffering, frustrated
-and unhealthily constituted growing minds, that
-we are barely aware of in a quantitative sense, because
-we do not have the agencies to bring them to our attention
-as problems of public hygiene and prophylaxis."
-They require highly specialized supervision and training
-if they are not to become future residents of our hospitals
-for mental diseases or possibly of institutions of
-a reformatory type. If such reforms as these are to be
-brought about in our public school system it is hardly
-necessary to suggest that the teacher herself must have
-very clear conceptions as to the significance and importance
-of mental training in youth.</p>
-
-<p>If these matters are important in the public schools
-they must be even more serious factors in higher education.
-Campbell<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> has raised the question as to how
-far the universities "fulfill their responsibilities with
-regard to the mental hygiene of the community? It is
-doubtful whether they have attained a clear recognition
-of the fact that a man's mind may be richly supplied with
-a great variety of special information, that he may have
-attained a high intellectual level, and yet the man's life
-may be rendered inefficient because it rests upon insecure
-foundations. An education may enable a man to solve
-abstruse intellectual problems, and yet leave him so hopelessly
-unable to cope with a bereavement, an unsuccessful
-love affair, difficult marriage relations, or even simple
-instructive impulses that he may lose control of the
-direction of his life and for a period be dominated by
-factors which have been almost entirely repressed in
-his conscious life; the disorder may be so marked as to
-be included under the wide term "insanity." To rear a
-superb intellectual structure on such a foundation is
-surely not an ideal education; it is like building a house
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-on the sand, or, to speak more hygienically, it is like
-building a superb mansion without paying any attention
-to the plumbing." Deplorable as it may seem that such
-important elements in the education of the individual
-have been overlooked, it is not nearly so surprising as
-the fact that no instruction of any consequence is given
-in psychiatry in the great majority of our medical
-schools. This is a matter which is well worthy of attention
-and is fortunately beginning to receive some consideration.
-A rather systematic campaign has been instituted
-by the mental hygiene organizations to bring about
-some instruction in these topics in our schools and
-universities,&mdash;a campaign which promises to be productive
-of results sooner or later.</p>
-
-<p>An interesting phase of the mental hygiene movement
-is the relation which it has been shown to hold to the
-field of industry. It must be admitted that this is an
-intensely practical question. We even have a Journal
-of Industrial Hygiene, which has been published successfully
-now for some time. The mere taking of intelligence
-tests for industrial purposes is only an incident.
-The important thing, as shown by Cobb,<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> is the prevention
-of mental disorder by bringing about a proper
-relation of the worker to his environment and the
-elimination of causes of discontent. Beyond this there
-is, of course, the early treatment of individuals before
-the opportunity of bringing about a proper adjustment
-has been lost for all time. Cobb<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> suggests that, above
-all, the physician must "forget orthodox psychiatry (as
-the economist seems to be forgetting cut-and-dried political
-economy) and interest himself in a dynamic, individual
-psychology which recognizes the essentials of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-human nature and at last begins to analyze for us the
-elements of which human nature really consists, looking
-on each case as a human experiment in reaction to environment."</p>
-
-<p>There would appear to be no limit to the possibilities
-of the mental hygiene movement. Perhaps no more comprehensive
-summary of its objects and purposes can be
-given at this time than that contained in a definition
-recently formulated by Southard:<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> "To stem the
-tide of syphilis, to wage war on alcohol, to counsel
-against marriage of defectives, to generalize the insane
-hospitals, to specialize the general hospitals, to weed
-defects out of general school classes, to open out the
-shut-in personality, to ventilate sex questions, to perturb
-and at the same time reassure the interested public&mdash;these
-are infinitives that belong perhaps in a rational
-movement for mental hygiene. They are things the past
-has taught us more or less clearly to do and in that
-sense the movement for mental hygiene is surely not
-much more than the elaboration of the obvious."</p>
-
-<p>It may be suggested that these are functions which
-properly belong to the medical profession exclusively.
-A little reflection will, however, be sufficient to show that
-this is not the case. Efforts have been made for years
-to prevent the spread of venereal disease. Attempts
-were made to accomplish this by legislative enactment.
-That these methods of control have been ineffectual is
-now well known to everyone. Continental governments
-have for a long while been trying to regulate prostitution
-by police supervision and frequent medical inspections.
-The percentage of venereal disease has, however,
-not been appreciably reduced by this plan and it has
-been repeatedly condemned by vice commissions as a
-result of official investigations. It may be stated now, I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-think, without fear of contradiction that this is a matter
-which must be regulated by educating the public and
-which can be handled in no other way. It is a well
-known fact that no law can be enforced unless it meets
-with public approval. The will of the majority rules.
-When the effects of venereal disease are generally recognized
-there will no longer be a necessity for much
-legislation on the subject. This is a question of far-reaching
-importance. When it is recalled that twelve
-per cent of the cases admitted to our hospitals for mental
-diseases are suffering from general paresis or cerebral
-syphilis, the necessity of a more general understanding
-of these conditions is readily apparent. The percentage
-is much higher in the densely populated metropolitan
-districts.</p>
-
-<p>Legislative restrictions in the past were never very
-successful in limiting the use of alcoholic beverages. It
-is true that the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution
-of the United States and the Volstead Act have had
-a very material effect on the number of cases of alcoholism
-admitted to our institutions. The influences which
-resulted in alcoholism, however, will find an outlet in
-some other direction unless they are modified in some
-way. This again is largely a matter of education. There
-never was a time in the history of the country when a
-knowledge of the effect of drugs of various kinds on
-the nervous system was as important as it is today.</p>
-
-<p>The history of the movement to prevent the marriage
-of mental defectives is more or less familiar to all. The
-sentiment of the community is apparently not such at
-this time as to encourage the regulation of the marriage
-of the mentally or physically unfit by legislative restrictions.
-Attempts to do so have been almost a flat failure.
-Various states have passed laws providing for the
-sterilization of defective delinquents. These laws, generally
-speaking, have accomplished nothing because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-public sentiment was not behind them. All of these matters
-have been brought to the attention of the public by
-prominent speakers on numerous occasions. Frequent
-articles have been printed in medical journals, well-known
-periodicals, and even in the daily papers. Attention
-has been called to the mental clinics established
-here and there and repeated reference has been made to
-the fact that physicians at our state hospitals may be
-consulted at any time on questions pertaining to mental
-diseases or mental defects.</p>
-
-<p>Something has been accomplished along these lines.
-It is unfortunate that, as a rule, people look with more or
-less suspicion upon institutions which are even now generally
-referred to as asylums. There are many who
-still believe that every hospital for mental diseases has
-its padded cells and underground dungeons. There is
-a rather widespread idea that the most common causes
-of insanity are cigarette smoking, religion and self abuse.
-Even in our most progressive communities it has been
-difficult, if not impossible, to entirely prevent the temporary
-detention, at least, of mental cases in jails and
-police stations. Very few general hospitals have psychopathic
-wards or any realization as to the necessity
-of establishing them. It is not to be denied that in many
-states the care of the mentally ill in our public institutions
-is far from being what it should be in this enlightened
-day. These are conditions that cannot be remedied
-by the medical profession without the active assistance
-of leaders of public sentiment. The fact that the importance
-of these questions is recognized by prominent
-educators, business men, lawyers, and other persons active
-in the affairs of the community, and well known to
-the public, will accomplish more than articles in the medical
-journals by physicians. This constitutes the great
-field of the mental hygiene organizations. They will
-mould public sentiment as nothing else ever has, in matters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-which relate to the mental health of the country.
-They will influence legislation where it is needed in a way
-that no medical society can hope to do. Above all, they
-can in time bring the public face to face with the fact
-that mental diseases should be discussed, generally understood
-and prevented, instead of being merely concealed
-and misrepresented. Possibly it would not be
-looking too far into the future to express the hope that
-an organization composed largely of laymen may be able
-eventually to accomplish something that the medical profession
-has never been able to do,&mdash;induce those who
-frame our laws to provide medical treatment for defective
-delinquents instead of merely locking them up
-for the protection of society. It would seem, moreover,
-that the time has come when the public should insist that
-the mental condition of persons accused of crime be made
-a medical rather than a legal question exclusively.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE ETIOLOGY OF MENTAL DISEASES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>In reviewing the history of medicine there is nothing
-more discouraging than the references found in literature
-to the views entertained from time to time relative to
-the cause of mental diseases. To a certain extent this
-may be looked upon as an index of the progress of civilization.
-It must be admitted that it is at the same time,
-nevertheless, a reflection upon the medical profession
-which has never shown the interest in psychiatry that the
-importance of the subject warrants. It has been suggested
-that mental diseases did not play a prominent
-part in ancient history, owing to the fact that the law of
-the survival of the fittest automatically eliminated the
-insane and defective. As Tuke<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> says, "They perished
-in the course of nature, or were stamped out of existence;
-many of the perverse and morally insane were stoned
-to death; war destroyed a large number of feeble persons;
-while the Romans deliberately, and in the interests
-of the race, threw down from the Tarpeian Rock the
-children who were unfit to live." The papyri of the fifteenth
-century before Christ show clearly that the doctrine
-of demoniacal possession was generally entertained
-at that time.</p>
-
-<p>One of the earliest attempts to explain the origin of
-mental diseases perhaps was that of Plato. "There are
-two kinds of madness, one arising from human diseases,
-the other from an inspired deviation from established
-custom." Hippocrates<a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> had some very clearly defined
-views on this subject: "As long as the brain is at rest
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-a man enjoys his reason; but the depravement of the
-brain arises from phlegm and bile, either of which you
-may recognise in this manner: Those who are mad
-from phlegm are quiet, and do not cry out or make a
-noise, but those from bile are vociferous, malignant, and
-will not be quiet, but are always doing something improper.
-If the madness be constant, these are the causes
-thereof; but if terrors and fears assail, they are connected
-with derangement of the brain, and derangement
-is owing to its being heated. And it is heated by bile
-when it is determined to the brain along the blood-vessels
-running from the trunk, and fear is present until it return
-again to the veins and trunk, when it ceases. He is
-grieved and troubled when the brain is unreasonably
-cooled and contracted beyond its wont. It suffers this
-from phlegm, and from the same affection the patient
-becomes oblivious." An interesting theory which he
-evolved was that the appearance of varicose veins or
-hemorrhoids tended to relieve the patient's mental suffering.
-Celsus subscribed to the black bile doctrine. Galen's
-teaching was that fatuity was due to moisture, while
-dryness produced sagacity. In cases where the whole
-body contained melancholy blood he recommended venesection.
-Thick and black wine was to be avoided, "as
-from it the melancholy humour is made."<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> This he described
-as a condition of the blood "thickened, and more
-like black bile, which exhaling to the brain, causes melancholy
-symptoms to affect the mind." The Roman custom
-of appealing to the household gods, sons of the Goddess
-of Madness, was quite significant. Horace, in speaking
-of Orestes, says: "Was he not driven into frenzy
-by those wicked Furies, before he pierced his mother's
-throat with the reeking point of his sword? Nay, from
-the time that Orestes passed for being unsound of mind
-he did nothing in any way to be condemned; he never
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-dared wound with his sword either his friend Pylades
-or his sister Electra; he merely abused both, calling one
-a Fury, the other some other name suggested by his active
-or bright bile." In the story of Argive, Horace says
-that "his relations cured him with much labour and care,
-by expelling the disease and the bile by doses of pure
-hellebore."</p>
-
-<p>Little progress was made, if any, by the time of the
-Christian era. In fact, as Clouston<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> says, "The mental
-pathology of the New Testament and of the early ages of
-Christianity was founded on the idea that the disease
-was a possession of the devil, and the feeling towards
-this afflicted class of human beings was naturally that of
-repulsion and hatred, their treatment following on those
-lines. Neglect, the whip, chains, confinement in stone
-cells, starvation, unsuitable medical treatment, speedy
-death were the natural results."</p>
-
-<p>Passing to the seventeenth century we find that Sennert,
-a professor in Wittenberg, believed that maniacs
-evacuated stones, iron, living animals, etc., things not
-produced in the natural body and therefore caused by
-demons. He also believed firmly in witchcraft. Thomas
-Willis (1682) is said by some to have been one of the
-first to suggest a relation between insanity and pathological
-changes in the brain. Prochaska in 1784 went so
-far as to say, "We think, with Haller, that no light can
-be thrown upon it in any other way than by a careful
-dissection of the brains of fatuous persons, apoplectics,
-and such as have other disorders of the understanding."
-It would appear to have been the belief of Pinel that the
-primary seat of disease in mental conditions was in
-the stomach and intestinal tract. Spreading from these
-centers it caused a derangement of the mind when the
-brain became involved. The influence of the moon, as
-well as the stars, was spoken of by Hippocrates and admitted
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-by Galen. To these ideas we owe the word lunacy
-which appeared in the laws of England in 1320 and may
-be found there today.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of the moon on the mind was taken quite
-seriously. Rush seems to have been somewhat in doubt
-on this subject and suggested the probability of there being
-a kind of sixth sense involved&mdash;a perception of the
-state of the air, and of light and darkness, as Pritchard
-expressed it, to which we are insensible in health. It
-was thought that the full moon, by rarefying the air,
-increased the amount of light, thus affecting the mind.
-Dr. Rush noted that during an eclipse of the sun in 1806
-"there was a sudden and total silence in all the cells of
-the hospital." He expressed the opinion in his "Medical
-Inquiries and Observations" in 1812 that there are
-few cases in which the insane feel the influence of the
-moon and that the excitement resulting in such cases is
-to be attributed to the resulting increase of light. It is
-interesting to note that von Feuchtersleben, an eminent
-German writer, in 1845 was unwilling to go on record as
-stating positively that the moon was not a factor in the
-causation of insanity. Esquirol, in his "Maladies Mentales,"
-in 1838, branded this belief as a superstition, but
-admitted that there were certain facts which could not
-be overlooked. "It is true that the insane are more agitated
-at the full moon as they are also at the dawn of
-day; but is it not the bright light of the moon that excites
-them, as that of the day every morning? Nevertheless,
-an opinion which has existed for ages&mdash;which has spread
-over all lands, and which is consecrated by popular language&mdash;demands
-the most careful attention of observers."
-Dr. Allen of the York Lunatic Asylum was very
-firmly of the opinion that the moon had a decided influence
-on the time of death in mental diseases. This question
-was given very serious consideration by various
-writers as late as 1856.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile efforts were being made to ascertain
-the cause of mental disease by means of pathological
-researches. Morgagni,<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> one of the earlier investigators,
-came to the conclusion that the more common lesions
-were in the pineal gland, although he found some induration
-of the brain and various other well-defined changes.
-Arnold (1782) thought that insanity was due to an increased
-density of the cerebral substance, particularly,
-according to Tuke, "of those parts of the brain by means
-of which the soul is connected with the body." Pinel
-finally concluded that pathology had practically nothing
-to do with the problem and Esquirol in 1838 wrote very
-discouragingly on the subject. Early contributions of
-considerable importance were made, however, by Foville,
-Bayle, Greding, Calmeil, Guislain, Parchappe and others.
-These were confined almost entirely to a study of gross
-or macroscopic lesions of the brain. Griesinger in 1845
-reviewed the pathological changes in the nervous system
-quite thoroughly as far as they were known at that time.
-It must be admitted that the greater part of our knowledge
-of the pathology of mental diseases was acquired
-at a much later date.</p>
-
-<p>A very definite indication of the progress, or lack of
-progress, made in determining the etiology of the psychoses
-is the list of causes agreed upon at the International
-Congress of Alienists<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> in 1867:&mdash;1. Physical
-causes: Artificial deformities of cranium; convulsions
-of infancy and dentition; cerebral congestion (primary,
-not that which arises in the course of certain forms of
-insanity); organic affections of the brain; senility; pellagra;
-anemia; constitutional syphilis; intermittent fever;
-typhoid fever; acute rheumatism; gout and chronic rheumatism;
-organic affections of the heart; pulmonary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-phthisis; intestinal worms; other acute diseases; other
-chronic diseases; suppression of the hemorrhoidal flux;
-menstrual disorders; metastasis; alcoholic drinks; abuse
-of tobacco; other vegetable poisons; mineral poisons
-(lead, mercury, coffee, etc.); insolation; intense heat;
-intense cold; blows and falls upon the head; other traumatic
-causes. 2. Moral causes: Appertain to religion;
-education; love (love thwarted, jealousy); family affections;
-fluctuations of fortune; domestic troubles; pride;
-disappointed ambition; fright; irritation; anger; wounded
-modesty; political events; nostalgia; ennui; misanthropy;
-sudden joy; simple imprisonment; solitary confinement.</p>
-
-<p>In 1897 the New York State Commission in Lunacy
-in its eighth annual report published an analysis of the
-assigned causes of insanity given in 39,369 cases admitted
-from 1888 to 1896. Of these 11,999 were reported as unascertained.
-In the remaining 27,370 cases the important
-"assigned causes" in the order of their frequency were
-as follows: Moral causes (including domestic trouble,
-loss of friends, business anxieties, pecuniary difficulties,
-grief, fright, disappointed affections, disappointed ambition,
-political excitement, religious excitement, etc.)
-6,608, intemperance in drink 4,763, hereditary predisposition
-2,095, old age 1,723, general ill health 1,681, epilepsy
-1,605, ill health following overwork 1,092, masturbation
-1,063, puerperal (including childbirth and abortion)
-773, traumatic 608, climacteric 502, la grippe 442,
-sunstroke 402, physical diseases 375, syphilis 368, cerebral
-diseases 312, intemperance in drink and narcotics
-277, congenital defects 223, shock from injury 167, fever
-147, uterine and ovarian disease 132, pregnancy 109,
-privation and overwork 110, etc. These are given in detail
-not that they throw any light on the question of etiology
-but that they are quite significant as to the ideas
-prevalent on this subject only a few years ago. In justice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-to the Commission in Lunacy attention should be called
-to the fact that this tabulation does not purport to give
-actual causes but those officially "assigned" by the examining
-authorities or others interested. Clouston<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> in
-1911, in making a statistical study of 11,346 cases admitted
-to the Royal Edinburgh Mental Hospital in the
-course of thirty-five years, enumerated a long list of
-causes shown in the hospital reports. It is interesting
-to note that they include nursing, disordered menstruation,
-self abuse, sexual excess, surgical operations, bronchitis,
-prostatic disease, lupus, commencing menstruation,
-transference of morbid action from other organs
-to the brain, excessive tobacco smoking, chloroform inhalation,
-excessive number of children, religious excitement,
-marriage, changes of residence, sedentary habits,
-political excitement, bad temper, the Queen's Jubilee,
-etc. As he says, "No other disease has anything like this
-list of 107 causes. A black and terrible roll it is. Poor
-humanity has much to contend with to keep sound in
-mind." Analyzing these statistical findings, Clouston
-concludes that "bad heredity, congenital defects, and
-previous attacks are the great predisposing causes, and
-that alcohol, the crises of life, epilepsy, the various forms
-of brain poisons and the gross brain and nervous diseases
-constitute the mass of exciting causes. Together they
-account for over seventy per cent of the defects and diseases
-of the mind that come under my observation."</p>
-
-<p>A reference to the statistical reports of the past as
-published by the hospitals of this and other countries will
-show nothing radically different until within the last few
-years. It will readily be observed that fundamentals
-were almost entirely lost sight of and nonessentials overemphasized.
-Masturbation, for instance, is often a symptom
-of dementia praecox and other forms of mental disease,
-but is not now looked upon as an important etiological
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-factor. The immediate cause, so-called, is usually
-a mere incident, often not without some significance,
-but bearing little if any definite relation to the fundamental
-underlying condition responsible for a mental
-breakdown. The studies of Meyer, Hoch, Kraepelin,
-Freud, Jung, Bleuler and many others have shown that
-in manic-depressive insanity, dementia praecox and various
-other psychoses we are dealing with very definite
-constitutional conditions, morbid temperaments, personality
-defects, etc., which are responsible for the maladjustments
-leading to the development of psychoses.
-Financial reverses, domestic difficulties, the death of near
-relatives, the ordinary hardships and disappointments of
-life, even ill health, do not as a rule mean the development
-of a psychosis in the normal, properly balanced individual.
-In the constitutionally predisposed, the love
-affair, the loss of a position, the upsetting factor, whatever
-it may be, is merely the "straw that breaks the
-camel's back" and is nothing more than an accident of
-fate, a pure coincidence. Any other comparatively trifling
-occurrence out of the ordinary, any difficult situation
-which the makeup of the individual could not adequately
-meet and react to, would have accomplished the
-same result. There are, however, of course, certain psychic
-traumas to which these inadequate personalities are
-particularly susceptible.</p>
-
-<p>Experience has shown that without any doubt there
-are conditions for which defective heredity is largely responsible.
-It is often difficult to determine the actual
-rôle which this plays in a given case. Efforts have
-been made to reduce the study of these factors to a definite
-scientific basis. In 1865 Gregor Mendel,<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> Abbot of
-Brünn, published an account of a series of experiments
-made by him with the common pea (pisum sativum)
-which was destined to revolutionize our views on the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-subject of heredity. On crossing a tall with a dwarf
-plant, tall hybrids resulted with no intermediate forms.
-This inheritance is said to be due to the presence of a
-definite "determiner" in the germ plasm. All of his
-hybrids being of the tall variety, he designated that character
-as the "dominant," the dwarf being spoken of as
-the "recessive." On the fertilization of these hybrids he
-obtained another generation, which averages three tall
-plants to one dwarf. Further investigation showed that
-the dwarfs always bred true, as did about one out of three
-of the tall varieties, the remaining two behaving as did
-the original hybrids and giving three talls to one dwarf.
-He therefore observed that he was dealing with three
-varieties of inheritance, the dwarfs which bred true, the
-talls which bred true and the talls with a fixed proportion
-of talls and dwarfs. The phenomenon as noted by Mendel
-is not, however, universal in its application. Curiously
-enough no attention was given to Mendel's experiments
-until eighteen years after his death, when his work
-was rediscovered by de Vries, Correns and Tschermak
-in 1900.</p>
-
-<p>Davenport<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> has shown that there are six possible
-matings of germ cells as illustrated by the pigment of the
-eye:&mdash;1. Both parents, pigmented iris (brown eyes) and
-duplex&mdash;all offspring with pigmented iris and duplex;
-2. Both parents brown-eyed, one duplex, one simplex&mdash;all
-children brown-eyed, but half simplex; 3. One parent
-brown-eyed and duplex, the other blue-eyed&mdash;all children
-brown-eyed and simplex; 4. Both parents brown-eyed
-and simplex&mdash;one-fourth of the children brown-eyed and
-duplex, one-half brown-eyed and simplex, and one-fourth
-blue-eyed; 5. One parent brown-eyed and simplex, and
-the other blue-eyed&mdash;one-half the children brown-eyed
-and simplex, the other half blue-eyed; 6. Both parents
-blue-eyed&mdash;all children blue-eyed. It should be explained
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-that a duplex origin means the inheritance of a character
-from both parents and simplex from only one. The principles
-of the Mendelian laws of heredity have been applied
-to a study of the color of the eyes and skin, the
-color and form of the hair, the stature, body weight
-and many other family traits such as musical knowledge,
-ability along artistic and literary lines, mechanical
-skill, etc. They have also been applied to the study of
-various diseases, such as Huntington's chorea, hereditary
-ataxia, deaf-mutism, feeblemindedness, epilepsy and insanity,
-etc.</p>
-
-<p>Rosanoff<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> and Orr have suggested the following hypothesis
-relative to the transmission of the neuropathic
-constitution as based on the Mendelian theory:&mdash;1. Both
-parents being neuropathic, all children will be neuropathic;
-2. One parent being normal but with the neuropathic
-taint from one grandparent, and the other parent
-being neuropathic, half the children will be normal but
-capable of transmitting the neuropathic constitution to
-their progeny, and half will themselves be neuropathic;
-3. One parent being normal and of pure normal ancestry,
-and the other parent being neuropathic, all the children
-will be normal but capable of transmitting the neuropathic
-makeup to their progeny; 4. Both parents being
-normal, but each with the neuropathic taint from one
-grandparent, one-fourth of the children will be normal
-and not capable of transmitting the neuropathic makeup
-to their progeny, one-half will be normal but capable of
-transmitting the neuropathic makeup, and the remaining
-one-fourth will be neuropathic; 5. Both parents being
-normal, one of pure normal ancestry and the other with
-the neuropathic taint from one grandparent, all the children
-will be normal; half of them will be capable and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-half not capable of transmitting the neuropathic makeup
-to their progeny; 6. Both parents being normal and
-of pure normal ancestry, all the children will be normal
-and not capable of transmitting the neuropathic makeup
-to their progeny.</p>
-
-<p>Just how much importance is to be attached to these
-theories is a difficult matter to determine. A study of a
-considerable number of families by Rosanoff<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> would
-appear to be very suggestive, although his conclusions
-must be looked upon as fairly conservative:&mdash;"On the
-whole, taking into consideration the limited amount of material
-as well as the various sources of possible error, the
-correspondence between the actual findings and theoretical
-expectation, as shown in the table, must be regarded as
-strikingly close." On the other hand, as White<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> says,
-"In dealing with the subject of heredity, however, it must
-not be forgotten that our ideas are of necessity largely
-founded upon hypotheses, as biological science has not
-yet unfolded a sufficient number of facts to make it possible
-to tell just how much, in any individual case, must
-be attributed to the inherent qualities of the "germ
-plasm" and just how much to the influences of environment.
-The view which is pretty generally admitted
-among biologists at present is that there is little warrant
-for the belief in the Lamarckian hypothesis of the inheritance
-of acquired characters."</p>
-
-<p>The New York statistical tables on heredity were discontinued
-in 1907, at which time a total of 104,013 cases
-had been reported. In 31,290 of these no information was
-available, leaving a total of 72,622, excluding the not insane.
-A history of insanity was shown in the paternal
-branch of the family in 8.6 per cent of the ascertained
-cases, in the maternal branch in 10.1 per cent, in both
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-paternal and maternal in 1.7 per cent, and in collateral
-branches in eleven per cent,&mdash;a total of 31.4 per cent in
-which some form of heredity was reported. These statistics
-relate only to insanity in the family history. There
-were so many sources of inaccuracy that it was not
-thought worth while to continue these studies after 1907.
-Comparisons between the heredity of mental cases and
-that of normal individuals have been rather surprising.
-Koller, for instance, as quoted by Kraepelin,<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> in a
-comparison of 370 healthy with a similar number of insane
-individuals found a history of psychopathic defects in
-the immediate families of fifty-nine per cent of the former
-and 76.8 per cent of the latter. Diem<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> in 1905
-made an analysis of the family history of 1193 healthy individuals.
-This was compared with 1850 mental cases.
-Neuropathic heredity of some kind was found in 78.2 per
-cent of the mental cases and 66.9 per cent of the healthy
-individuals. There was, however, a history of mental
-diseases in the families of 38.3 per cent of the insane patients
-as compared with 7.1 per cent of the normal individuals.
-Somewhat different results were noted in a
-study of the parents. There was a paternal or maternal
-history of insanity in 18.1 per cent of the families of the
-mental cases as compared with 2.2 per cent in the cases
-of the normal individuals. In the direct parentage, Koller
-found mental diseases in 57.3 per cent of the families
-of the insane as compared with 28 per cent in the case
-of normal individuals. Kraepelin states that the influence
-of the father is greater in heredity than is that of
-the mother. The father, furthermore, usually transmits
-to the son while the mother influences the daughter more.</p>
-
-<p>Heredity varies with the psychoses, having its greatest
-influence in the transmission of manic-depressive attacks,
-epileptic and hysterical conditions, nervousness,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-compulsive and impulsive insanity, sexual perversions
-and morbid personalities (Kraepelin). As the result of
-a study of two thousand cases, Pilcz<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> (1907) found that
-in alcoholism heredity was most likely to manifest itself
-in the form of alcoholism, epilepsy and imbecility or
-manic-depressive psychoses. In the progenitors of epileptics
-he found epilepsy and migraine. Apoplectics
-showed a family history of paralysis, arteriosclerosis,
-senile dementia or melancholia. Senile dementia preceded
-paralysis, arteriosclerosis, feeblemindedness and
-dementia praecox. Tabes and paralysis apparently frequently
-precede paralysis and dementia praecox. The
-various forms of alcoholic psychoses furthermore show
-a tendency to repeat themselves in the offspring of alcoholics.
-Similar heredity is said to be the general rule
-in manic-depressive psychoses, epilepsy and alcoholism,
-and to a less extent in arteriosclerosis. Heredity, in so
-far as it is related to mental diseases, may be said to be
-largely a question of the transmission of a neuropathic
-or psychopathic constitution or predisposition. Various
-psychoses are now held to be the direct result of constitutional
-causes or hereditary influences. This is probably
-true of manic-depressive insanity, Huntington's
-chorea, involution melancholia, dementia praecox, paranoia
-and paranoid conditions, epileptic psychoses, the
-psychoneuroses and neuroses, psychopathic personality
-and mental deficiency. It is true that some of these conditions
-develop as the immediate results of certain predisposing
-factors and that in frequent instances no evidences
-of heredity can be found. It is also true that
-various authorities maintain that a predisposition to the
-development of certain psychoses may be acquired. If,
-however, we assume that the above mentioned psychoses
-are constitutional in their nature and due primarily to
-heredity, it may be definitely stated that, based on recent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-statistical studies, hereditary influences account for from
-fifty-five to sixty per cent of the mental cases admitted
-to our institutions. It may be pointed out, as an objection
-to this suggestion, that although manic-depressive
-psychoses often develop in an emotionally unstable or
-cyclothymic personality and dementia praecox is associated
-with certain peculiarities of makeup, not all of these
-cases show clear evidences of constitutional origins.
-This is unquestionably true. It is equally true, on the
-other hand, that heredity is also probably very often
-a factor in the production of the senile and arteriosclerotic
-conditions, various nervous diseases, alcoholism and
-drug habits.</p>
-
-<p>When we leave the subject of heredity we are on
-much more certain ground. There is no question whatever
-as to the rôle played by traumatism, senility, arteriosclerosis,
-syphilis, brain and nervous diseases, alcoholism,
-exogenous toxins, epilepsy, pellagra and somatic diseases
-in the causation of mental disorders. In an analysis
-of 4,079 cases examined at the Munich Clinic, Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>
-found the following factors involved:&mdash;1. Physical
-diseases, infections and gross brain lesions, 1.3 per
-cent; 2. Syphilis and metasyphilis, 10.3 per cent (general
-paresis 9.4 per cent); 3. Toxins&mdash;alcohol, morphine, cocaine,
-etc., 22.8 per cent (alcoholic psychoses 22.4 per
-cent); 4. Traumatic neuroses and prison psychoses, 2.5
-per cent; 5. The presenile and senile psychoses, arteriosclerosis,
-etc., 5.6 per cent; 6. Dementia praecox, epilepsy,
-idiocy and imbecility, 27.2 per cent; 7. Psychopathic and
-hysterical states, and manic-depressive insanity, 30.3 per
-cent. Conditions existing in our hospitals and clinics
-are somewhat different. As the result of a study of over
-seventy thousand first admissions to forty-eight hospitals
-in sixteen different states we are now in a position to
-speak quite definitely as to the frequency of the conditions
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-above referred to as etiological factors. Traumatic
-psychoses quite uniformly represent a little less than
-one-half of one per cent of the admissions to our institutions.
-The senile psychoses constitute approximately
-ten per cent and arteriosclerosis five per cent of the total.
-General paresis averages about twelve per cent in the
-New York hospitals and from seven to ten per cent in the
-other states. Cerebral syphilis amounts to a little less
-than one per cent of the cases. It should be said that in
-the large cities the rate for syphilis is, in some instances
-at least, twice as high as that given. Brain tumor, with all
-other brain and nervous diseases, only constitutes about
-one and one-half per cent of our admissions. Alcoholism,
-which has been responsible for as high as ten per cent of
-all admissions, from time to time, has been decreasing
-gradually during the last five years and in New York in
-1920 constituted less than two per cent. Epileptic psychoses
-in our state hospitals amount to from one to two
-and one-half per cent of the total. As a general rule
-pellagra is not a factor of any consequence, amounting to
-less than one-half of one per cent of the admissions. In
-a few of the southern hospitals large numbers of pellagra
-are encountered. The psychoses accompanying somatic
-diseases are represented by from three to four per cent
-of the whole number. In addition to this, there is still
-a considerable number of cases reported from the hospitals
-as being caused by psychic trauma of various
-kinds. These represent the acute psychoses usually resulting
-from mental and emotional upsets but with nothing
-which definitely points to constitutional disorders
-or hereditary influences.</p>
-
-<p>If we speak of predisposing causes, some reference
-should be made to the influence of the physiological landmarks
-which are of so much significance in the life of the
-individual in more ways than one&mdash;puberty, adolescence,
-the climacterium and the senium. A no less noteworthy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-factor in the female sex is the puerperium. These periods
-of life are of tremendous importance in the development
-of the psychoses. It is customary to speak of age,
-sex, race, civil condition, degree of education, climate,
-civilization, etc., as factors in the production of mental
-diseases. Not much is to be said on these questions, nor
-are they closely related to the subject. On January 1,
-1920, there were 232,680 patients in the hospitals for
-mental diseases in the United States. Fifty-two per cent
-of these were men and forty-eight per cent women. This
-represents about the difference that has been shown for
-many years. The reduction in alcoholic psychoses may
-affect this ultimately. The striking exceptions to this
-ratio are Massachusetts and New York, where the number
-of women has slightly exceeded the men for a number
-of years. The admission rate for men is, however,
-slightly higher than that for women in both of those
-states. Less than one-half of one per cent of the patients
-admitted to the New York hospitals are under
-fifteen years of age. In that state approximately five
-per cent have been between fifteen and nineteen years old.
-In Massachusetts the percentage of persons admitted
-who were under twenty years of age has averaged 8.5
-quite consistently for some time. The admission rate,
-for twenty to twenty-five, twenty-five to thirty, thirty
-to thirty-five and thirty-five to forty years of age in Massachusetts
-and New York has averaged from ten to
-eleven per cent for each of those periods for several
-years. From the age of forty to fifty the admission rate
-is about 8.5 per cent, and from fifty to sixty between five
-and six per cent. Nine per cent of the admissions in
-Massachusetts and eight per cent in New York are seventy
-years of age or over. The statistics on race, birthplace
-and the psychoses of the various races are shown
-in detail in the chapter on Immigration. The admission
-rate in New York is almost exactly the same for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-married and the unmarried, the former constituting about
-thirty-nine per cent and the latter forty. In Massachusetts
-the single first admissions amount to about
-forty-three per cent and the married approximately forty
-per cent. Throughout the country generally the unmarried
-slightly predominate. The percentage of widowed
-in Massachusetts and New York varies from thirteen to
-fourteen per cent. The divorced constitute only about
-one per cent of all admissions. As to education, it may
-be said that about nine per cent of all first admissions are
-illiterate, from fifteen to twenty per cent can read and
-write only, about sixty per cent have had a high school
-and two per cent a college education. A study of economic
-conditions shows that from fifteen to seventeen per
-cent are dependent, from sixty to seventy per cent are
-rated as marginal, and from eleven to thirteen per cent
-as being in comfortable circumstances. In Massachusetts
-and New York about eighty-five per cent of the admissions
-come from a city environment and from twelve
-to fifteen per cent from rural communities. It is interesting
-to note that in 1919 eighteen per cent of the admissions
-in Massachusetts and New York were reported as
-being intemperate in their habits, with over fifty per cent
-abstinent.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, it may be said that the important etiological
-factors in the production of mental disease are
-heredity, senility, syphilis, arteriosclerosis, somatic diseases,
-mental deficiency, epilepsy, diseases of the brain
-and nervous system, alcoholism, drugs, traumatism and
-mental stress and shocks of various kinds. It is hardly
-necessary to add that our information on this subject
-is far from complete.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">IMMIGRATION AND MENTAL DISEASES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>A history of the development of our western civilization
-is very largely a study of the process of assimilation
-of the various racial elements representing a new population.
-While it must be conceded that we are indebted
-to European countries for much that has been contributory
-to the welfare and success of American institutions,
-it is equally true that the tremendous increase in mental
-diseases and defects here is to be attributed in no small
-degree to immigration. This constitutes a problem of
-social and economic importance which is worthy of serious
-consideration. Perhaps no better evidence of this
-fact can be offered than a study of such statistics as are
-available relating to the thirty-three millions of people
-coming to the United States from other countries during
-the last century. This would seem to be particularly indicated
-at this time, in view of the fact that the conclusion
-of the war has brought about the necessity of a new
-adjustment of our relations with other countries.</p>
-
-<p>Immigration to the United States has varied greatly
-from time to time. It is a well known fact that the
-founders of our government were practically all of English,
-Dutch, German or Scotch-Irish extraction. Unfortunately
-no information of any consequence is available
-regarding the aliens entering the country prior to 1820,
-when their study was first undertaken by the federal authorities.
-As far as can be determined, during the ensuing
-ten years about 128,000 were admitted at the
-various ports of entry. The history of immigration since
-that time has been determined very largely by existing
-conditions in other countries. The famines and political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-disturbances in Ireland between 1840 and 1850 were the
-occasion of a large influx, concededly of a highly desirable
-type. The nature of the tide of incoming immigrants
-was changed by the revolutionary troubles in Germany
-during the decade following 1848. There was a decrease
-for a time during the civil war. This was soon followed
-by a considerable increase which continued quite consistently
-until the outbreak of the world war. There
-would at this time seem to be every reason for thinking
-that an unprecedented invasion can be expected during
-the next twenty-five years as a result of conditions prevailing
-abroad unless some restrictions are imposed. In
-1850 and 1860 the number of Irish people in the United
-States exceeded the German born. The 1890 census
-showed a predominance of the latter race and they have
-exceeded the Irish element in the population for some
-time. Nearly a million Germans were admitted between
-1880 and 1885. Since 1890, however, the number of Irish
-and Germans entering have both decreased markedly.
-After the Spanish-American war a great increase in immigration
-was noted and the rate of admission per year
-reached a million in 1905, but the source of supply had
-entirely changed.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">Salmon<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> has shown that in spite of the fact that in
-1882 only 12.9 per cent of all incoming aliens admitted
-were from those countries, eighty-one per cent of
-all immigration from Europe in 1907 came from Austria-Hungary,
-Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Montenegro, Poland,
-Portugal, Roumania, Russia, Servia, Syria and Turkey.
-In 1882, 87.1 per cent of those admitted came from England,
-Germany, Holland, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland
-and Belgium. The races represented by the new tide of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-immigration, according to Salmon, were Slavic, thirty
-per cent, Italian, twenty-six per cent, and Hebrew, fifteen
-per cent, the remainder being made up of various other
-miscellaneous elements. This change is shown by the
-fact that the immigration from Austria-Hungary, which
-amounted to only 711,926 from 1820 to 1896, increased to
-2,303,323 during the first decade of the present century.
-Five hundred and thirty-four thousand three hundred
-and thirty-six were admitted from Russia between 1820
-and 1896 and 1,756,027 between 1900 and 1911. The
-Italian immigration, which amounted to 676,826 between
-1820 and 1896, increased to 2,228,759 between 1901 and
-1911 (Salmon<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a>). The numerical status of immigration
-by decades is shown in the following table:</p>
-
-
-<table width="70%" class="d" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">From 1831 to 1840</td>
- <td class="td04">528,721</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1841 to 1850</td>
- <td class="td04">1,604,805</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1851 to 1860</td>
- <td class="td04">2,648,912</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1861 to 1870</td>
- <td class="td04">2,369,878</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1871 to 1880</td>
- <td class="td04">2,812,191</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1881 to 1890</td>
- <td class="td04">5,246,613</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1891 to 1900</td>
- <td class="td04">3,687,564</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1901 to 1910</td>
- <td class="td04">8,795,386</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1911 to 1920</td>
- <td class="td04">6,747,381</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">A study made by the United States Immigration Commission
-some years ago showed that of 68,942 foreign
-born males employed in various mining and manufacturing
-industries, and who had been in the United States
-for five years or more, only 33.3 per cent had obtained
-naturalization papers. Of 246,673 of this same class
-representing non-English speaking races, only 53.2 per
-cent had learned the language of this country to any extent.
-A report made by the Commissioner General of
-Immigration showed that of 719,906 immigrants over
-fourteen years of age and admitted from 1899 to 1909,
-26.6 per cent could neither read nor write and 29.8 per
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-cent had no occupation. The following table shows the
-percentage of foreign born in the population of the
-United States from time to time as stated in official reports:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="70%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1850</td>
- <td class="td05">9.7</td>
- <td class="td06p" style="width:10%">per</td>
- <td class="td06p3" style="width:9%">cent</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1860</td>
- <td class="td05">13.3</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1870</td>
- <td class="td05">14.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1880</td>
- <td class="td05">13.3</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1890</td>
- <td class="td05">14.7</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1900</td>
- <td class="td05">13.6</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1910</td>
- <td class="td05">14.7</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td05">1920</td>
- <td class="td05">12.96</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td07" style="width:25%">(white only)</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">The foreign born population naturally varies more
-or less in different parts of the country. In New York
-state it was twenty-six per cent in 1870, 23.8 in 1880,
-26.2 in 1890, 26.1 in 1900, 29.9 in 1910, and 26.8 per cent
-in 1920. In Massachusetts it was 30.6 per cent in 1895,
-30.2 in 1900, 30.3 in 1905, 31.5 in 1910, 31.2 in 1915, and
-28 per cent in 1920.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">We have little authentic information relative to the
-institution population prior to 1903. The United States
-Census Bureau in its report of 1904 on the insane in hospitals
-shows that in 1903 there were 140,312 patients, of
-which number 47,078, or 34.3 per cent, were of foreign
-birth. The percentage of foreign born in state hospitals
-in various parts of the country at that time were as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="70%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">New York</td>
- <td class="td05">46.9</td>
- <td class="td06p" style="width:10%">per</td>
- <td class="td06p3" style="width:9%">cent</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Massachusetts</td>
- <td class="td05">42.0</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">New Jersey</td>
- <td class="td05">39.5</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Pennsylvania</td>
- <td class="td05">30.9</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">District of Columbia</td>
- <td class="td05">36.7</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Connecticut</td>
- <td class="td05">35.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Michigan</td>
- <td class="td05">43.5</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Illinois</td>
- <td class="td05">41.6</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Wisconsin</td>
- <td class="td05">50.9</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Minnesota</td>
- <td class="td05">63.5</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">North Dakota</td>
- <td class="td05">68.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">South Dakota</td>
- <td class="td05">49.9</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Montana</td>
- <td class="td05">57.8</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Nevada</td>
- <td class="td05">63.1</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">In 1912 an investigation was made of the foreign
-born in the New York state hospitals. As a result of the
-census taken, it was found that of 31,624 patients, 13,728,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-or 43.4 per cent, were foreign born. Of this number
-4,487 had been naturalized and 9,241, or 29.2 per cent of
-the total hospital population were aliens. At the Manhattan
-State Hospital in New York City, out of a total
-of 4,570 patients 2,526 were foreign born and only 708
-had been naturalized. The Central Islip State Hospital
-at the same time had 4,438 patients. Of this number
-2,803 were foreign born and only 891 were naturalized
-citizens. Thus, at the Manhattan State Hospital 39.8 per
-cent and at the Central Islip State Hospital 43.1 per cent
-of the patients were aliens. It was shown that the average
-hospital residence of the insane in the state was 9.85
-years. Based on the maintenance expenditures for 1912
-it was estimated that the cost to New York for caring for
-its 9,241 aliens in the state hospitals was $2,579,902.78
-per year, and for their entire hospital residence, over
-twenty-five million dollars.<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> Of the first admissions to
-the New York hospitals for the eight years beginning
-October 1, 1904, and ending September 30, 1910, 46.2 per
-cent were foreign born. The citizenship of the first admissions
-for this same period is shown by the following
-<span class="no-break">table:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="e" width="40%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07"><i>Year</i></th>
- <th colspan="3" class="td06p4"><i>Aliens</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1905</td>
- <td class="td05b" style="width:20%">28.4</td>
- <td class="td06" style="width:10%">per</td>
- <td class="td06p3" style="width:9%">cent</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1906</td>
- <td class="td05b">31.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1907</td>
- <td class="td05b">32.6</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1908</td>
- <td class="td05b">33.9</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1909</td>
- <td class="td05b">33.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1910</td>
- <td class="td05b">33.0</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1911</td>
- <td class="td05b">32.9</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1912</td>
- <td class="td05b">29.3</td>
- <td class="td06p4">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">It was also shown that 14.7 per cent of the aliens admitted
-in 1905 had been in the United States less than
-three years, in 1906, 18.7, in 1907, 21.8, in 1908, 20.1, in
-1909, 18.1, in 1910, 15.5, in 1911, 14.9 and in 1912, 18.1
-per cent. The birthplace and citizenship of first admissions
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-to the New York state hospitals since 1912 is shown
-in the following <span class="no-break">table:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="pagebreak">
-<table class="a" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr>
- <th class="td06p"><i>Year</i></th>
- <th colspan="3" class="td06p2"><i>Foreign born</i></th>
- <th colspan="3" class="td06p2"><i>Aliens</i></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1913</td>
- <td class="td05" style="width:11%">47.0</td>
- <td class="td06p4" style="width:10%">per</td>
- <td class="td06p4b" style="width:10%">cent</td>
- <td class="td05" style="width:11%">22.5</td>
- <td class="td06p4" style="width:10%">per</td>
- <td class="td06p4b" style="width:10%">cent</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1914</td>
- <td class="td05">46.7</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td05">25.2</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1915</td>
- <td class="td05">47.0</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td05">26.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1916</td>
- <td class="td05">48.5</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td05">27.8</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1917</td>
- <td class="td05">47.8</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td05">27.1</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1918</td>
- <td class="td05">46.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td05">27.5</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1919</td>
- <td class="td05">46.8</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td05">26.4</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td06">1920</td>
- <td class="td05">45.3</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- <td class="td05">24.8</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2ab">The percentage of the foreign born as shown by the first
-admissions to the Massachusetts state hospitals during
-the last eleven years was as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="e" width="40%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1910</td>
- <td class="td05">44.88</td>
- <td class="td06p4" style="width:10%">per</td>
- <td class="td06p4b" style="width:10%">cent</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1911</td>
- <td class="td05">44.65</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1912</td>
- <td class="td05">44.40</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1913</td>
- <td class="td05">45.30</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1914</td>
- <td class="td05">45.75</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1915</td>
- <td class="td05">45.59</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1916</td>
- <td class="td05">43.87</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1917</td>
- <td class="td05">43.40</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1918</td>
- <td class="td05">43.07</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1919</td>
- <td class="td05">43.38</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">1920</td>
- <td class="td05">42.18</td>
- <td class="td06p4c-1">"</td>
- <td class="td06p4a">"</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">The percentage of aliens as shown by the first admissions
-to Massachusetts hospitals was 26.40 per cent in
-1918, 27.54 in 1919 and 22.73 per cent in 1920.</p>
-
-<p>Studies of the population of the New York state hospitals
-show that the aliens have for a period of several years
-constituted nearly thirty per cent of the entire number.
-The influence which immigration may have had in determining
-the relative frequency of various psychoses in our
-institutions is an exceedingly interesting question. In
-speaking of the susceptibility of certain races to special
-types of disease, Salmon<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> says, "This is particularly
-true of mental diseases, for if racial characteristics profoundly
-affect political, social and religious ideals we
-must look for a similar influence upon the individual
-makeup which so largely determines trends in mental
-disease. All those who are familiar with mental diseases
-among the Japanese in California testify to the remarkable
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-tendency to suicide in that race, not only in depressed
-conditions but in conditions in which suicidal
-tendencies, in other races, are not frequent. This is in
-accordance with the general attitude of the Japanese toward
-self-destruction. The strong tendency to delusional
-trends of a persecutory nature in West Indian negroes,
-the frequency with which we find hidden sexual complexes
-among the Hebrews and the remarkable prevalence of
-mutism among Poles, even in psychoses in which mutism
-is not a common symptom, are familiar examples of the
-influence of racial traits upon mental diseases." As the
-result of a special study of this subject Salmon has
-reached the following conclusions: "1. The psychoses
-more prevalent among Hebrews than in the native stock
-are manic depressive psychosis, dementia praecox, the
-psychoneuroses, and psychoses associated with constitutional
-inferiority. 2. The absence of alcoholic psychoses
-among Hebrews is the most striking clinical fact in connection
-with immigration. In 1909 there were but 3 patients
-with alcoholic psychoses in 448 Hebrews admitted
-to all the New York state hospitals. 3. The very high
-prevalence of general paresis among Italians bears a
-direct relation to the high prevalence of venereal diseases
-among Italians in New York.... 4. Italians show a
-freedom from alcoholic psychoses second only to Hebrews.
-5. Italians exceed the native born in the prevalence
-of epileptic psychoses, infective exhaustive psychoses
-and dementia praecox.... 7. From the data
-available, alcoholic psychoses are found to be more prevalent
-among Slavs than among any other races of the new
-immigration, but not as prevalent as among the native-born.
-8. General paresis is nearly twice as prevalent
-among Slavs as in the native-born, but not so prevalent
-as among the Italians. Dementia praecox is more prevalent
-among the Slavs than among the native-born."</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">The racial representation as shown by statistics of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-first admissions is fairly constant in New York state, at
-least, as is shown by the following table of <span class="no-break">percentages:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-
- <table class="c" width="80%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Race</i></th>
- <th class="td05"><i>1916</i></th>
- <th class="td05"><i>1917</i></th>
- <th class="td05"><i>1918</i></th>
- <th class="td05"><i>1919</i></th>
- <th class="td05"><i>1920</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">African</td>
- <td class="td05">3.1</td>
- <td class="td05">3.3</td>
- <td class="td05">3.9</td>
- <td class="td05">3.7</td>
- <td class="td05">3.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">English</td>
- <td class="td05">7.6</td>
- <td class="td05">5.7</td>
- <td class="td05">5.1</td>
- <td class="td05">4.9</td>
- <td class="td05">5.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">German</td>
- <td class="td05">14.3</td>
- <td class="td05">13.5</td>
- <td class="td05">12.5</td>
- <td class="td05">11.7</td>
- <td class="td05">11.7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hebrew</td>
- <td class="td05">12.2</td>
- <td class="td05">11.6</td>
- <td class="td05">12.2</td>
- <td class="td05">11.7</td>
- <td class="td05">10.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Irish</td>
- <td class="td05">19.8</td>
- <td class="td05">19.5</td>
- <td class="td05">17.3</td>
- <td class="td05">16.7</td>
- <td class="td05">16.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Italian</td>
- <td class="td05">6.3</td>
- <td class="td05">6.9</td>
- <td class="td05">7.1</td>
- <td class="td05">8.1</td>
- <td class="td05">8.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Magyar</td>
- <td class="td05">.8</td>
- <td class="td05">.9</td>
- <td class="td05">1.0</td>
- <td class="td05">.7</td>
- <td class="td05">.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Scandinavian</td>
- <td class="td05">1.9</td>
- <td class="td05">2.2</td>
- <td class="td05">2.2</td>
- <td class="td05">2.1</td>
- <td class="td05">2.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Slavonic</td>
- <td class="td05">5.7</td>
- <td class="td05">5.8</td>
- <td class="td05">5.7</td>
- <td class="td05">5.4</td>
- <td class="td05">6.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mixed</td>
- <td class="td05">12.4</td>
- <td class="td05">16.0</td>
- <td class="td05">23.6</td>
- <td class="td05">23.3</td>
- <td class="td05">24.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Others</td>
- <td class="td05">5.7</td>
- <td class="td05">5.6</td>
- <td class="td05">4.4</td>
- <td class="td05">4.9</td>
- <td class="td05">6.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Unascertained</td>
- <td class="td05">10.2</td>
- <td class="td05">9.0</td>
- <td class="td05">5.0</td>
- <td class="td05">6.9</td>
- <td class="td05">4.8</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-
-<p class="p2ab">The 1916 report of the Commission on Mental Diseases
-shows the following analysis of the nativity of the
-34,300 first admissions to the Massachusetts state hospitals
-covering a period of thirteen years (1904-1916):&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="pagebreak">
-<table class="e" width="50%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Birthplace</i></th>
- <th class="td05"><i>Number</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">United States</td>
- <td class="td05">18,757</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Africa</td>
- <td class="td05">7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Armenia</td>
- <td class="td05">68</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Austria</td>
- <td class="td05">319</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Azores</td>
- <td class="td05">187</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Canada</td>
- <td class="td05">3,315</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">England</td>
- <td class="td05">1,359</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Finland</td>
- <td class="td05">250</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Germany</td>
- <td class="td05">486</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Greece</td>
- <td class="td05">129</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Ireland</td>
- <td class="td05">5,033</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Italy</td>
- <td class="td05">719</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Nova Scotia</td>
- <td class="td05">136</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Poland</td>
- <td class="td05">190</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Russia</td>
- <td class="td05">1,139</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Scotland</td>
- <td class="td05">381</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Sweden</td>
- <td class="td05">539</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Turkey</td>
- <td class="td05">100</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">It should be borne in mind that these statistics represent
-birthplace and not race. An analysis of the above
-figures shows that 54.68 per cent were born in the United
-States and 44.42 per cent in other countries. Of the
-other countries represented, 3.96 per cent were born in
-England, 3.32 per cent in Russia, 9.63 in Canada and
-14.67 per cent in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2b">A comparison of the more important psychoses represented
-by the various races, as reported by the New
-York State Hospital Commission in 1918, is shown in
-the following <span class="no-break">table<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table width="100%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <caption>Per Cent of Total First Admissions of Each Race</caption>
-<tr>
- <th class="td07a">Psychoses</th>
- <th class="td06">African</th>
- <th class="td06">German</th>
- <th class="td06">Hebrew</th>
- <th class="td06">Irish</th>
- <th class="td06">Italian</th>
- <th class="td06">Slavonic</th>
- <th class="td06">Mixed</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Senile</td>
- <td class="td05a">5.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">11.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">5.8</td>
- <td class="td05a">13.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">6.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">1.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">10.2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">General paralysis</td>
- <td class="td05a">21.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">17.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">13.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">9.9</td>
- <td class="td05a">19.1</td>
- <td class="td05a">6.7</td>
- <td class="td05a">13.1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Alcoholic</td>
- <td class="td05a">5.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">4.5</td>
- <td class="td05a">0.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">10.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">2.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">10.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">4.5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Manic-depressive</td>
- <td class="td05a">12.4</td>
- <td class="td05a">12.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">24.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">9.8</td>
- <td class="td05a">22.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">14.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">12.4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Dementia praecox</td>
- <td class="td05a">29.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">25.5</td>
- <td class="td05a">35.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">26.7</td>
- <td class="td05a">26.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">47.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">24.0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">Some variation is shown by a similar analysis of the New
-York admissions for the year 1919, as is illustrated by
-the following <span class="no-break">table<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table width="100%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <caption>Per Cent of Total First Admissions of Each Race</caption>
-<tr>
- <th class="td07a">Psychoses</th>
- <th class="td06">African</th>
- <th class="td06">German</th>
- <th class="td06">Hebrew</th>
- <th class="td06">Irish</th>
- <th class="td06">Italian</th>
- <th class="td06">Slavonic</th>
- <th class="td06">Mixed</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Senile</td>
- <td class="td05a">8.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">12.7</td>
- <td class="td05a">6.9</td>
- <td class="td05a">14.9</td>
- <td class="td05a">4.9</td>
- <td class="td05a">1.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">11.5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">General paralysis</td>
- <td class="td05a">15.7</td>
- <td class="td05a">15.1</td>
- <td class="td05a">11.5</td>
- <td class="td05a">12.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">16.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">9.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">12.3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Alcoholic</td>
- <td class="td05a">4.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">4.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">0.4</td>
- <td class="td05a">7.9</td>
- <td class="td05a">2.4</td>
- <td class="td05a">7.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">3.0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Manic-depressive</td>
- <td class="td05a">10.4</td>
- <td class="td05a">13.7</td>
- <td class="td05a">21.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">11.1</td>
- <td class="td05a">20.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">17.6</td>
- <td class="td05a">13.1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="td07">Dementia praecox</td>
- <td class="td05a">31.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">24.2</td>
- <td class="td05a">32.0</td>
- <td class="td05a">25.5</td>
- <td class="td05a">29.7</td>
- <td class="td05a">42.3</td>
- <td class="td05a">23.8</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2ab">For purposes of comparison an analysis of the psychoses
-shown by various races in the admissions of the
-Massachusetts state hospitals for a period of three years
-is added (1917-1918-1919):&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<div class="pagebreak2">
- <table width="100%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <th class="td06">Senile</th>
- <th class="td06">Arterio-</th>
- <th class="td06">General</th>
- <th class="td06">Alco-</th>
- <th class="td06">Manic-</th>
- <th class="td06">Dementia</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class="td05">Race</th>
- <th class="td05">No.</th>
- <th class="td06">Psychoses</th>
- <th class="td06">sclerosis</th>
- <th class="td06">Paresis</th>
- <th class="td06">holic</th>
- <th class="td06">Depressive</th>
- <th class="td06">Praecox</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">African</td>
- <td class="td05">211</td>
- <td class="td05c">5.68%</td>
- <td class="td05">4.73%</td>
- <td class="td05">6.16%</td>
- <td class="td05">7.10%</td>
- <td class="td05">4.26%</td>
- <td class="td05">27.96%</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">English</td>
- <td class="td05">3281</td>
- <td class="td08">10.75</td>
- <td class="td08">9.87</td>
- <td class="td08">7.46</td>
- <td class="td08">5.76</td>
- <td class="td08">9.99</td>
- <td class="td08">18.65</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">French</td>
- <td class="td05">647</td>
- <td class="td08">6.64</td>
- <td class="td08">6.95</td>
- <td class="td08">12.05</td>
- <td class="td08">8.19</td>
- <td class="td08">6.80</td>
- <td class="td08">24.88</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">German</td>
- <td class="td05">283</td>
- <td class="td08">6.00</td>
- <td class="td08">7.77</td>
- <td class="td08">10.60</td>
- <td class="td08">9.92</td>
- <td class="td08">12.01</td>
- <td class="td08">21.20</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hebrew</td>
- <td class="td05">353</td>
- <td class="td08">.56</td>
- <td class="td08">2.26</td>
- <td class="td08">5.66</td>
- <td class="td08">1.41</td>
- <td class="td08">10.19</td>
- <td class="td08">37.11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Irish</td>
- <td class="td05">2994</td>
- <td class="td08">9.01</td>
- <td class="td08">7.11</td>
- <td class="td08">7.11</td>
- <td class="td08">16.13</td>
- <td class="td08">7.11</td>
- <td class="td08">23.31</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Italian</td>
- <td class="td05">522</td>
- <td class="td08">3.44</td>
- <td class="td08">2.66</td>
- <td class="td08">7.66</td>
- <td class="td08">5.34</td>
- <td class="td08">10.34</td>
- <td class="td08">35.44</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mixed</td>
- <td class="td05">1244</td>
- <td class="td08">8.76</td>
- <td class="td08">12.62</td>
- <td class="td08">7.70</td>
- <td class="td08">8.11</td>
- <td class="td08">7.55</td>
- <td class="td08">24.35</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Slavonic</td>
- <td class="td05">635</td>
- <td class="td08">6.77</td>
- <td class="td08">7.08</td>
- <td class="td08">12.28</td>
- <td class="td08">8.35</td>
- <td class="td08">6.93</td>
- <td class="td08">25.20</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p2">This shows some very interesting results. It will be
-noted that the Hebrews and Italians have the highest
-rate for dementia praecox, the percentage shown by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-these races being much higher than any of the others.
-The Germans, Italians and Hebrews, in the order mentioned,
-have the highest rates for manic-depressive psychoses.
-The frequency of alcoholic psychoses as shown
-by the Irish is nearly double that of any of the others.
-The Slavonic race has the highest rate for general paresis,
-followed in close succession by the French and Germans.
-The highest rate for senile and arteriosclerotic
-psychoses combined is shown by the races of mixed origin,
-the next highest by the English, closely followed by the
-Irish. The most common psychosis in every instance
-is dementia praecox. In the admissions to the institutions
-for the criminal insane in New York the highest
-percentages are represented by the Irish, Italian and
-Hebrew races, as shown in another chapter. During a
-period of six years (1912 to 1918) a study of first admissions
-to the New York state hospitals shows an incidence
-of dementia praecox in the native-born of 75.2
-per hundred thousand of the population and in the foreign
-born of 161.4. The importance of this is shown
-by the fact that over fifty per cent of the entire hospital
-population is made up of cases of dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>The necessity of some supervision of immigration for
-the purpose of preventing the entrance of undesirable
-aliens has long been recognized. As early as 1824 the
-state of New York tried by legislation to prevent the admission
-of the insane and mental defectives. This effort
-was a failure, probably owing to the fact that the proposed
-enactments would have compelled the companies
-responsible for the entrance of undesirable aliens to remove
-them if they became a public charge. The introduction
-of discordant racial elements from abroad at
-one time disturbed the equilibrium of the entire country.
-The agitation for the restriction of immigration before
-the civil war led to the formation of a political organization
-known as the "Native American" or "Know Nothing"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-party, as it was usually called. It at one time had
-forty representatives in Congress and nominated a candidate
-for President in 1856. These disturbed conditions
-led to the consideration of this subject by Congress as
-early as 1838 and the Judiciary Committee recommended
-legislation prohibiting the entrance of idiots, lunatics and
-those suffering from incurable diseases or convicted of
-crime. The action of several foreign countries in pardoning
-murderers with the provision that they should
-emigrate to the United States led to a resolution of protest
-by Congress in 1860 and shortly thereafter a statute
-intended to encourage immigration was repealed. An
-investigation made by the United States Immigration
-Commission brought to light the fact that the great influx
-of foreigners was largely caused by the agents of the
-steamboat companies abroad and that they had "five or
-six thousand ticket agents in Galicia alone."<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a></p>
-
-<p>The activities of those opposed to the indiscriminate
-entrance of objectionable aliens led to the federal enactment
-of August 3, 1882. The Secretary of the Treasury
-was charged with the duty of prohibiting the landing
-of lunatics, idiots and persons liable to become a public
-charge. The provisions for the execution of this law
-were not satisfactory and it was amended by an act of
-1891. This made it a misdemeanor to bring in any of
-the above proscribed classes and imposed a fine of over
-one thousand dollars upon anyone guilty of so doing.
-Section 11 provided that aliens entering in violation of
-this law could be returned at any time within one year
-thereafter at the expense of the person or persons, vessel,
-transportation company or corporation responsible
-for their entry, and further, that those becoming public
-charges within one year from causes existing prior to
-landing should be considered as having entered in violation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-of law. The provisions of this statute were unchanged
-until the act of March 3, 1903. This excluded
-persons insane within five years previous to landing,
-those having had two or more previous attacks at any
-time, paupers and all others liable to become a public
-charge. Section 17 delegated to the officers of the United
-States Public Health Service the duty of determining the
-condition of all immigrants. Section 20 provided that
-aliens coming to the United States in violation of law, or
-who were found to be public charges from causes existing
-prior to landing, could be deported at any time within
-two years. Section 21 authorized the Secretary of Commerce
-and Labor to deport any alien within three years
-of entering in violation of the act.</p>
-
-<p>An important step in the legislative restriction of
-immigration was the amendment of Feb. 20, 1907. This
-made mandatory the exclusion of idiots, imbeciles, the
-feebleminded, epileptics, insane, all who had been insane
-within five years and persons having had two
-or more attacks of insanity at any time, or who were
-likely to become a public charge, as well as individuals
-not comprehended in the foregoing excluded classes but
-found to be suffering from mental or physical defects
-of such a nature as to affect their ability to earn a living.
-Section 20 provided that an alien entering in violation
-of law or becoming a public charge from causes existing
-prior to landing should, upon the warrant of the Secretary
-of Commerce and Labor, be taken into custody and
-deported to the country from whence he came at any
-time within three years after the date of his entry into
-the United States. The cost of this removal was to be
-a charge upon the owners of the vessel or transportation
-line immediately responsible. When the mental or
-physical condition of the alien was such as to require
-personal care or attention, the Secretary of Commerce
-and Labor was authorized to employ a suitable person<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-for that purpose. This was a great step in advance. There
-were, however, some very great difficulties to be overcome.
-The force placed at the disposal of the Public Health
-Service for the inspection and examination of incoming
-immigrants was entirely inadequate and one or two men
-were sometimes responsible for the examination of several
-thousands aliens in a day. This was, of course, impossible.
-The burden of proof in showing that the mental
-condition was due to causes existing prior to landing,
-furthermore, devolved upon the persons requesting deportation.
-It was impossible in many instances to submit
-actual proof even where there could be no reasonable
-doubt as to the facts. This led to great difficulties and
-much dissatisfaction. Another serious objection to the
-provisions of this law was the requirement that only
-such persons could be deported as were likely to become
-a public charge. In many instances such persons
-were supported by private funds until they were no
-longer deportable, after which they became a burden
-upon the state in which they resided.</p>
-
-<p>These conditions were much improved by the action
-of the Sixty-fourth Congress in 1917. This definitely
-excluded "all idiots, imbeciles, feebleminded persons, epileptics,
-insane persons; persons who have had one or
-more attacks of insanity at any time previously; persons
-of constitutional psychopathic inferiority," etc., or "persons
-not comprehended within any of the foregoing excluded
-classes who are found to be and are certified by the
-examining surgeons as being mentally or physically defective"
-or persons likely to become a public charge.
-Section 9 provided that it shall be unlawful for any person,
-"including any transportation company," to bring
-either from a foreign country or any insular possession
-of the United States any alien afflicted with idiocy, insanity,
-imbecility, feeblemindedness, epilepsy, constitutional
-psychopathic inferiority, etc., and subjected to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-fine any person or persons so doing. The Secretary of
-Labor was also authorized to detail inspectors and matrons
-to duty on vessels carrying immigrants, who shall
-"report to the immigration authorities in charge at the
-port of landing any information of value in determining
-the admissibility of such passengers that may have become
-known to them during the voyage." It also provided
-that a mental examination of all arriving aliens
-should be made by medical officers of the United States
-Public Health Service who shall certify all mental defects
-or diseases observed. "Medical officers of the
-United States Public Health Service who have had special
-training in the diagnosis of insanity and mental defects
-shall be detailed for duty or employed at all ports
-of entry designated by the Secretary of Labor." Section
-19 provided, that any alien "who within five years
-after entry becomes a public charge from causes not
-affirmatively shown to have arisen subsequent to landing"
-shall, upon warrant of the Secretary of Labor, be taken
-into custody and deported. The act also made provision
-for the first time for a literacy test which has been a
-subject of discussion for years. These amendments are
-of far-reaching importance and will eventually undoubtedly
-afford the hospitals considerable relief. The fact
-still remains, however, that the individual states are expending
-millions of dollars annually for the care and
-maintenance of an alien population which should have
-been excluded by the federal government. Under these
-circumstances it would seem nothing more than fair that
-the states should be reimbursed for the cost of carrying
-a burden for which they are in no way responsible.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">MENTAL DISEASES AND CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">The question of responsibility for criminal acts, once
-a legal problem pure and simple, is now recognized as
-involving sociological, psychological and psychiatric considerations
-of far-reaching importance. This viewpoint,
-none too thoroughly established even now, represents the
-progress of several centuries, and still lacks adequate
-recognition in law. The eloquent protest against the
-legal conception of mental diseases written by Isaac
-Ray<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> in 1838 sounds like a quotation from a recent medical
-journal. "In all civilized communities, ancient or
-modern, insanity has been regarded as exempting from
-the punishment of crime, and vitiating the civil acts of
-those who are affected with it. The only difficulty, or
-diversity of opinion, consists in determining who are
-really insane, in the meaning of the law, which has been
-content with merely laying down some general principles,
-and leaving their application to the discretion of the
-judicial authorities.... It is to be feared, that the
-principles, laid down on this subject by legal authorities,
-have received too much of that reverence which is naturally
-felt for the opinions and practices of our ancestors;
-and that innovations have been too much regarded,
-rather as the offspring of new-fangled theories, than of
-the steady development of medical science. In their zeal
-to uphold the wisdom of the past, from the fancied desecrations
-of reformers and theorists, the ministers of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-law seem to have forgotten, that, in respect to this subject,
-the real dignity and respectability of their profession
-is better upheld, by yielding to the improvements of
-the times, and thankfully receiving the truth from whatever
-quarter it may come, than by turning away with
-blind obstinacy from everything that conflicts with long
-established maxims and decisions."</p>
-
-<p>A brief reference to the history of the development
-of the present legal conceptions of criminal responsibility
-will justify the comments made by Ray. The terms
-idiocy, lunacy and non compos mentis were all used by
-Coke in his "Institutes of the Laws of England" written,
-as nearly as can be determined, in 1625. A differentiation
-between the significance of the word idiot and
-non compos mentis appeared as early as 1325 in the English
-statute "De Praerogativa Regis," which delegated
-various responsibilities to the crown that are recognized
-to this day. Sir Matthew Hale, about 1670, described
-a partial and a total insanity, the former not being accepted
-as relieving the accused of responsibility for the
-commitment of a crime. It is an interesting fact that
-we still hear the question of partial insanity seriously discussed.
-In 1723 Justice Tracy in a murder trial ruled
-that "a prisoner in order to be acquitted on the ground
-of insanity must be a man that is totally deprived of his
-understanding and memory, and doth not know what he
-is doing no more than an infant, than a brute or a wild
-beast." As a result of this ruling a man was found guilty
-of attempting to murder a neighbor who sent devils and
-imps into his house at night for the purpose of disturbing
-his sleep. Fortunately the sentence was commuted to
-life imprisonment. In 1812 the Attorney General of
-England<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> ruled that "a man may be deranged in his
-mind&mdash;his intellect may be insufficient for enabling him
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-to conduct the common affairs of life, such as disposing
-of his property, or judging of the claims which his respective
-relations have upon him; and if he be so, the
-administration of the country will take his affairs into
-their management, and appoint to him trustees; but, at
-the same time, such a man is not discharged from his responsibility
-for criminal acts."</p>
-
-<p>The legal procedure of the present day is based very
-largely on the decisions made at the time of the McNaughton
-trial in 1843. In this case the Chief Justice,
-as quoted by Lord Lyndhurst, addressed the following
-words to the jury: "The point which at last will be submitted
-to you will be whether or not on the whole of
-the evidence you have heard you are satisfied that at
-the time the act was committed, for the commission of
-which the prisoner stands charged, he had not that competent
-use of his understanding as not to know what he
-was doing with respect to the act itself&mdash;a wicked and
-wrong thing&mdash;whether he knew it was a wicked and a
-wrong thing he had done, or that he was not sensible at
-the time he committed this act that it was contrary to
-the laws of God and man." This case led to a very serious
-consideration of the subject in the House of Lords.
-As the result of an official request for an opinion, the majority
-of the judges of the court, all concurring but one,
-expressed the view that "to establish a defense on the
-ground of insanity, it must be clearly proved that at
-the time of the committing of the act the accused party
-was labouring under such a defect of reason, from disease
-of the mind, as not to know the nature and quality of
-the act he was doing; or if he did know it (sic) that he did
-not know he was doing what was wrong."<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></p>
-
-<p>The importance and significance of these decisions,
-which one might very readily assume to be obsolete and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-too ancient to be worthy of consideration, will be made
-clear by a quotation from the penal code in effect in New
-York today. "Sec. 1120 (Penal Law). Incompetency of
-idiot or lunatic. An act done by a person who is an idiot,
-imbecile, lunatic or insane is not a crime. A person cannot
-be tried, sentenced to any punishment or punished
-for a crime while he is in a state of idiocy, imbecility,
-lunacy or insanity so as to be incapable of understanding
-the proceeding or making his defense. A person is not
-excused from criminal liability as an idiot, imbecile, lunatic
-or insane person except upon proof that, at the time
-of committing the alleged insane act, he was laboring
-under such a defect of reason as 1, not to know the nature
-and quality of the act he was doing; or 2, not to know
-that the act was wrong." It will, I think, be conceded
-that we have, at least, not lost ground in any way since
-1843.</p>
-
-<p>No less interesting is the legal definition of insanity
-in Massachusetts: "The words 'insane person' and
-'lunatic' shall include every idiot, non compos, lunatic
-and insane and distracted person." (Chapter 4, Sec. 7,
-General Laws of Massachusetts.) In New York the
-terms lunatic and lunacy include every kind of unsoundness
-of mind except idiocy. (Chapter 22, Sec. 28, Consolidated
-Laws.) This would presumably include psychopathic
-personality and imbecility.</p>
-
-<p>Numerous court decisions have had a material bearing
-on the subject of responsibility. It has been held in
-New York that partial or incipient insanity is not a sufficient
-defense if there is still an ability to form a correct
-perception of the legal quality of the act and to know
-that it was wrong. (People vs. Taylor, 138 N. Y. 398, 407
-(1893)). A weak or disordered mind is not excused from
-the consequences of crime. (People vs. Burgess, 153
-N. Y. 561, 569 (1897)), etc. Generally speaking, the legal
-methods of determining criminal responsibility do not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-vary to any material extent with the different states. It
-is obvious that the responsibility for crime as defined
-by the courts is far from harmonizing with the conception
-of competency entertained by the medical profession.
-To the psychiatrist, if the criminal act is the result of the
-mental condition it constitutes a symptom of the disease
-process. It is readily apparent from even a very brief
-reference to the statutes that a person concededly suffering
-from paranoia, general paresis, dementia praecox
-or any other well-defined psychosis is still criminally
-liable for his insane acts within certain limitations.
-From a medical point of view the existence of a psychosis,
-if associated with a consequent judgment defect, emotional
-instability, disturbance of volition, intellectual deterioration,
-delusional and particularly persecutory control,
-hallucinatory trends, ideas of reference, etc., is of
-itself quite sufficient to explain criminal acts in the insane.
-This, however, as has been shown, is not the legal
-point of view. The accused is fully responsible unless it
-can be shown that he is suffering from such a defect of
-reason as not to appreciate the quality or nature of his
-act or that the act is wrong. There is no other legal
-standard. It is a well-known fact that many persons
-adjudged insane by the courts and committed to our
-institutions are fully competent to discriminate between
-right and wrong from an ethical point of view, although
-legally held to be incompetent and unsafe to be at large.
-These divergent viewpoints presumably are due to the
-fact that the law moves only with a degree of dignity
-which theoretically guarantees absolute security in avoiding
-any possible sources of error. It nevertheless is responsible
-for many miscarriages of justice.</p>
-
-<p>Efforts to remedy this state of affairs have been made
-repeatedly by the medical profession. The American
-Psychiatric Association has devoted a great deal of time
-and attention to this subject, unfortunately without any
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-very concrete results. The last official action taken was
-the unanimous approval of the following <span class="no-break">resolutions:&mdash;</span>
-<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81"
-class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
-
-<p>"Resolved: 1. That the proved rarity of wrong acquittals
-on the ground of insanity is the strongest evidence
-that the abuse of the insanity plea in criminal
-cases has been unwarrantably exaggerated.</p>
-
-<p>"2. That the insanity plea is not by any means raised
-as often as it should be, to prevent the frequent miscarriage
-of justice arising from the conviction and imprisonment
-of insane persons whose true mental condition
-has not been recognized.</p>
-
-<p>"3. That the abuses which have crept into the method
-of presenting medical expert testimony have been largely
-the result of established legal tests and procedures, although
-their correction does not require radical change
-in the laws.</p>
-
-<p>"4. That inaccessibility of the evidence on both sides
-of the case is the chief cause of defective medical testimony.</p>
-
-<p>"5. That whenever possible the medical witness
-should not testify unless he has had an opportunity to
-make both a mental and a physical examination of the
-person in whose behalf the plea of insanity is raised.</p>
-
-<p>"6. That we consider the hypothetical question as
-ordinarily presented to be unscientific, misleading and
-dangerous to medical repute and that the evidence on
-both sides should always be included in its presentation
-to medical witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>"7. That in all criminal cases absolutely equal rights
-should be accorded the medical witnesses for both the
-prosecution and the defence for the examination of the
-person alleged to be insane.</p>
-
-<p>"8. That in our judgment the judiciary should by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-legal enactment be allowed more latitude in enlightening
-the jury and enabling it to comprehend the nature and
-meaning of the medical testimony laid before it.</p>
-
-<p>"9. That we recommend as advisable the adoption
-wherever possible of the so-called Leed's method of preliminary
-consultation by medical witnesses on both sides
-of the case as to its status.</p>
-
-<p>"10. That we advocate a freer use of appointments
-of commissions by the court.</p>
-
-<p>"11. That a period of hospital observation of all
-persons committing crimes in whose defence the plea
-of insanity has been raised is by far the best method yet
-devised for securing impartial and accurate opinions,
-silencing popular clamor, avoiding prolonged and sensational
-trials and saving expense to the State; also that we
-advocate the enactment in every State of laws similar
-to those of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and Massachusetts,
-providing that such persons may be committed
-by the court to a State hospital for the insane there to
-remain for such time as the court may direct pending
-the determination of their insanity.</p>
-
-<p>"12. That it is the sense of the Association that it
-is subversive of the dignity of the medical profession for
-any of its members to occupy the position of medical
-advisory counsel in open court and at the same time
-to act as expert witness in a medico-legal case.</p>
-
-<p>"13. That we regard the acceptance by a physician
-of a fee that is contingent upon the result of a medico-legal
-case as not in accordance with medical ethics and
-derogatory to the good repute of the profession, and
-advocate the regulation of the practice by legislation.</p>
-
-<p>"14. That we are in favor of any legislation that will
-secure a definite standard of qualification for medical
-men giving expert testimony."</p>
-
-<p>An equal amount of consideration has been given to
-this important question from time to time by the American<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology. At a
-recent meeting of that organization the following recommendations
-were submitted by a committee:</p>
-
-<p>"1. That in all cases of felony or misdemeanor punishable
-by a prison sentence the question of responsibility
-be not submitted to the jury, which will thus be
-called upon to determine only that the offense was committed
-by the defendant.</p>
-
-<p>"2. That the disposition and treatment (including
-punishment) of all such misdemeanants and felons, i.e.,
-the sentence imposed, be based upon a study of the individual
-offender by properly qualified and impartial
-experts cooperating with the courts.</p>
-
-<p>"3. That provisions be made permitting the transfer
-of such misdemeanants and felons at any time after conviction
-from one institution to another affording a different
-kind of treatment upon the presentation of evidence
-of the needs for such action satisfactory to the court
-which passed sentence.</p>
-
-<p>"4. That no maximum term be set to any sentence.</p>
-
-<p>"5. That no parole or probation be granted without
-suitable psychiatric examination.</p>
-
-<p>"6. That in considering applications for pardons and
-commutation careful attention be given to reports of
-qualified experts showing the applicant's mental age
-and mental stability and that in drafting statutes determining
-or defining juvenile delinquency, mental age and
-mental stability, within reasonable limits, be regarded
-as of importance with the calendar age of the delinquent.</p>
-
-<p>"In view of the foregoing and as an initial step
-towards the ends stated, the committee submits the following
-resolution and urges its immediate adoption:</p>
-
-<p>"Resolved, That the several states be urged to make
-provision for the psychiatric examination, under conditions
-permitting prolonged observation when necessary,
-of all persons convicted of a felony, misdemeanor or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-other offense by properly qualified experts appointed
-to assist the court in reaching a decision as to the proper
-disposition and treatment of the offender."</p>
-
-<p>The courts, the medical profession and the public have
-shown indications of a decided dissatisfaction with existing
-methods of determining criminal responsibility.
-This will certainly continue as long as the sole test of
-competency is the power of the accused to discriminate
-between a knowledge of right and wrong at the time when
-the act is committed. The conditions which lead to crime
-have been made the subject of scientific study by many.
-One of the early investigators in this field was Morel,
-who saw in the criminal a personification "of the various
-degenerations of the species." Much has been said of
-"moral insanity," a condition referred to by Abercromby
-as one "in which all the upright sentiments are eliminated
-while the intelligence presents no disorders." Lombroso
-advanced the theory that criminality is a form of atavism&mdash;a
-reversion of man to the primitive and savage type
-represented by his early ancestors. This theory was
-based on a careful study of the anatomical, physiological
-and psychological characteristics of primitive man. His
-classification included the occasional, the emotional, the
-born criminal, the moral insane, and the masked epileptic.
-Marro offered an anatomical basis for the degenerative
-theory in the form of nutritional defects in the central
-nervous system. Ferri distinguished between criminal
-lunatics and emotional criminals and held crime to be
-"a phenomenon of complex origin and the result of biological,
-physical and social conditions." "Habitual
-criminals," he says, "are the victims of a clear, evident
-and common mental alienation which causes the criminal
-activity," while the occasional offenders are to be explained
-by "the impulse of opportunities more than the
-innate tendency that determines the crime." The emotional
-criminal, according to Ferri, is a sane and moral<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-individual overcome by momentary emotional paroxysms
-referred to as a "psychologic storm." Garofalo, on the
-other hand, looked upon crime as "an offense against the
-fundamental altruistic sentiments of pity and probity."
-From his point of view a criminal act was an indication
-of the loss of a proper sense of appreciation of the life
-or property of another&mdash;a moral anomaly. The Italian
-school of criminology was responsible also for the theory
-that criminal acts are only the expression of epileptic
-symptoms. Sociological workers have attributed crime
-to influences which overcome the natural resistance of the
-individual, a variation from which is merely an inability
-of the person to conform to the laws of environment.
-Max Nordau sees in human failings only an abnormality
-which he describes as "human parasitism." Others look
-upon crime as the natural product of a modern social
-and economic system. Colajanni ascribes alcoholism,
-vagrancy and prostitution to poverty, but crime, he says,
-is "due to necessity and to the degree and kind of education
-received." In the light of our present knowledge
-the conclusion would appear to be warranted that crime
-is the result of constitutional defects in the form of hereditary
-tendencies and arrested mental development, educational
-defects, a deterioration of habits as shown by
-alcoholism, etc., accidental influences such as environment
-and poverty, pathological conditions, including epilepsy
-and insanity, and precipitating factors in the form
-of emotional disturbances.</p>
-
-<p>Criminality, alcoholism, poverty, prostitution and
-mental deficiency are closely correlated. A special committee
-appointed by the New York State Prison Commission
-has made an exceedingly interesting report<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> on
-the relation existing between mental disease and crime.
-Their investigation shows that 21.8 per cent of 608 cases
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-at Sing Sing, thirty-five per cent of 459 men at Auburn,
-twenty-two per cent of three hundred men at the Massachusetts
-State Prison, twenty-eight per cent of forty-nine
-women at Joliet, twenty-five per cent of seventy-six
-women at Auburn, twenty-three per cent of one hundred
-cases at the Indiana State Prison and thirty per cent of
-150 examined at San Quentin were found to be mentally
-defective. An average of 27.5 per cent has been found
-in the prison population as a whole. Thirty-one and four-tenths
-per cent of the inmates of reformatories, training
-schools, workhouses and penitentiaries were found to
-be feebleminded. From twenty-seven to twenty-nine per
-cent of the inmates of penal and correctional institutions
-of the country were said to be defective. About thirty
-per cent of the population of the penal institutions for
-women in New York were found to be feebleminded. A
-study of 502 selected cases at the Psychopathic Laboratory
-of the Police Department of New York City in 1917
-showed that fifty-eight per cent were suffering from
-either nervous or mental abnormalities. Of one thousand
-offenders examined by the medical service of the
-Boston Municipal Court twenty-three per cent were feebleminded,
-10.4 per cent, psychopathic, 3.17 per cent,
-epileptic and nine per cent, mentally diseased and deteriorated;
-45.6 per cent in all showed abnormal mental conditions.
-It has been shown that one of the most important
-causes of recidivism is mental deficiency. The importance
-of this observation may be illustrated by the
-fact that of 133,047 persons admitted to the penal and
-correctional institutions of New York state sixty per
-cent had served previous terms. Of 25,820 persons received
-at institutions in Massachusetts during one year,
-57.4 per cent were recidivits. Justice Roads is responsible
-for the statement that of 180,000 convictions in England
-in one year more than ten thousand represented
-persons convicted upwards of twenty times previously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The mental condition of the cases committed to the
-Matteawan State Hospital is of great importance in a
-consideration of the relation of crime to the psychoses.
-Of 2,595 cases admitted between 1875 and 1907 heredity
-or congenital defects were shown as etiological factors
-in eight per cent of the total number. Of 793 admissions
-in which more definite and reliable information was available,
-hereditary factors were noted in either the paternal
-or maternal branches of the family or both in thirty-five
-per cent of the cases. In addition to this, heredity was
-found in collateral branches in sixteen per cent. Heredity
-of some kind was thus shown in 51.3 per cent of the
-whole number studied. Of 3,247 admissions, 46.9 per
-cent were noted as being intemperate in their habits. An
-analysis of 576 unconvicted cases in 1912<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> showed that
-41.4 per cent were diagnosed as dementia praecox, 21.1
-per cent as alcoholic psychoses, 6.9 per cent as paranoid
-conditions, 4.1 per cent as epileptic psychoses, 7.1 per
-cent as imbecility with excitements, 2.9 per cent as manic-depressive
-psychoses, 2.4 per cent as general paresis, 3.1
-per cent as undifferentiated depressions, 6.7 per cent
-as constitutional inferiority and 2.2 per cent as not insane.
-An analysis of 925 cases committed as insane and
-charged with criminal offenses attributable to their mental
-condition shows the more common crimes as follows:&mdash;assault
-(all forms), 26.2 per cent, burglary, 7.8, grand
-larceny, 8.2, petit larceny, 1, manslaughter, 1.4, murder,
-18.9, homicide (total), 22.4, rape, 3.2, and vagrancy, 4.2
-per cent.</p>
-
-<p>Nolan<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a>
-has made an analysis of 646 first admissions
-to Matteawan during a period of six years (1912 to
-1918). Forty-eight per cent of these were found to have
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-been born in foreign countries. A striking observation
-was the large proportion of male cases born in Italy
-(10.8 per cent) and the female cases born in Ireland (11.7
-per cent). Of the various races represented it was noted
-that the African, which was only responsible for 3.9
-per cent of the admissions to civil hospitals, constituted
-7.4 per cent of the Matteawan admissions. The races
-having the largest representation were the Irish (18.7
-per cent), the Italian (12.4 per cent) and the Hebrew
-(10.8 per cent). The mixed races constituted 11.3 per cent
-of the admissions as compared with twenty-three per cent
-of the cases reported from civil institutions. Among the
-male cases 11.4 per cent were charged with disorderly
-conduct and 26.47 per cent with vagrancy. Of the women,
-eighteen per cent were charged with disorderly conduct,
-16.4 with public intoxication and 39.8 per cent with vagrancy
-and prostitution. These three groups represent
-74.2 per cent of all of the female cases admitted. Of the
-646 criminal acts causing commitment, 34.1 per cent were
-classified from a legal point of view as felonies and 65.9
-per cent as misdemeanors. Only 5.3 per cent were
-charged with murder, manslaughter, etc. Of the various
-psychoses represented by these cases 26.9 per cent were
-diagnosed as dementia praecox, seventeen per cent as
-alcoholic psychoses, 14.7 per cent as constitutional psychopathic
-inferiority, 7.3 as mental deficiency, 8.3 as
-manic-depressive psychoses, 11.3 as general paresis, 3.6
-as senile psychoses, 2.0 as paranoia or paranoid conditions,
-2.2 as epileptic psychoses, and 1.4 per cent as not
-insane. The alcoholic, constitutionally inferior and mentally
-defective group constituted thirty-eight per cent
-of the total. Of the 165 cases diagnosed as dementia
-praecox it is interesting to note that eleven were charged
-with homicide, ten with assault in the first degree, fifteen
-with burglary, thirteen with petit larceny, fourteen with
-disorderly conduct, and sixty-six with vagrancy or prostitution.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-Of the seventy-four cases of general paresis
-thirteen were charged with petit larceny, eleven with disorderly
-conduct, and twenty-nine with vagrancy or prostitution.
-The homicides and assaults were committed
-principally by the alcoholic, dementia praecox, constitutionally
-inferior and the defective cases. The burglaries
-and larcenies were committed largely by patients diagnosed
-as suffering from general paresis, dementia praecox
-and constitutional psychopathic inferiority.</p>
-
-<p>The type of cases received at an institution exclusively
-for insane convicts is naturally quite different, as
-shown by the admissions to the Dannemora State Hospital
-in New York. Of 185 admissions covering a period
-of three years the principal psychoses represented were
-dementia praecox, forty-one per cent, constitutional psychopathic
-inferiority, nineteen per cent, manic-depressive
-psychoses, eight, mental deficiency, nine, alcoholic psychoses,
-five, paranoid conditions, four per cent, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Experience has shown that the defective criminal
-classes are not suitable cases for either penal institutions
-or hospitals for the insane. They are unable to adapt
-themselves to prison discipline or hospital routine and
-prefer to associate only with persons of their own kind
-who are given to foolish boasting of their crimes as their
-least harmful diversion. They are entirely unappreciative
-of any efforts made on their behalf to improve their
-condition or fit them in any way for the requirements of
-society. They are strongly inclined to unprovoked
-cruelty to others. Often they manifest an apparent interest
-in religious services, thinking it may lead to some
-preferment, but not for any moral reason. They are
-notoriously untruthful, unreliable and exhibit a low cunning
-which often deceives those not familiar with handling
-individuals of that type. Curiously enough they are
-exceedingly critical of others and quick to notice their
-shortcomings. Sexual perversions and immoral conduct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-are only too common. Prostitution, as has already been
-shown, is one of the most common failings of the female
-delinquent. An interesting but superficial knowledge of
-legal matters is noted very frequently and paraded with
-a remarkable degree of egotism which is difficult to
-understand. It is comparatively an infrequent occurrence
-for a prisoner to admit that he is guilty of the crime of
-which he has already been convicted by a court. Only a
-few years since, a prisoner at Sing Sing wrote the
-Governor of New York suggesting that his release was
-indicated as a moral procedure for the good of the institution,
-as he was convinced from information obtained
-from others that he was the only guilty man in the establishment.
-The habitual criminal takes little, if any, interest
-in his own relatives or family except when he is in
-confinement, and feels no home ties. There is a curious
-lack of appreciation for the gravity of his own offense
-and he always complains of a "frame up" and asserts
-that he has not had a square deal. Homicides even are
-always explained in an attempt to show that they were
-justifiable or unavoidable. The most vicious of assaults
-are often committed on their fellow prisoners without any
-provocation of consequence. Experience shows that as
-a rule they are incapable of any sustained effort and
-accomplish little or nothing when left to themselves.
-Tendencies to crime show not only a marked suggestibility
-but a degree of impulsiveness and a lack of self control
-which is highly significant.</p>
-
-<p>Another type of institution for this special group of
-cases is strongly indicated. They should be held under
-an indeterminate sentence and in some instances committed
-for life. As a result of hereditary defects, arrested
-mental development, ignorance and vicious tendencies
-this class furnishes the prisons with our most dangerous
-criminals. They should receive separate care, with an
-opportunity for a special education adapted to their individual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-needs. The defective classes have for centuries
-been held criminally responsible and have filled our prisons
-with incorrigibles and recidivists. Modern civilization
-should place at our disposal some means for
-remedying this situation other than mere punishment for
-the possession of an intellectual endowment for which
-these individuals are in no way responsible. The ends
-of justice can be served and the protection of the public
-assured at the same time by a form of medical treatment
-for the defective delinquent which will look forward to
-his ultimate restoration to society rather than a form of
-punishment which accomplishes nothing.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHIATRY OF THE WAR</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The psychiatry of the late war is of unusual interest
-from various points of view. Never before have mental
-diseases or defects been looked upon as military problems
-worthy of any special attention either in times of war or
-peace. It is true that the United States government has
-maintained a hospital for the treatment of such conditions
-at Washington for many years, and medical officers from
-the army and navy have been sent to that institution for
-instruction, from time to time. No adequate provision
-has been made, however, in previous wars for the special
-care or observation of the psychoses or neuroses, nor has
-any great consideration been given to a determination of
-the mental status of recruits. It is, of course, equally
-true that modern military methods have brought about
-different conditions and given rise to new problems.
-In 1917 and 1918 definite psychiatric organizations were
-established by the United States army for the first time.
-The services of specialists in mental diseases were utilized
-extensively and they were ultimately assigned to
-practically all of the large hospitals. Division consultants
-were soon found necessary and the active cooperation
-of practically every psychiatrist available in the
-country was required before the armistice was declared.</p>
-
-<p>This was directly due to the fact that for the first
-time in history one of the most important problems, with
-which the military authorities had to deal, was the question
-of mental diseases and defects. For purposes of
-comparison and the intelligent consideration of this important
-subject, the incidence of mental diseases in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-army in the past is of considerable interest. The rate
-in enlisted men, as shown by the Surgeon General's reports,
-varied from 1.08 per thousand in 1898 to 1.73 in
-1911, and was 2.72 in 1900, the only year in which it went
-above two. In 1912, 1913, 1914 and 1915, when defective
-mental development, constitutional psychopathic states,
-hypochondriasis and nostalgia were included in the reports
-the rates per thousand were respectively 3.45, 3.44,
-4.18 and 3.82. The frequency of psychoses was higher in
-the men serving in the Philippines&mdash;2.07 in 1898, 2.79 in
-1900, 1.45 in 1905 and 2.01 in 1911.</p>
-
-<p>The ratio of mental diseases in the American and English
-armies has been higher for many years than in the
-French, Italian, Russian and German forces. Universal
-military service is supposed to have been the factor producing
-this difference, the larger establishments naturally
-more nearly representing the normal insanity rate of
-the country. From May 1, 1861, to June 30, 1866, in
-other words, during the civil war period, there were
-198,849 discharges for disability from the United States
-army.<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> Of this number 819 men were discharged on account
-of insanity, 3,872 for epilepsy and 2,838 for various
-forms of "paralysis." Based on the mean annual
-strength of the army, this represented a rate of .34 per
-thousand for insanity, 1.6 for epilepsy and 1.17 for paralysis.
-Based on the total number of discharges alone, it
-represented a rate of 6.0 per thousand for insanity, 20.8
-for paralysis, and 28.3 for epilepsy or a rate for the three
-combined of 55.1 per thousand. These statistics are for
-white soldiers only. The rate for colored troops, based
-on the total discharges, was seven per thousand for insanity,
-14.3 for paralysis and thirty-six for epilepsy. No
-information whatever is available as to what the term
-paralysis includes in these reports. The rate per thousand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-in the United States army, as has been shown, increased
-from approximately one in 1898 to three in 1901,
-during the Spanish war, Philippine insurrection, etc., and
-dropped back to one again in 1903. Weygandt,<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> who
-made a study of war neuroses and psychoses in 1904,
-gives the insanity rate per thousand of the German army
-during the Franco-Prussian war as .54, the American
-troops during the Spanish war as 2.7, the British army
-during the Boer war as 2.6, the Russian army during
-the Japanese war as 2.0, and the Bulgarian troops during
-the Balkan campaign .33. The German expeditionary
-corps engaged in Southwestern Africa reported 4.95 per
-thousand and a rate of 8.28 including epilepsy and hysteria.</p>
-
-<p>The first attempt ever made to provide special care
-for mental diseases in the field was during the Russo-Japanese
-war. A hospital set aside for this purpose by
-the Russian army at Harbin treated between fifteen
-hundred and two thousand men in 1905 and 1906. It has,
-however, never been claimed that all of the mental cases
-reached that place. Of 1,310 admissions the following
-conditions were represented<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>:&mdash;epileptic psychoses,
-22.5 per cent; alcoholic forms, 19.5 per cent; dementia
-praecox, ten per cent; confused states, nine per cent; hysterical
-psychoses, 7.7 per cent; general paresis, 5.6 per
-cent; toxic conditions, 4.8 per cent; manic-depressive psychoses,
-four per cent; degenerative types, 3.5 per cent;
-traumatic psychoses, 3.2 per cent; and organic brain diseases,
-2.9 per cent. It is interesting to note that Steida,
-who analyzed the statistics of the Russo-Japanese war in
-1906, reached the conclusion that a psychic trauma alone
-was not a sufficient cause for the development of a neurosis.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-He attached an equal importance to prolonged physical
-exertion, deprivation, loss of sleep, hunger and
-thirst, etc. The most common disturbances following
-battles were found to be hysterical excitements and confused
-states.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the examination of men for military service
-was undertaken in this country in 1917 it became
-apparent that one of the most frequent causes of rejection
-was either mental disease or deficiency. The second
-report of the Provost Marshal General to the Secretary
-of War in 1919<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> showed that of all rejections during the
-first year of mobilization, twenty-two per cent were due
-to physical defects which would interfere with duty (defects
-in bones, and joints, flat foot, hernia, etc.), fifteen
-per cent were on account of imperfections of the sense
-organs, thirteen per cent were for defects in the cardiovascular
-system and about twelve per cent were due to
-nervous or mental diseases. The inspection at camps
-following the physical examination of the first million
-men mobilized resulted in a rejection of nine per cent
-on account of nervous or mental diseases. Of all causes
-for rejections from the army up to February 1, 1919, according
-to Bailey,<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> mental and nervous diseases ranked
-fourth numerically. The "neuropsychiatric" causes
-were:&mdash;psychoses, eleven per cent; neuroses, fifteen per
-cent; epilepsy, nine per cent; organic nervous diseases
-or injuries, eighteen per cent; mental defects, thirty-two
-per cent, and constitutional psychopathic states, nine per
-cent; a total of 67,417 cases.</p>
-
-<p>In the organization of our military forces in 1917,
-when this country entered the war, every effort was made
-to take advantage of the experience of others. Of the
-men returned to Canada from European battlefields on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-account of disability, the nervous and mental cases contributed
-ten per cent of the total at that time, as was
-shown by Farrar.<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> These were distributed as follows:&mdash;neurotic
-reactions, fifty-eight per cent; mental disease
-and defect, sixteen per cent; head injuries, fourteen per
-cent; epilepsy and epileptoid conditions, eight per cent;
-and organic diseases of the central nervous system, four
-per cent. The first group mentioned consisted of neuroses
-in general and included the so-called cases of "shell
-shock," which brings us to one of the most interesting
-problems of the war. Dean A. Worcester, in a recent letter
-to the editor of <i>Science</i>, has raised the question as
-to whether this is a new disease. He calls attention to
-the following reference by Herodotus to the Battle of
-Marathon which occurred in the year 490 <span class="smcap">B.C.</span>:&mdash;"The
-following prodigy occurred there: An Athenian, Epizelius,
-son of Capliagoras, while fighting in the medley, and
-behaving valiantly, was deprived of sight, though
-wounded in no part of his body, nor struck from a distance;
-and he continued to be blind from that time for
-the remainder of his life. I have heard that he used to
-give the following account of his loss. He thought that
-a large, heavy armed man stood before him, whose beard
-shaded the whole of his shield; that this specter passed
-by him, and killed the man that stood by his side. Such
-is the account I have been informed Epizelius used to
-give."</p>
-
-<p>The nature and cause of shell shock has been the
-subject of much controversy. In 1875 Ericksen called
-attention to the effect of intense emotional shock on the
-nervous system. This he explained as "dependent on
-molecular changes in the cord itself." Oppenheim's
-monograph in 1899 was responsible for the general use
-of the term "traumatic neurosis." His conception of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-these conditions was not accepted by Charcot, who at
-the time insisted that they belonged to the domain of
-hysteria, and were due solely to psychic traumas. Oppenheim's<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a>
-observation of cases during the first year
-of the war confirmed his previous views. He expressed
-the opinion in 1915 that "in absolutely healthy and mentally
-normal individuals, without any trace of hereditary
-taint, war trauma may cause psychoses or neuroses.
-The causal injury may be of an objective, psychic or
-mixed nature. Violent detonations illustrate the mixed
-type. Their effect upon the nerve of hearing is certainly
-physical, but the psychic effect&mdash;terror&mdash;is also an
-important element in the resulting condition. The enormous
-air pressure exerted by the close passage of these
-missiles is another influential factor. An element that
-tends to complicate etiology is the frequent long duration
-of the exciting causes (prolonged and continuous
-artillery fire, a series of injuries received at brief intervals,
-exhaustion from various causes, lack of sleep, insufficient
-nourishment, extreme heat or cold, etc.)." He
-admits that the symptoms indicate a combination of neurasthenic
-and hysterical complexes which may be explained
-on a psychogenic basis, but maintains that the war has
-demonstrated them to be of a different nature. An external
-shock causes "a functional disturbance of the delicate
-mechanism of the psychic centers shown in 1, faulty
-distribution of motor impulses, 2, hypo-innervation, 3,
-hyper-innervation, causing tremors, tonic and clonic
-spasms, etc., instead of single muscle actions." He admits
-that a hysterical temperament may be an important
-factor. Max Nonne<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> in 1915 called attention to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-the fact that conditions combining symptoms of hysteria,
-neurasthenia and hypochondriasis plus vasomotor
-changes may occur without any history of injury and
-should not be called traumatic neuroses for that reason.
-He felt that the sudden recoveries occurring so frequently
-strongly discredited any theories suggesting an
-anatomical basis. He expressed the opinion that the most
-common cause was the explosion of hand grenades and
-that the main factor involved was an emotional disturbance.
-Binswanger<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> was of the opinion that mechanical
-injuries to the nervous system were responsible for the
-clinical pictures in war hysterias. He found that in a
-few cases only was there a history of predisposition, and
-maintained that in pre-war conditions hysteria was the
-result of a combination of psychic traumas with physical
-disturbances. Exciting causes were "over-exertion, irregular
-and insufficient nutrition, loss of sleep and high
-mental tension." He concludes that "The theory of a
-psychic mechanism as the origin of these motor and sensory
-symptoms is not demonstrable." "War neurology
-has demonstrated that emotional shock, in conjunction
-with other injuries, may cause a symptom complex identical
-in all its details with the well known clinical picture
-of hysteria." Wolfsohn,<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> from a study of one hundred
-psychoneuroses and one hundred cases of physical
-injury received on the firing line, reached the conclusion
-that war neuroses are very rarely associated with external
-wounds. The vast majority of cases studied had
-a neuropathic or psychopathic taint, as shown in the
-family history in fourteen per cent of the total. A previous
-neuropathic constitution in the patient was found in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-seventy-two per cent. "A gradual psychic shock from
-long-continued fear, together with the sudden change
-from quiet, peaceful environment to the extraordinary
-stress and strain of trench fighting, is the chief predisposing
-cause of war psychoneurosis in soldiers with
-neuropathic predisposition.... Wounded soldiers do
-not suffer from war neuroses except in rare instances."</p>
-
-<p>When the United States entered the war, Major, afterwards
-Colonel, Thomas W. Salmon<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> of the United
-States army made an exhaustive study of "The Care and
-Treatment of Mental Diseases and War Neuroses
-("Shell Shock") in the British Army." At that time
-one-seventh of all discharges for disability from the British
-forces were due to mental and nervous disorders. As
-a matter of fact, they accounted for one-third of all
-discharges for actual diseases (eliminating wounds).
-England with the advantage of three years of experience
-had presumably completed her organization to its
-highest efficiency. One and one-tenth per cent of the
-cases in the military hospitals were suffering from mental
-diseases. The percentage represented by the expeditionary
-forces was 1.3. About six thousand "shell
-shock" cases were being admitted annually to the English
-hospitals. Col. Salmon estimated the admission rate
-at two per thousand in the troops at home and four
-per thousand in the expeditionary forces. The civilian
-rate during the same period was about one to one thousand
-of the population. The confusion which existed
-early in the war was shown by the fact that ten per cent
-of the cases sent to the Red Cross Military Hospital at
-Maghull as war neuroses turned out to be insane and
-twenty per cent of those admitted as mental cases at the
-Royal Victoria Hospital at Netley were subsequently
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-found to be suffering from neuroses. The first conclusion
-reached by Col. Salmon was that "contrary to popular
-belief and to some medical reports published early
-in the war, no new clinical types of mental disease have
-been seen in soldiers. There are no war psychoses."
-He found that of the cases being admitted to the hospitals
-for mental diseases about eighteen per cent were mental
-defectives, two per cent syphilitic psychoses, twenty
-per cent manic-depressive insanity, fourteen per cent
-dementia praecox, and seven per cent epilepsy. Statistics
-at that time were not available on purely psychopathic
-conditions, owing to the classification used.</p>
-
-<p>In discussing the etiology of shell shock Col. Salmon
-divides those conditions into four groups&mdash;1. Cases in
-which death is caused by exploding shells or mines without
-external signs of injury; 2. Those in which severe
-neurological symptoms follow burial or concussion by
-explosions, with characteristic syndromes suggesting the
-operation of mechanical factors; 3. Cases in which there
-may or may not be damage to the central nervous system,
-but showing neuroses similar to those of civil life&mdash;"In
-this group of cases, in which there is possibility but
-no proof of damage to the central nervous system, the
-symptoms present which might be attributable to such
-damage are quite overshadowed by those characteristic
-of the neuroses;" and 4. Cases in which even the slightest
-damage to the central nervous system from the direct
-effect of explosions is exceedingly improbable. He also
-found that hundreds of men who have not been exposed
-to battle conditions at all develop symptoms almost identical
-with those described as "shell shock," many occurring
-in the non-expeditionary forces. The psychogenic
-factors involved are very well summarized by Col. Salmon
-in the following words:&mdash;"The psychological basis
-of the war neuroses (like that of the neuroses in civil
-life) is an elaboration, with endless variations, of one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-central theme: escape from an intolerable situation in
-real life to one made tolerable by the neurosis. The conditions
-which may make intolerable the situation in
-which a soldier finds himself hardly need stating. Not
-only fear, which exists at some time in nearly all soldiers
-and in many is constantly present, but horror, revulsion
-against the ghastly duties which must be sometimes performed,
-intense longing for home, particularly in married
-men, emotional situations resulting from the interplay
-of personal conflicts and military conditions, all
-play their part in making an escape of some sort mandatory.
-Death provides a means which cannot be sought
-consciously. Flight or desertion is rendered impossible
-by ideals of duty, patriotism and honor, by the reactions
-acquired by training or imposed by discipline and by herd
-reactions. Malingering is a military crime and is not at
-the disposal of those governed by higher ethical conceptions.
-Nevertheless, the conflict between a simple and
-direct expression in flight of the instinct of self-preservation
-and such factors demands some sort of compromise.
-Wounds solve the problem most happily for many men
-and the mild exhilaration so often seen among the
-wounded has a sound psychological basis. Others with
-a sufficient adaptability find a means of adjustment. The
-neurosis provides a means of escape so convenient that
-the real source of wonder is not that it should play such
-an important part in military life but that so many men
-should find a satisfactory adjustment without its intervention.
-The constitutionally neurotic, having most readily
-at their disposal the mechanism of functional nervous
-diseases, employ it most frequently. They constitute,
-therefore, a large proportion of all cases but a very
-striking fact in the present war is the number of men of
-apparently normal make-up who develop war neuroses in
-the face of the unprecedentedly terrible conditions to
-which they are exposed."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The symptomatology has been briefly summarized by
-Col. Salmon in a way which cannot be improved upon:&mdash;"Most
-of them can be summed up in the statement that
-the soldier loses a function that either is necessary to
-continued military service or prevents his successful
-adaptation to war. The symptoms are found in widely
-separated fields. Disturbances of psychic functions include
-delirium, confusion, amnesia, hallucinations, terrifying
-battle dreams, anxiety states. The disturbances of
-involuntary functions include functional heart disorders,
-low blood pressure, vomiting and diarrhea, enuresis,
-retention or polyuria, dyspnoea, sweating. Disturbances
-of voluntary muscular functions include paralyses, tics,
-tremors, gait disturbances, contractures and convulsive
-movements. Special senses may be affected producing
-pains and anesthesias, mutism, deafness, hyperacusis,
-blindness and disorders of speech. It is highly significant
-that, in this unprecedented prevalence of functional
-nervous diseases among soldiers, no symptoms unfamiliar
-to those who see the neuroses in civil life present themselves."</p>
-
-<p>An analysis of the 170,000 cases discharged for disability
-in England showed that twenty per cent were due
-to war neuroses. In his second Lettsomian lecture
-Mott<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> called attention to the interesting similarity between
-shell shock following concussion and burial, and
-the symptoms resulting from an acute carbon monoxide
-poisoning. This was, of course, a very possible complication
-in trench warfare. The headache, ringing in the
-ears, blurred and indistinct vision, hallucinations of
-sight, or actual blindness, giddiness, yawning, weariness,
-vomiting, cold sensations, palpitation, sense of oppression
-on the chest, etc., so common in gas poisoning are often
-followed, when consciousness is regained, by confusion
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-and loss of memory, with retrograde amnesia. Tremors
-and loss of speech are also frequently noted. Mott
-reached the conclusion that shell shock, in some cases at
-least, was due to gas poisoning. In his third Lettsomian
-lecture he discusses the symptomatology of shell shock.
-In some instances there was a partial loss of consciousness,
-characterized by dazed states somewhat similar to
-those of epilepsy. Under speech defects he includes
-mutism, aphonia, stammering, stuttering and verbal
-repetition. Headache in the occipital region was found
-to be a very common symptom. Vasomotor conditions
-were palpitation, breathlessness, pericardial pain, rapid
-weak pulse, low blood pressure, cold extremities, low
-temperature, etc. Anesthesia and hyperesthesia or loss
-of pain sense also occurred, and deafness was often observed.
-Smoky vision, photophobia and functional blindness
-were frequent eye symptoms. Tremors, tics, choreiform
-movements, functional paralysis and gait disturbances
-are also mentioned by Mott. In the Chadwick lecture
-he later called attention to the presence of insomnia
-and terrifying dreams in practically all cases of true shell
-shock.</p>
-
-<p>In 1917 Mott<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> reported the examination of the
-brains from two cases of pure shell shock. They showed a
-congestion of the meninges, scattered subpial hemorrhages,
-and congested vessels in the internal capsule, pons
-and medulla. In one case there was an extravasation of
-blood into the substance of the lower surface of the
-orbital lobe. He spoke also of a general chromatolysis
-in the ganglion cells. Eder<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> in 1917 advanced the theory
-that the symptoms of neuroses are the result of mental
-conflicts and that the mechanisms involved are those
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-attributed by Freud to hysteria. As a result of an analysis
-of one hundred cases he reached the conclusion that
-mechanical shock, gas poisoning and other physical
-traumas were not factors in the production of these conditions.
-His cases occurred in persons free from hereditary
-or personal psychoneurotic predisposition. Chavigny
-in a discussion of the mental diseases in the French
-army asserted that psychoses and neuroses were practically
-unknown until trench warfare began and the use
-of heavy artillery became common. From this moment
-psychiatric units became necessities. Ballet and de
-Fursac<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> were very firmly of the opinion that shell
-shock was due to purely emotional reactions in predisposed
-individuals. "If disturbances from explosion and
-from emotional shock, existing with or without traumatism,
-produce identical results, it is evident that they
-have a common factor and this common factor can be
-only the emotion itself. Disturbance from explosion
-without external injury presupposes an emotional state,
-and it is from this state that it derives its causal efficacy;
-whatever the etiological complex found as the cause of
-a condition of shock, whether the explosion of a shell,
-bomb or mine, the sight of the dead, burial in a trench,
-wound from an explosion or a missile, there is only one
-factor of importance, the emotional factor, which is
-essentially responsible for all the neuropsychic disorders
-that together make up the shock syndrome."</p>
-
-<p>In 1915 Birnbaum summarized seventy-two articles
-written on war psychoneuroses in the German army up
-to the middle of March of that year. On analyzing this
-study Hoch reached the conclusion that the rate of psychoses
-was only about two in ten thousand, which would
-appear to be entirely too low. Birnbaum compared the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-statistics of various observers showing the frequency
-of psychoses during the first year of the war as follows:&mdash;"Psychopathic
-constitution, hysteria, traumatic neuroses,
-etc., Bonhöffer, fifty-four per cent; Meyer, 37.5 per
-cent; and Hahn forty-three per cent. Alcoholism, acute
-and chronic, Bonhöffer, ten per cent; Meyer, 21.5 per
-cent; and Hahn, twenty-one per cent. Dementia praecox,
-Bonhöffer, seven per cent; Meyer, 7.5 per
-cent; and Hahn, thirteen per cent. Epilepsy, Bonhöffer,
-fourteen per cent; Meyer, 11.5 per cent; and Hahn, eight
-per cent. Manic-depressive insanity, Bonhöffer, three
-per cent; Meyer, four per cent; and Hahn, two per cent.
-General paralysis, Bonhöffer, six per cent; Meyer, 3.5
-per cent; and Hahn, three per cent." In discussing these
-findings Hoch says:&mdash;"It is clear from this table that
-psychopathic constitutions, various psychogenic reactions,
-hysterical and anxiety states, also exhaustive conditions&mdash;all
-of which are included in the first group&mdash;are
-strikingly frequent; whereas the more serious constitutional
-disorders, such as manic-depressive insanity,
-dementia praecox and epilepsy are much rarer." Both
-Birnbaum and Bonhöffer expressed surprise at the infrequency
-of manic-depressive conditions. Wollenberg found
-that the individuals who broke down during mobilization,
-and who had the least resistance, developed manic-depressive
-insanity, paranoid schizophrenias, episodic
-psychopathic excitements and occasional clouded states.
-The cases appearing at the front, on the other hand, were
-largely hysterias, anxiety states and exhaustive conditions.
-Birnbaum described psychoses similar to those
-reported by Awtokratow in the Russo-Japanese war and
-characterized by great weariness with a tendency to weeping,
-disturbed sleep and hallucinations related directly
-to unpleasant war experiences to which the patients had
-been subjected. He attributed these to exhaustion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-Lust<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> quotes Mörchen as finding only five cases of war
-neuroses in forty thousand prisoners at Darmstadt and
-found very few cases in an additional twenty thousand
-which he investigated himself.</p>
-
-<p>Westphal in 1915 expressed the opinion that there
-were neither war psychoses nor neuroses and that these
-conditions did not differ in any way from those described
-in times of peace. MacCurdy,<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> who made an elaborate
-study of war neuroses in 1917, described them as being
-either anxiety conditions or simple conversion hysterias.
-He looked upon fatigue as being a very important factor
-in the development of a neurosis, with either a physical
-accident or a mental shock as the precipitating cause.
-He defines war neuroses as "Those functional nervous
-conditions arising in soldiers which are immediately determined
-by modern warfare and have a symptomatology
-whose content is directly related to war." MacCurdy
-found that concussion could be considered as a possible
-factor in less than one-fourth of the cases he observed.
-He refers to minute cerebral and retinal hemorrhages
-with blood in the cerebrospinal fluid as an evidence that
-concussion is a cause in some cases. Curschmann, Meyers,
-Buzzard, Farrar and various others have noticed that
-the gross hysterical manifestations were extremely rare
-in officers. After an extended discussion of the etiology
-of the war neuroses, Farrar in 1918 expressed as one
-of his conclusions the opinion that "The drift of opinion
-is unmistakable towards the psychogenic basis of war
-neuroses of all types, including shell shock. Even in
-the initial unconsciousness or twilight state of some duration
-there is evidence that the psychogenic element may
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-have as great if not a greater rôle than the item of mechanical
-shock, although this is also important."</p>
-
-<p>Hartung<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> in 1918 reported a study of 780 cases of
-war neuroses treated by him at Thal. About ninety-eight
-per cent were cured by psychic and mechanical
-treatments. One hundred and sixty-two cases showed
-hysterical paralysis, the lower limbs being affected twice
-as often as the upper. Tremors of the head or upper
-limbs were present in twenty-eight per cent, hysterical
-convulsions in eight per cent, speech disturbances in
-five per cent, hearing disorders in one per cent, cardiac
-and respiratory symptoms in 1.5 per cent, neuroses of
-the digestive system in 1.5 per cent, and bladder disturbances
-in 1.5 per cent of the cases. Neurasthenia "in the
-strictest sense of the word" was present in twenty per
-cent. Hurst<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> and others have spoken of endocrine disturbances
-in war neuroses. He includes hyperadrenalism
-and hyperthyroidism due to an over-stimulation of the
-sympathetic nervous system, resulting from such emotions
-as anger and fear. Rapid pulse, enlargement of
-the heart, and high blood pressure were common symptoms.
-The patients in some cases showed conditions
-strongly suggesting Graves' disease. In addition to the
-circulatory disturbances there was paroxysmal sweating,
-the eyes were slightly prominent, sometimes with von
-Graefe's sign, and pilomotor reflexes were present.</p>
-
-<p>An important contribution to the discussion as to the
-etiology of war neuroses was the statement made by
-Major General Ireland<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> to the Senate Committee on
-Military Affairs, that of the twenty-five hundred cases
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-of shell shock awaiting transportation to the United
-States, twenty-one hundred recovered within a day or
-two after the armistice was declared. He gave the incidence
-of mental and nervous diseases in the forces in
-camps in this country as 2.5 per thousand and ten per
-thousand overseas. Another interesting phase of shell
-shock was the surprising results which various German
-observers obtained by the so-called "Kaufmann" treatment,
-the sudden application of a strong faradic current.
-One of the most significant contributions to the
-psychiatric history of the war as far as this country is
-concerned is the statement made by Col. Salmon<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> that
-in the latter part of December, 1920, of the beneficiaries
-of the War Risk Insurance thirty-two per cent were suffering
-from general diseases; forty-one per cent from
-tuberculosis; and twenty-seven per cent from various
-neuropsychiatric disorders. "The vague idea that all
-these men are suffering from "shell shock" or other mysterious
-maladies developed under the stress of modern
-warfare was replaced by the realization that more than
-two-thirds of all neuropsychiatric patients have one or
-another type of insanity." Of these cases sixty-six per
-cent had well developed psychoses; nineteen per cent
-psychoneuroses; five per cent epilepsy; two per cent
-mental deficiency; and eight per cent organic nervous
-diseases or injuries. On December 16, 1920, there were
-five thousand five hundred cases receiving hospital treatment.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">ENDOCRINOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The important influence exercised by the glandular
-structures on the human organism has long been recognized.
-Perhaps the earliest evidence of this is the study
-of alterations due to the removal of the sexual glands.
-Eunuchoidism was described by Larrey as early as 1812
-in his well-known account of the Egyptian campaign. In
-1845 Bouchardat advanced the theory that pancreatic lesions
-were responsible for the development of diabetic disorders.
-Thomas Addison in 1855 showed the existence
-of a very definite disease process caused by pathological
-conditions in the adrenals. Mongolianism was recognized
-as a distinct entity by Langdon-Down in 1866. Gigantism
-was studied very thoroughly by von Langer in
-1872. The existence of the parathyroids was unknown
-until they were described by Sandström in 1880. Weiss
-in 1881 showed that the extirpation of the thyroid sometimes
-caused tetany. After myxedema had been studied
-clinically by Charcot and others the fact that it was
-clearly related to disturbances of the functions of the
-thyroid gland was demonstrated by Kocher and Reverdin
-in 1882. Adipositas Dolorosa was described by Dercum
-as a form of dysthyroidia in the same year. Acromegaly
-was originally defined by Pierre Marie in 1886 and its
-relation to the hypophysis was pointed out by him. In
-1886 Möbius called attention to the part played by the
-ductless glands in Basedow's disease, Grawitz in 1888
-showed the significance of thymic hyperplasia and Paltauf
-in the following year described the "lymphato-chlorotic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-constitution." The pancreatic origin of diabetes
-was elaborately outlined by von Mering and Minkowski
-in 1889. The influence exerted by glandular
-secretions on general metabolism was demonstrated by
-Brown-Sequard in the same year. Lemoine and Launois
-in 1891 reported the existence of sclerosis of the blood
-and lymph vessels in the pancreas and Laguerse in
-1893 found that the Islands of Langerhans were often involved
-in diabetes. Thyroigenic obesity was reported by
-von Hertoghe in 1896. The isolation and chemical definition
-of adrenalin by Takamine in 1901 was a decided
-step in advance. Fröhlich in 1901 suggested that obesity,
-infantilism of the genitalia and myxedematous alterations
-of the skin pointed to tumors of the hypophysis.
-In the same year Neumann thoroughly reviewed the subject
-of growths in the epiphysis, submitting a study of
-twenty-two cases. The various types of dwarfism were
-first described by von Hansemann in 1902. Thyroplasia
-and myxedema were exhaustively studied by Pineles in
-1910 and 1912. The literature on the subject of the ductless
-or so-called endocrine glands has grown enormously
-during the last two or three decades and is shown in full
-by Falta and Meyers.<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a></p>
-
-<p>The endocrine syndromes as now understood have
-been briefly summarized by Blumgarten<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> in a very
-graphic form as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="st4">Thyroid Stigmata</p>
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Symptoms of So-called Hyperactivity</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Exophthalmus.</li>
-<li>Wide palpebral slits.</li>
-<li>Tachycardia.</li>
-<li>Nervousness.</li>
-<li>Tremors.</li>
-<li>Stelwag's sign.</li>
-<li>Scanty and frequent menstruation.</li>
-<li>Emaciation.</li>
-<li>Periodic loss of flesh and strength.</li>
-<li>Mild hyperthermia.</li>
-<li>Increased basal metabolism.</li>
-<li>Lymphocytosis.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></li>
-
-<li>Von Graefe's sign.</li>
-<li>Anginoid attacks.</li>
-<li>Hyperidrosis.</li>
-<li>Deformities of the nails.</li>
-<li>Dryness of the mouth.</li>
-<li>Excessive salivation.</li>
-<li>Vomiting attacks.</li>
-<li>Diarrhea.</li>
-<li>Irregular breathing.</li>
-<li>Eosinophilia.</li>
-<li>Increased coagulation time.</li>
-<li>Increased emotional irritability.</li>
-<li>Ideas of reference and persecution.</li>
-<li>Manic symptoms.</li>
-<li>Bluish-white teeth.</li>
-<li>High hair line.</li>
-<li>Hourglass contraction of the stomach.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Symptoms of So-called Hyposecretion</i></p>
-
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Precocious graying of the hair.</li>
-<li>Drowsiness.</li>
-<li>Anorexia.</li>
-<li>Small stature.</li>
-<li>Puffiness of the face.</li>
-<li>Sallow complexion.</li>
-<li>Scanty hair.</li>
-<li>Deepset eyeballs.</li>
-<li>Dull and listless cornea.</li>
-<li>Hard, brittle nails.</li>
-<li>Scanty eyebrows.</li>
-<li>Cold, bluish, moist hands.</li>
-<li>Tending to chilblains.</li>
-<li>Irregularly developed teeth which decay easily.</li>
-<li>Defective development.</li>
-<li>Dry, thick, scaly skin.</li>
-<li>Acrocyanosis.</li>
-<li>Localized transitory edema.</li>
-<li>Urticaria.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Parathyroid Stigmata</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Intermittent cramps.</li>
-<li>Twitching of the hands.</li>
-<li>Tetany with associated symptoms.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Pituitary Stigmata</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Greatly thickened nose.</li>
-<li>Prominence of superciliary ridges.</li>
-<li>Tendency to increased tuftings of terminal phalanges.</li>
-<li>Coarse, heavy, overhanging eyebrows.</li>
-<li>Protruding thick lips.</li>
-<li>Prominent hypertrophied lower jaw.</li>
-<li>Increased sugar tolerance.</li>
-<li>Increased interdental spaces.</li>
-<li>Enlarged sella tursica.</li>
-<li>Hypertrophied nails.</li>
-<li>Hypertrophied, thickened skin.</li>
-<li>Short, square hands.</li>
-<li>High carbohydrate tolerance.</li>
-<li>Amenorrhea.</li>
-<li>Visceroptosis.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>So-called Deficiency Symptoms</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Adiposity.</li>
-<li>Fat pads around the malleoli.</li>
-<li>Increased development of the mammary glands.</li>
-<li>Deposit of fat around the buttocks and the neck.</li>
-<li>Alabasterlike skin.</li>
-<li>Irregular menstruation.</li>
-<li>Subnormal temperature.</li>
-<li>Wide intercostal angle.</li>
-<li>Fatigability.</li>
-<li>Infantile uterus.</li>
-<li>Slow pulse.</li>
-<li>Sluggish mentality.</li>
-<li>Mononucleosis.</li>
-<li>Eosinophilia.</li>
-<li>Leucocytosis.</li>
-<li>Short stature.</li>
-<li>Childlike voice.</li>
-<li>Bitemporal headache.</li>
-<li>Supraorbital headache.</li>
-<li>Sterility.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Adrenal Stigmata</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Aggressive type of individual.</li>
-<li>Increased growth of hair on body.</li>
-<li>Masculine type of female and vice versa.</li>
-<li>Prominent canine teeth.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>So-called Deficiency Symptoms</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Asthenia.</li>
-<li>Low blood pressure.</li>
-<li>Muscular pains.</li>
-<li>Fatigability.</li>
-<li>Pigmentation.</li>
-<li>Sergent's white line.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Thymus Stigmata</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Very long stature.</li>
-<li>High palatal arch.</li>
-<li>Infantile epiglottis.</li>
-<li>Lymphocytosis.</li>
-<li>General glandular enlargement.</li>
-<li>Abnormally long thorax.</li>
-<li>Visceroptosis.</li>
-<li>Eosinophilia.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Gonadal Stigmata</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Hermaphroditism.</li>
-<li>Pale, anemic skin.</li>
-<li>Flushes in the female.</li>
-<li>Scanty growth of lanugolike hair.</li>
-<li>Sparse eyebrows.</li>
-<li>Dull, lethargic mentality.</li>
-<li>Characteristic pyramidal pubic hair in males and flat in females.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Symptoms of So-called Gonadal Hyperactivity</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Precocious sexual activity.</li>
-<li>Jolly, gay disposition.</li>
-<li>Marked fecundity.</li>
-<li>Menorrhagia or metrorhagia.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Symptoms of So-called Hyposecretion</i></p>
-
-<ul class="list">
-<li>Infantilism.</li>
-<li>Small, atrophic testes.</li>
-<li>Late menstruation.</li>
-<li>Menorrhagia.</li>
-<li>Dysmenorrhea.</li>
-<li>Infantile uterus.</li>
-<li>Nervous constipation.</li>
-<li>Deficient lateral incisors.</li>
-<li>Sterility.</li>
-<li>Absent lateral incisors.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="pr1c"><i>Pineal Stigmata</i></p>
-
-<p class="pr1a">(occur only in children)</p>
-
-<p class="pr1b">Precocious sexual and mental development.<br />
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">It will be noted that he associates manic symptoms,
-increased emotional irritability, ideas of reference and
-persecution with thyroid hyperactivity and speaks of a
-sluggish mentality in pituitary deficiency and gonadal
-stigmata. Blumgarten's summary of these conditions is
-very interesting: "The study of the various stigmata
-shows that many of these are present regularly in certain
-types of individuals. Consequently we may group individuals
-from an endocrine viewpoint into various types
-according to the prominent endocrine stigmata which
-they show. For example, the nervous, thin individual
-with tachycardia, rather prominent eyeballs, fine, delicate
-hair, suffering occasionally from gastric symptoms, suggests
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-the thyroid type, as does also the clean-cut, alert
-individual, and the young woman suffering with amenorrhea
-and a tendency to obesity and lethargic mentality.
-On the other hand, the aggressive, energetic individual,
-with the history of an ancestry subject to vascular disease,
-with high blood pressure, with abundant, unusual
-distribution of hair and a tendency to pigmentation, suggests
-the adrenal type. And so does the tired, asthenic
-individual with low blood pressure and Sergent's white
-line, who may have had influenza or diphtheria and even
-may be suffering from tuberculosis. On the other hand,
-however, the heavily built individual with broad, large
-frame, wide intercostal angle, broad nose, prominent
-supra-orbital ridges, prominent lips, large, square fingers,
-suggests the pituitary type. These individuals are
-very fond of meats, are heavy eaters, and are constantly
-subject to diseases of a gouty nature, may have a history
-of syphilis, are often musical and, as a rule, are usually
-successful in their particular community."</p>
-
-<p>According to Kaplan<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> "such states as lack of courage,
-melancholy, suicidal tendencies, dementia praecox,
-precocious adolescence, and immature senility, sadism and
-masochism; all of these are possible manifestations in a
-gonadotrop individual." Garretson<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> is of the opinion
-that the "large group of patients generally misunderstood
-and frequently classed in civil life as neurasthenics,
-psychasthenics, hysterics, cyclothymics, and hypochondriacs,
-is now capable of an intelligent analysis and
-rational therapy, if one will concede that these are the
-victims of an endocrinic asthenia."</p>
-
-<p>As an evidence of the influence of the endocrine glands
-on psychical functions, Falta<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> refers to "the alteration
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-in character that is almost always associated with the development
-of Basedow's disease; to the psychical irritability,
-the inclination to irascibility, the manic-euphoristic
-attitude of patients with Basedow's disease; to the
-apathy and lack of interest of the myxedematous; to the
-characteristic quiet mental attitude in hypophysial
-dystrophy, and the feeling of mental want of strength
-in those suffering with Addison's disease; to the depressive
-attitude of the tetany patient, and finally to the
-profound influence that the ripening of the sexual glands
-at the time of puberty or the loss of function of the sexual
-glands in castrates exercises on the psyche." Going
-into this subject more in detail Falta gives the following
-mental symptoms as associated with Basedow's disease:
-abnormal irritability, "immotivated" gaiety, hasty
-speech, rapid flow of thoughts, a suggestion of flight of
-ideas, changeable moods and terrifying dreams. He also
-finds an alteration in the personality as shown by suspiciousness,
-capriciousness, irritability and either euphoric
-or depressed tendencies. Möbius compares this with
-a condition of mild intoxication associated with maniacal
-periods alternating with depression. Occasional attacks
-of delirium with confusion and hallucinations terminating
-in coma have been described. Sattler, who has analyzed
-150 of these cases as reported in current literature,
-classifies over seventy as cases of manic-depressive insanity.
-Boinet, Parhan and others have shown that depression
-with suicidal inclinations may follow the ingestion
-of large amounts of thyroidin. Conditions of excitement
-have also been reported in thyroidism, and, according
-to Falta, are not uncommon. Brunet has expressed
-the opinion that in such cases Basedow's disease acts
-only as a precipitating factor in an individual predisposed
-to a psychosis.</p>
-
-<p>The English Myxedema Commission found the apathy
-characteristic of that disease present in all but three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-of 109 cases. This condition develops early and may
-manifest itself in the form of a mild mental dulness.
-Intellectual activities are often markedly diminished and
-there is a slow, monotonous form of speech. Deterioration
-may be well developed and memory seriously impaired.
-The commission in its investigations found
-illusions in eighteen cases, hallucinations in sixteen and
-psychoses in sixteen. These took the form usually of a
-depression with occasional excitements. The symptoms,
-in some cases at least, disappeared after thyroid treatment
-was instituted.</p>
-
-<p>The psychic changes in cretinism have been made the
-subject of considerable study. The usual mental state is,
-of course, one of feeblemindedness. Perception has been
-shown to be disturbed, memory is impaired and there
-is a marked emotional deterioration and instability.</p>
-
-<p>In the parathyroid form of tetany von Frankl-Hochwart
-found depressions and confused states with hallucinations.
-Depressions were reported by him in fourteen
-of thirty-seven cases examined. Excitements were also
-noted in some instances. Falta refers to "a characteristic
-apathy, a want of initiative, and a slowing of speech"
-in acromegaly. In rare cases he has also noted mental
-exaltation. Oppenheim (1914) has called attention to
-cases of acromegaly presenting the picture of general
-paresis but due to an alteration of glandular functions
-and not syphilitic in origin.</p>
-
-<p>Falta includes the following in his description of the
-symptomatology of Addison's disease: "Almost always
-the disease manifests itself in ready fatigability, disinclination
-for work, and apathy; to these symptoms are
-sometimes added headaches, poor sleep, sometimes obstinate
-insomnia, psychical ill humor and depression,
-often too, abnormal irritability; further, diminution in
-memory, noises in the ears, vertigo and commonly fainting
-attacks, singultus, and rheumatoid pains in the back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-and in the extremities, sometimes, also epileptiform convulsions.
-Extremely stormy manifestations on the part
-of the nervous system may, especially in the later stages,
-make their appearance&mdash;violent delirium, acute confusion,
-convulsions, deep stupor, and coma."</p>
-
-<p>Raeder<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> has made an analysis of glandular involvements
-found in the study of one hundred cases of feeblemindedness
-at autopsy. He classifies these as 1, extreme
-changes&mdash;in which three or four glands were involved and
-where there were marked anomalies of growth, underdevelopment,
-disproportion of the body parts, etc.; 2,
-marked changes&mdash;in which at least two glands were involved
-and where there were distinct changes in growth
-and anomalous development; 3, moderate changes&mdash;in
-which one or two glands were involved; and 4, cases
-where no glandular involvement was found. He noted
-extreme changes in ten per cent of the series, marked
-changes in eleven per cent, moderate changes in fifty-three
-per cent and none at all in twenty-six per cent.
-Sixty per cent of these individuals showed deviation from
-the normal in size, fifty-one per cent were undersized and
-nine per cent were above the average height, while thirty-eight
-per cent were normal. The pituitary was found to
-be involved in forty per cent of the one hundred cases,
-the thyroid in nineteen per cent, the suprarenal in
-twenty-seven per cent, the sex glands in thirty-eight per
-cent, the thymus in twelve per cent and other glands in
-six per cent. He frequently found several involved:
-"Pituitary with gonads in nine cases, was the most common
-dual adenosis, though there were combinations of
-sex and thyroid in four instances, sex and suprarenal in
-four cases, and in three cases the thyroids, pituitary and
-gonads were affected in triple involvement. Furthermore,
-there were six cases in which the gonads were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-combined with three other glands; two included the
-gonads, thyroid, pituitary and suprarenal; two, gonads,
-thyroid, pituitary and thymus." Further investigation
-only can accurately determine the exact relation which
-exists between disturbance of these glands and the presence
-of mental deficiency.</p>
-
-<p>Attention was called some time since to the fact that
-the injection of adrenalin leads to an increase in blood
-pressure. This has been discussed by Falta, Newburgh,
-Nobel and others. Neubürger<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> made a study of thirty-nine
-cases, seven of which were normal, the others including
-alcoholism, neurasthenia, manic-depressive, etc., but
-not dementia praecox. A fairly well marked rise of blood
-pressure followed adrenalin injection very quickly,
-reaching its maximum in from six to twelve minutes. He
-found the reaction diminished or absent in eighty per cent
-of the sixty-three cases of dementia praecox which he
-examined, but does not advance the claim that this can be
-utilized for diagnostic purposes. Walter and Krumbach<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a>
-found an increased pressure in sixty per cent
-of normal control cases and obtained similar reactions in
-dementia praecox. Schmidt, on the other hand, confirmed
-the findings of Neubürger. Emerson<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> found status
-lymphaticus in over twenty-nine per cent of his cases of
-dementia praecox and Davis<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> found the same condition
-in twenty-four per cent of war neuroses in a series of over
-one hundred cases. These findings, however, lack confirmation
-by other observers. Straus<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> includes as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-mental symptoms in thyroidal disbalance: sluggish mental
-reactions alternating with sparkling wit, irritability,
-general moodiness and depression, difficulty in thought
-with inability to concentrate, forgetfulness, fatigability
-and somnolence.</p>
-
-<p>Turro<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> has shown that all of the physical evidences
-of fright&mdash;pallor, dilatation of the pupils, rapid
-pulse, cutis anserinus, perspiration, etc., can be produced
-experimentally by the injection of epinephrin in certain
-cases. Knauer and Billigheimer<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> have called attention
-to the striking similarity between the functional
-changes to be found in disturbances of the vegetative
-(sympathetic) nervous system and certain manifestations
-associated with fear neuroses. They attribute these disturbances
-to congenital inferiority, toxic sources, emotional
-shock or fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>A uniform defective development of the physical and
-mental personality of the individual has been designated
-by Lasègue as infantilismus. As described by Di Gaspero
-and de Sanctis the mental status of these cases belongs
-to the domain of feeblemindedness and in some
-instances to imbecility. According to Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> the
-attention is easily attracted and as easily distracted.
-These individuals are inquisitive and flighty. Apprehension
-is defective. What they hear and see can only
-be related in a fragmentary and unreliable manner. They
-often learn readily and forget as quickly. Pende described
-the mental development as only one-third of the
-normal. Memory gaps are supplied by exaggeration and
-fabrication, as influenced by emotion or suggestion. Di
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-Gaspero found falsification of memory in twenty per cent
-of his cases. Imagination is very active with a tendency
-to dreamlike unrealities, wonderful tales of adventure,
-etc. Mental processes are inadequate, vague and uncertain.
-The real and the unreal are not clearly differentiated.
-Explanations and descriptions are inaccurate
-and indefinite. Standards of value, size or time are
-vague. The store of ideas is impoverished and associations
-are poor. Calculations are slow and faulty. These
-persons are illogical, impractical and credulous. They
-are swayed by prejudices, catchwords and hasty judgment.
-Their range of thought is narrow and their viewpoint
-of life childish. The emotional and volitional content
-is immature. They are cheerful but lack earnestness,
-and are often ambitious and boastful. At other times
-they are likely to be despondent, timid, anxious, fearful
-and lacking in self-confidence. The mood is exceedingly
-variable. They are not industrious, cannot apply themselves
-constantly to any line of work, and tire easily.
-Their conduct is very uncertain and unreliable.
-Some have criminal tendencies. Occasionally hysterical
-symptoms appear. Evidences of an absence
-of physical development manifest themselves in all
-varieties of immaturity. These defects, according
-to Falta, are shown especially in the genitalia and
-the lymphatic apparatus, with a delay in the closure
-of the epiphysis and the retention of a childish physique
-generally. The skeletal framework shows a failure of
-development, the lower length of the body exceeds the
-upper slightly, if at all, the head is relatively large, the
-bones slender and the pelvis infantile in type. The
-sexual organs and the "vita sexualis" are those of a
-child. The blood shows a large lymphocyte count and a
-definite status lymphaticus is sometimes found to be present.
-The hairy development of the pubis and axillary
-surface is slight. The internal organs are normal. True<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-infantilism, according to Falta, is not due to a glandular
-disturbance. He also maintains that the mind, while
-that of a child, is normal otherwise and shows no defects.
-Juvenile myxedema, hypophysial dystrophy and eunuchoidism,
-Falta would not include with the infantilismus
-group. Infantilism has been ascribed to syphilis, tuberculosis,
-alcoholism, etc., of the parents. Brissaud in
-1907 advanced the theory that it was a hypothyroid symptom.
-His views have been supported by various other
-writers, although not shared by either Falta or Kraepelin.
-The latter has also described mental conditions more
-or less suggesting feeblemindedness and associated with
-lesions of the hypophysis, the pineal gland, the adrenals,
-the sexual glands and the thymus.</p>
-
-<p>Lesions in the anterior lobe of the pituitary result in
-gigantism or acromegaly, with a childish mentality most
-marked in the emotional sphere. These persons are
-usually indifferent, good-natured and boastful, and at
-the same time clumsy and inactive. A diminished activity
-of the glandular portion of the hypophysis means
-dwarfism. Lesions of the posterior or "nervous" lobe
-may cause "dystrophia adiposo genitalis," the "adipositas
-dolorosa" of Dercum. The mental status in this condition
-Kraepelin compares to that described in acromegaly&mdash;apathy
-and indifference, with occasional restless
-or excited types. The intellectual capacity may be normal,
-mediocre or somewhat deficient.</p>
-
-<p>The pineal gland is spoken of as having a very definite
-relation to sexual development. Extirpation is said
-to lead to rapid development of the body, the accumulation
-of fat and early sexual development,&mdash;a condition
-described by Pellizzi as "makro-genitosomia praecoce."
-Schüller in fifty-one cases with pineal involvements
-found ten occurring during the first decade of life. Death
-usually takes place within a few months or years. Similar
-conditions result from hyperactivity of the adrenal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-cortex,&mdash;rapid development of the body, and particularly
-of the sexual organs, obesity and overgrowth of the hair
-and beard. Wiesel described as a "suprarenal genital
-symptom complex" cases of pseudo-hermaphrodism in
-women.</p>
-
-<p>Lesions of the adrenal, as studies of Addison's disease
-show, have, according to Kraepelin,<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> the following
-symptoms: weakness of memory, apathy, dulness, inactivity
-and inhibition of growth. He also calls attention
-to the fact that in anencephaly, hemicephaly and microcephaly
-defective development of the adrenals is very
-common. "Eunuchoidismus" and "viriginität" with
-mental symptoms due to defective development of the
-sex glands are also described. The physical manifestations
-include defective secondary sexual characteristics,
-in men in the growth of the beard and change of the
-voice, and in women in the development of the mammary
-glands, the fat deposits and the curve of the hips. There
-is a failure of sexual development and absence of
-menses, as well as defective physical growth. Eunuchoidismus
-may manifest itself in a giantism somewhat
-suggesting that resulting from lesions of the pituitary
-or in a dwarflike physical development. The former
-variety is characterized by an unusual height with long
-arms and legs. The forehead is receding, with a low hair
-line. The external genitals are very small and there is
-little pubic or axillary hair. Ossification is delayed. In
-the second form (dwarfs) the body, arms and legs are
-short and thick. The head is large and the neck short.
-The genitals are small and the penis is short and button-shaped.
-Hair formation is slight. The mental condition
-in either case is characterized by an intellectual
-defect with timidity, emotional instability, helplessness
-and weakness of will, sometimes with an active imagination.
-Kraepelin also describes endocrine conditions resulting
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-from thymic lesions&mdash;thymic idiocy, status thymolymphaticus&mdash;and
-mentions the pancreatic infantilismus
-referred to by Brownell, Basedow's disease, acromegaly,
-pluriglandular insufficiency and other conditions
-already mentioned. Kraepelin has encountered only
-seven "dysadenoid" forms in a study of 244 cases.
-Bourneville has reported 104 cases of persistent thymus.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most interesting contributions to the literature
-of endocrinology is Mott's<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> suggestion that dementia
-praecox is due to a combination of degenerative
-changes in the cortical neurones and the generative
-organs. As a result of the study of twenty-two cases of
-dementia praecox he found that more marked pathological
-changes were found in the testes than were observed in
-cases of manic-depressive insanity, alcoholic psychoses,
-epilepsy or paranoia. The characteristic findings consisted
-in regressive changes in the seminal tubules and
-abnormal staining reactions in the spermatozoa. He
-found more evidences of virility in a senile individual of
-eighty than in any of his cases of dementia praecox. His
-theory as to the pathogenesis of the disease is based on
-the fact that the changes in the neurones are of the same
-character&mdash;a degeneration of the nuclear elements.
-These findings have not at this time been confirmed by
-other observers.</p>
-
-<p>Timme<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> has described a psychic makeup due to
-subinvolution of the thymus. "The mental picture presented
-by these subinvoluted thymic states is also of great
-importance, for analogous to their structural lack of differentiation
-is their psychic makeup. They remain child-like
-in their character, so that they are self-centered;
-simple in their mental processes and imitative; looking
-for protection and care, and more or less unfitted for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-the active struggles of life. They are obstinate and negativistic;
-if, however, an efficient compensation takes
-place, then, although the mental development may have
-been delayed, it nevertheless seems finally to reach complete
-maturity; and these individuals are among the
-brightest and most intelligent of their community." In
-cases of precocious involution of the thymus he finds the
-mental condition to be of chief interest. "They are precocious,
-with much initiative, are easily aroused to anger
-and are resentful. They have cruel instincts and show
-little inhibition. Although they seem far advanced for
-their years while still young, yet they never seem thoroughly
-to mature, and become blocked in early adolescence.
-They seem to retain their impulsive, unreasoning
-characteristics, brook no restraint and remain constantly
-a prey to their easily aroused anger." Of thyroid insufficiency
-he says: "Mentally, the patient is dull, sluggish
-and with little initiative. He moves slowly and
-thinks slowly, is extremely forgetful and his lethargy is
-occasionally disturbed by outbursts of anger due probably
-to his maladjustment to the more quickly moving
-world about him." In his summary of the hyperthyroid
-makeup, Timme says: "Both mind and body are everlastingly
-busy. And not only with present problems, but
-anticipatory of tomorrow's as well. The patient shows
-no rest or relaxation. His mind, filled with echoes of
-the day's troubles, prevents his falling to sleep until
-long after he retires, and he is again awake and immediately
-on the "qui vive" as soon as daylight comes."
-Statistics on endocrine conditions are unfortunately not
-available as yet.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE MODERN PROGRESS OF PSYCHIATRY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The remarkable accomplishments of medical science
-during the last few decades may be looked upon as a
-fairly accurate index of modern progress in general.
-Nor have these advances been confined to any limited
-field. Standards of education have changed with almost
-startling rapidity. The most extended course of instruction
-open to medical students fifty or sixty years ago
-covered a period of two years. Qualifications for entrance
-consisted in little more than a demonstration of
-the candidate's ability to pay the required matriculation
-fee. The three year course, only recently established
-and generally recognized, was lengthened to four years
-during the latter part of the nineteenth century. The
-number of medical colleges has been materially reduced
-and the size of the graduating classes has decreased fifty
-per cent or more during the last twenty-five years as a
-result of the higher standards. Several of our medical
-schools admit college graduates only and two years of
-college work is now a minimum entrance requirement in
-institutions of the highest type. Very few men feel
-properly equipped for taking up the practice of medicine
-today until they have had an experience of at least a year
-in a general hospital. The profession is tending more
-and more towards specialization and the old-fashioned
-general practitioner is now at a considerable disadvantage.
-Ophthalmology has become almost an exact science.
-Gynecologists, obstetricians, pediatrists, orthopedists,
-laryngologists, neurologists and internists are looked
-upon as almost indispensable in a community of any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-size. All of these specialists are more or less dependent
-on the cooperation of a pathologist, who can do nothing
-without a well equipped laboratory at his disposal. Surgery
-has long been regarded as a specialty which required
-an extended training as well as years of experience.</p>
-
-<p>The progress of modern medical science has been
-almost bewildering. It has been a comparatively short
-time since the principles of antisepsis and asepsis were
-established by Lister. The plasmodium of malaria was
-described in 1880. It was not until 1882 that the tubercle
-bacillus was discovered by Koch. Diphtheria was rendered
-an almost harmless disease by the discovery of a
-specific antitoxin. The uncertainties relating to the diagnosis
-of typhoid fever were entirely removed when the
-Widal reaction came into general use. The Roentgen
-ray has revolutionized surgery. The diagnostic and
-therapeutic use of tuberculin has been of inestimable
-value to internal medicine. Schaudinn's discovery of the
-treponema pallidum in 1905 cleared up one of the greatest
-scientific mysteries of modern times. The introduction
-of salvarsan has added a new and important chapter
-to our history of therapeutics. The Wassermann reaction
-represents probably the most important diagnostic
-discovery of the century. The recent studies of the so-called
-ductless glands have opened up new and important
-fields of research which promise to be far-reaching in
-their results. Social service, unknown only a few years
-ago, is now an indispensable adjunct of the modern hospital
-organization. Training schools for nurses have
-become highly specialized educational institutions.</p>
-
-<p>What is to be said of the progress made in our knowledge
-of mental diseases? Certainly much has been
-accomplished during the last century. The earliest
-American contributor to this branch of medicine was
-Benjamin Rush (1745-1813), professor in the Medical
-Department of the University of Pennsylvania, member<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-of the Continental Congress, a signer of the Declaration
-of Independence and one time physician-in-chief to the
-American armies. His "Medical Inquiries and Observations
-into Diseases of the Mind," which appeared in
-1812 was the first publication of the kind in this country.
-It is interesting to note that he condemned the misuse
-of mechanical restraint, advocated hydrotherapy and
-recommended the appointment of instructors to direct
-the employment and amusement of patients. Incidentally
-he was the chairman of a committee appointed by the
-College of Physicians of Philadelphia to memorialize
-Congress and the legislature of Pennsylvania on the evils
-of alcoholism. Reference should also be made to the fact
-that he opposed capital punishment, advocated the abolition
-of slavery and objected to the study of the classics
-as a required part of the college curriculum. He even
-favored woman suffrage. In addition to his other activities
-this remarkable man was treasurer at one time of the
-United States Mint, vice-president of the American Bible
-Society, one of the founders of Dickinson College and
-associated for many years with Franklin in the work of
-the American Philosophical Society. Certainly he was
-many years in advance of his time. When his work on
-"Diseases of the Mind" appeared, the word psychiatry
-was unknown in this country. The term lunatic, which
-first appeared in the English statutes in 1320, during the
-reign of Edward the Second, was still in quite general
-use. The only state hospital for mental diseases was the
-one at Williamsburg, Virginia. Such institutions were
-universally known as asylums for many years.</p>
-
-<p>Insanity was generally discussed in the terminology
-of Pinel and Esquirol as including mania, melancholia,
-dementia and idiocy. Those not thoroughly familiar with
-the psychiatry of the past may not understand the sense
-in which the word dementia was employed. It was defined
-by Esquirol in the following terms: "There exists,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-therefore, a form of mental alienation which is very
-distinct&mdash;in which the disorder of the ideas, affections
-and determinations is characterized by feebleness and
-by the abolition, more or less marked, of all the sensitive,
-intellectual, and voluntary faculties. This is dementia."
-It was looked upon usually as a terminal state following
-excitements or depressions and in some rare instances as
-being primary in origin.</p>
-
-<p>There have been many important developments in
-psychiatry since the days of Benjamin Rush. The mania,
-melancholia and dementia of the eighteenth century have
-apparently gone for all time. The events of the last
-hundred years include more particularly the delimitation
-and complete differentiation of general paresis, the
-rise and fall of the paranoia concept, the description of
-the traumatic psychoses, the establishment of the alcoholic
-insanities as clinical entities, a study of the mental
-diseases due to endogenous and exogenous toxins, the
-recognition of the neuroses and psychoneuroses in their
-modern sense, the addition of the psychopathic personalities
-to our classification and the definition of manic-depressive
-insanity, dementia praecox and involutional
-melancholia. The mental states due to somatic conditions
-have been exhaustively studied and the psychoses associated
-with epilepsy and pellagra have been fully investigated.
-Psychology and psychiatry have been definitely
-correlated and pathological research placed upon a firm
-foundation. The psychiatric phraseology of today would
-have been practically meaningless to the students of
-Pinel. Curiously enough the word psychiatry, which
-goes back to nearly 1800 in the literature of Germany and
-Italy has only been used for a few years in this country
-and England. The word psychosis is of even more recent
-origin.</p>
-
-<p>This modern era may be said to have been ushered in
-by the preliminary studies made of general paresis by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-Haslam in 1798. These were followed by the researches
-of Bayle, Delaye and finally Calmeil, which definitely
-established the integrity of that disease as a clinical
-entity. Even then its specific origin was only a matter
-of conjecture. When Esmarch and Jessen suggested
-that general paresis was a syphilitic disease in 1857, their
-views were rejected by men as prominent as Charcot and
-Déjerine. Although paranoia is a term which has appeared
-in the literature of medicine for centuries, it has
-only had the significance now attached to it since the
-latter part of the nineteenth century. Its description was
-foreshadowed perhaps by the monomania of Esquirol
-and Pritchard and the partial insanity of Rush and
-others. Heinroth, Griesinger, Magnan, Lasègue, Régis,
-Falret, Mendel, Krafft-Ebing, Herz, Snell, Werner,
-Schüle, Ziehen, Kraepelin and many other well-known
-psychiatrists have played a part in the evolution of paranoia
-which only definitely displaced the wahnsinn, verrüchtheit,
-and various other designations of the earlier
-writers, in the neighborhood of 1890. Paranoia is a term
-which has only been infrequently used since the general
-acceptance of Kraepelin's paranoid forms of dementia
-praecox. Its territory has been still further invaded by
-paraphrenia, the fate of which, however, is somewhat
-uncertain as yet. The forerunners of the psychopathic
-personalities were the moral insanity of Pritchard, the
-insanity of degeneracy of Morel, Magnan, Régis, Lombroso,
-etc., and the "demifous et demiresponsables" of
-Grasset, Trélat and others. The introduction of the
-"constitutional inferiority" idea into the psychiatry of
-this country was directly attributable to Adolf Meyer following
-the work of Koch in Germany. After the elaborate
-study of alcoholism made by Magnus Huss in 1852
-the psychoses due to that condition were described by
-Bonhöffer, Magnan, Korsakow, Kraepelin and various
-other writers. The psychoneuroses represent the developments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-of Brachet, who wrote on hysteria in 1847, Briquet,
-Oppenheim, Lasègue, Möbius, Charcot, Janet, Babinski,
-Beard, Kraepelin and many others. To Meyer
-again we are indebted for the first exhaustive study and
-classification of the traumatic psychoses. The description
-of amentia by Meynert in 1881 was of considerable
-significance. The first comprehensive study of mental
-disorders associated with the use of cocaine was made by
-Erlenmeyer in 1886. The same writer was responsible
-for the first elaborate investigation of morphinism in the
-year following. Circular insanity was described by
-Falret in 1851 and again as "folie à double forme" by
-Baillarger in 1854. Hecker was responsible for an event
-of great importance in the history of psychiatry when he
-published his description of hebephrenia in 1871. Kahlbaum
-in his "Katatonia" made a contribution which was
-destined to influence the future of medicine in 1874.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile what is to be said as to the progress
-of pathological research? The earliest contribution to
-psychiatry from that point of view was made by Morgagni
-in 1761, his opinions being based on the autopsy
-reports in some thirteen cases. Greding in 1790 published
-the results of autopsies in a series of thirty-seven
-cases. The findings at that time included variations in
-the thickness of the skull, adhesions and thickenings of
-the dura, changes in the consistency of the cerebrum and
-cerebellum, effusions into the ventricles and various gross
-defects. The early writers attached a great deal of
-importance to the pineal gland changes. These pathological
-conditions were so generally reported, that Portal
-in the eighteenth century went so far as to say that
-"Morbid alteration in the brain or spinal marrow has
-been so constantly observed, that I should greatly prefer
-to doubt the sufficiency of my senses, if I should not at
-any time discover any morbid change in the brain, than
-to believe that mental disease could exist without any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-physical disorder in this viscus, or in one or other of
-its appurtenances." Pinel spoke very discouragingly,
-however, of the results and Esquirol finally reached the
-conclusion that nothing really important had been accomplished
-after all. In his Charenton reports (1835) he
-expressed himself on this subject as follows:&mdash;"However
-important may have been the researches of anatomists
-made during our days into diseases which affect the
-mind, we may venture to repeat that pathological anatomy
-is yet silent as to the seat of madness, and that it
-has not yet demonstrated what is the precise alteration
-in the encephalon which gives rise to this disease. What
-shall we, then, think of the rash pretensions of those who
-assume that they can fix upon the diseased portion of the
-brain, judging merely from the character of the disease?"
-In 1836 Guislain summarized the various lesions found
-in insanity at autopsy under nine headings&mdash;congestion
-of the brain or meninges or both, serous congestion of
-the same, cerebral softening, adhesions of the membranes
-to each other or to the brain, cerebral induration, cerebral
-hypertrophy, and abnormalities of the brain or
-skull. The appointment of a pathologist at the Utica
-State Hospital in 1868 as a result of the remarkable interest
-taken in this subject by Dr. John P. Gray must be
-looked upon as one of the important events in the history
-of American psychiatry. The later developments of the
-nineteenth century included studies of general paresis,
-cerebral syphilis, arteriosclerosis, senility, epilepsy,
-mental deficiency, pellagra and various other somatic
-conditions. It may fairly be said, at least, that pathology
-has kept fully abreast of the progress made by
-clinical psychiatry during the nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding all of these advances, the generally
-recognized mental diseases, as late as 1895, included the
-following types:&mdash;mania, melancholia, dementia, imbecility,
-idiocy, general paresis, chronic delusional insanity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-or paranoia and senile insanity. This was in substance
-the psychiatry of Savage, Maudsley, Clouston, Blandfield,
-Régis, Chapin, Kellogg, Spitzka, Kirchoff, Berkley
-and many other well-known writers of a comparatively
-recent date. A new era in the history of mental medicine
-was ushered in by Kraepelin when the sixth edition of
-his "Psychiatrie" appeared in 1899. This established
-manic-depressive insanity and dementia praecox as clinical
-entities. Kraepelin called attention to the fact that
-excitements and depressions frequently recur in the same
-individual, often with frequent attacks but with no
-marked tendency towards mental enfeeblement. This
-class of cases he grouped together as manic-depressive
-psychoses and pointed out certain characteristics common
-to the excitements and depressions included. He
-showed that certain other forms of depression marked
-by anxiety, fear, restlessness, self-accusation, marked
-suicidal tendencies, etc., were common to the involutional
-period of life. To this anxious depression the name involution
-melancholia has been applied, although Kraepelin
-is now somewhat in doubt as to its differentiation
-from the manic-depressive group. To certain other cases
-characterized by emotional dulness, apathy, hallucinations
-with phantastic delusions, and in some types, mannerisms,
-negativism, stereotypy, verbigeration, etc.,
-tending sooner or later towards deterioration, he attached
-the name dementia praecox. This included the
-hebephrenia of Hecker and the katatonia of Kahlbaum.</p>
-
-<p>Wernicke in 1906 advanced the hypothesis that psychical
-symptoms may be attributed to disturbances of
-various association mechanisms. These interruptions
-were to be found in various parts of the psychical reflex
-arcs. This included the psychosensory tracts or receptive
-mechanisms, the intrapsychical tracts or elaboration
-mechanisms and the psychomotor mechanisms. Manic-depressive
-psychoses were looked upon as representing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-a disorder of the intrapsychic mechanism, while dementia
-praecox was considered to be an illustration of a disturbance
-of the psychomotor mechanisms. This was an
-exceedingly interesting but purely theoretical scheme for
-putting psychiatry on a definite anatomical and pathological
-basis.</p>
-
-<p>The progress made by Kraepelin, Stransky, Wernicke,
-Bleuler, Ziehen and other modern psychiaters led to renewed
-interest in pathological research. This was to a
-considerable extent due to the suggestion of Kraepelin
-that dementia praecox was autotoxic and endogenous in
-origin. The neurons were exhaustively studied by Alzheimer
-and changes in metabolism thoroughly investigated
-by Folin and many others. To the researches of
-Nissl and Alzheimer in 1904 we are largely indebted for
-an accurate knowledge of general paresis. Studies of
-the cortex in dementia praecox by Alzheimer and many
-others have been extremely interesting if not conclusive.
-The introduction of lumbar puncture by Quincke and the
-studies of the cerebrospinal fluid made by Widal, Plaut,
-Nonne, Mott and others were of great aid in diagnostic
-procedure. These have been supplemented by the Wassermann
-reaction, the colloidal gold test, etc. The isolation
-of the treponema pallidum in the cortex settled the
-question of the identity of general paresis and cerebral
-syphilis for all time.</p>
-
-<p>Another line of research responsible in no small measure
-for the remarkable progress of psychiatry during the
-last few decades was that instituted by Freud, Jung
-and others in their studies of psychological mechanisms.
-It is a rather remarkable fact that it is only in comparatively
-recent years that a study of the psychological
-processes of the normal mind has been looked upon as
-essential to an understanding of the mental reactions involved
-in the development of a psychoneurosis or psychosis.
-This is really the basis of Freud's work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Psychiatry may be said to be practically the only
-branch of medical science in which a study of pathological
-processes has not been based largely upon physiological
-and anatomical foundations. Our textbooks for
-many years have insisted that "insanity" was a disease
-of the brain but have not given much consideration to a
-correlation of the physiology with the pathology of that
-organ. The application of psychological methods to psychiatric
-research was largely a result of the studies of
-hysteria by Janet. This was supplemented by the important
-contribution of Breuer and Freud in 1895 calling
-attention to their theories in regard to the production of
-the psychoneuroses by psychic traumas, usually of a
-sexual nature. Freud's views were outlined more fully
-in his "Selected Papers on Hysteria," "Three Contributions
-to the Sexual Theory," and his studies of the
-"Psychopathology of Everyday Life," etc. The psychological
-processes of dementia praecox and paranoia were
-subjected to elaborate studies by Freud, Jung and various
-other authors.</p>
-
-<p>The relation existing between psychology and psychiatry
-has been placed on a very practical basis by the
-studies of shell shock and other hysterical conditions so
-important during the recent war. Probably nothing will
-contribute more towards a recognition of the importance
-of psychiatry than the discovery made early in the war
-that mental diseases and defects were responsible for
-more disabilities than were attributable to almost any
-other single cause. Certainly the inactivity of many
-years has been followed by an awakening which has
-placed modern psychiatry on a dignified plane and its
-progress will now compare favorably with the accomplishments
-of any other branch of medicine. The statement
-is, I think, justified, that psychiatry has been established
-on a thoroughly scientific basis as the result of
-the work of comparatively few years. We have, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-reached a stage where careful analyses should be made of
-the clinical data upon which future progress entirely depends.</p>
-
-<p>A brief consideration of existing conditions should be
-sufficient to show this conclusively. Psychiatric literature
-is, and for many years has been, characterized
-largely by an unfortunate absence of accurate scientific
-information which would warrant the conclusions reached
-in many instances by the authors of our textbooks. We
-have been subjected to an avalanche of theories and a
-remarkable paucity of facts. In the discussion of abstract
-propositions where concrete evidence is not obtainable
-this is of course unavoidable. There has, however,
-been a very noticeable oversight of many facts which
-the wealth of clinical material in our hospitals has placed
-at our disposal. Our literature has been filled with too
-many unsubstantiated statements. There is no reason
-why many of the views entertained by various authorities
-should be matters of personal opinion or based entirely
-on individual observation. The fact that there are over
-two hundred thousand cases of mental disease in the state
-hospitals of this country, with an admission rate of sixty
-thousand annually, is sufficient evidence to justify the
-statement that there is no lack of material for accurate
-studies.</p>
-
-<p>A brief reference to some of the discrepancies shown
-in a consideration of the various psychoses will serve to
-illustrate the need of more accurate information on many
-of these subjects. In discussing the predisposing causes
-of mental diseases, for instance, White<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> made the following
-statement, which is perfectly correct: "An inherited
-predisposition to mental disorder is found in
-from 30 to 90 per cent of cases according to different
-authorities, while the average for all conditions has been
-estimated at from 60 to 70 per cent." Information on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-this subject is certainly far from being complete or satisfactory.
-The Thirty-first annual report of the State Hospital
-Commission shows that of 4,492 first admissions to
-the New York hospitals during the year ending June 30,
-1919, 2,003, or 44.6 per cent, were reported as having a
-family history of insanity, nervous diseases, alcoholism
-or other neuropathic taint. As far as could be determined
-55.4 per cent showed no evidence of heredity in their
-family history. The necessity of further information on
-this important subject would appear to be obvious. The
-question as to the relation between syphilis and general
-paresis may be said to have been definitely settled for all
-time. The origin of this disease has, however, been the
-subject of controversy since 1857. Paton<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> in a review
-of this discussion in 1905 states that Gudden found a history
-of syphilis in 35.7 per cent of his cases, Hirsch, in
-fifty-six per cent, Jolly, in sixty-nine, Mendel, in seventy-five,
-and Alzheimer, in ninety per cent. In the light of
-our present knowledge this difference of opinion and experience
-is quite interesting and illuminating.</p>
-
-<p>The most extravagant and misleading statements
-made about etiological factors, perhaps, are those which
-relate to the alcoholic psychoses. This was due largely
-to the statements of enthusiastic propagandists who were
-advocating prohibitory legislation. The facts of the matter
-are that when the use of liquor was unrestricted, the
-admission rate of alcoholic psychoses, as shown by the
-New York state hospital reports, had averaged ten per
-cent for a number of years (1908 to 1913).</p>
-
-<p>Frequent contributions have been made from time
-to time to the literature of psychiatry on the subject of
-dementia praecox. Voluminous articles have been written
-on its pathology, psychological mechanisms, etiology,
-etc. Many of the theories advanced are not in harmony
-with what little definite information we possess. Many
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-of the theses on this subject have been based on the
-study of a surprisingly small number of cases. The
-statement has been made<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> that attacks either of a syncopal
-or epileptic nature are among the most important
-physical symptoms of dementia praecox, and "occur in
-about eighteen per cent of the cases." In his eighth edition
-Kraepelin speaks of convulsive attacks of various
-sorts in sixteen per cent of all cases of dementia praecox,
-and says that they also occur in a few cases of manic-depressive
-insanity. These findings are certainly not consistent
-with those of other observers. In a review of
-eight hundred cases, five hundred of dementia praecox,
-one hundred and eighty of manic-depressive insanity and
-sixty in each of the "allied to" groups, Simon<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> found
-convulsions in less than one per cent of the total number
-of cases in which epilepsy or organic conditions could
-be definitely excluded. In a study of 367 cases of dementia
-praecox Ullman<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> found convulsive manifestations
-in 2.7 per cent of the total. He also reported seizures
-in 1.4 per cent of 340 cases of manic-depressive insanity.
-Kraepelin formerly held that recovery was to be expected
-in about eight per cent of the cases of hebephrenic
-dementia praecox and thirteen per cent of the cases of
-katatonia (seventh edition). Notwithstanding this, he
-says in his eighth edition in one place:<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> "Further investigations
-of a series of observations carried on extensively
-and carefully for decades must show how far
-the view, which is gaining in probability for myself, is
-correct, that permanent and complete recoveries of dementia
-praecox, though they may perhaps occur, still in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-any event belong to the rarities." As Kraepelin himself
-suggests, the widely varying views on this subject are
-due to different conceptions as to what constitutes dementia
-praecox and what is to be considered a cure. Certainly
-we are in need of further information. On June
-30, 1918, there were 37,352 patients in the state hospitals
-of New York.<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> Twenty-one thousand nine hundred and
-two cases were diagnosed as dementia praecox. Fifty-four
-of these were discharged as recovered during the
-year. This represents 3.2 per cent of the 1,687 cases
-discharged as recovered, 2.8 per cent of the 1,883 cases of
-dementia praecox admitted during that period (first admissions)
-and .2 per cent of the 21,902 cases of dementia
-praecox in the hospitals. The reports of the State Psychopathic
-Hospital at the University of Michigan show
-1.19 per cent of recoveries in the cases of dementia praecox
-discharged during a period of eleven years. Reference
-is made to these discrepancies not in any spirit of
-criticism but for the purpose of pointing out the necessity
-of utilizing such facts as may be available.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing new about this suggestion. It was
-strenuously advocated by Louis, the founder of one of
-the greatest French schools of medicine many years ago.
-This was referred to by his pupil and admirer, Oliver
-Wendell Holmes, in his farewell address to the Harvard
-Medical School in 1882 in the following words: "The
-'numerical system,' of which Louis was the greatest advocate,
-if not the absolute originator, was an attempt to
-substitute series of carefully recorded facts, rigidly
-counted and closely compared, for those never-ending
-records of vague, unverifiable conclusions with which the
-classics of the healing art were overloaded. The history
-of practical medicine had been like the story of Danaides.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-'Experience' had been, from time immemorial, pouring
-its flowing treasures into buckets full of holes."</p>
-
-<p>A determined effort has been made by the American
-Psychiatric Association to correlate the activities of the
-various state hospitals for mental diseases and utilize
-the great wealth of clinical material within the walls of
-these institutions for such studies as may promote the
-advancement of psychiatry. With this end in view a
-committee was appointed at the annual meeting at Niagara
-Falls in 1913 to formulate a plan for the compilation
-of statistical data relating to mental diseases. The
-conclusions reached by this committee are illustrated by
-the following quotation from their report in 1917: "That
-the statistical data annually compiled by the various
-institutions for the insane throughout the country should
-be uniform in plan and scope is no longer open to question.
-The lack of such uniformity makes it absolutely impossible
-at the present time to collect comparative statistics
-concerning mental diseases in different states and
-countries, and extremely difficult to secure comparative
-data relative to movement of patients, administration and
-cost of maintenance and additions. The importance and
-need of some system whereby uniformity in reports would
-be secured have been repeatedly emphasized by officers
-and members of this Association, by statisticians of the
-United States Census Bureau, by editors of psychiatric
-journals, and by administrative officials in various states.
-We should know accurately the forms of mental disease
-occurring in all parts of the country; we should know
-the movement of patients in every hospital for the insane;
-we should know the cost of maintenance of patients
-and the amounts spent for additions and improvements
-in every state hospital; we should be able to compile annually
-complete data concerning these and other matters,
-and compute rates and draw comparisons therefrom.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-Such data would serve as the basis for constructive work
-in raising the standard of care of the insane, as a guide
-for preventive effort, and as an aid to the progress of
-psychiatry."</p>
-
-<p>A permanent committee on statistics has been maintained
-by the Association since 1913. The following statistical
-tables were officially adopted some years ago and
-are now in general use: 1. General information; 2.
-Financial statement; 3. Movement of patients; 4. Nativity
-and parentage of first admissions; 5. Citizenship of
-first admissions; 6. Psychoses of first admissions, types
-as well as principal psychoses to be designated; 7. Race
-of first admissions classified with reference to principal
-psychoses; 8. Age of first admissions classified with reference
-to principal psychoses; 9. Degree of education of
-first admissions classified with reference to principal psychoses;
-10. Environment of first admissions classified
-with reference to principal psychoses; 11. Economic condition
-of first admissions classified with reference to
-principal psychoses; 12. Use of alcohol by first admissions
-classified with reference to principal psychoses;
-13. Marital condition of first admissions classified with
-reference to principal psychoses; 14. Psychoses of readmissions,
-types as well as principal psychoses to be
-designated; 15. Discharges of patients classified with
-reference to principal psychoses and condition on discharge;
-16. Causes of death of patients classified with
-reference to principal psychoses; 17. Age of patients at
-time of death classified with reference to principal psychoses;
-18. Duration of hospital life of patients dying
-in hospital, classified with reference to principal psychoses.</p>
-
-<p>An elaborate statistical manual fully explaining the
-use of these tables has been furnished to the psychiatric
-hospitals of the country by the Association. Since this
-work has been undertaken the full cooperation of the institutions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-of the following states has been assured: Alabama,
-Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut,
-Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana,
-Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland,
-Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi,
-Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire,
-New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina,
-North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
-Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee,
-Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia,
-Wisconsin and Wyoming, and the District of Columbia.
-Practically every state hospital in the United
-States is now officially represented in this important
-movement. The success of this undertaking has been
-largely due to the active cooperation of the National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene through its Bureau of
-Statistics. It should receive the enthusiastic support of
-all who are interested in the future progress of modern
-psychiatry.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE CLASSIFICATION OF MENTAL DISEASES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the American Psychiatric Association first approached
-the problem of formulating a definite scheme
-for the collection of statistical data relating to mental diseases
-it was immediately confronted with the necessity
-of adopting an official classification of psychoses purely
-for purposes of uniformity. This undertaking, which
-suggested no difficulties at the outset, led to all kinds
-of unexpected complications and embarrassments. Classifications
-of "insanity" are almost as old as the terms
-mania and melancholia and have been given a grossly
-exaggerated importance by the space which for so many
-years has been devoted to a consideration of this subject
-in textbooks. This, if nothing else, appears to have
-been demonstrated quite clearly by the discussions of
-the last few years.</p>
-
-<p>A review of the literature of psychiatry shows that
-attempts to classify the psychoses date back almost to
-the beginning of medical history. Hippocrates is said to
-have recognized three forms of mental disorders&mdash;mania,
-melancholia and dementia, although there is some question
-as to his having used those terms in accordance with
-their present significance. Celsus<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> also described three
-forms of insanity. The first, which was accompanied by
-febrile symptoms, he termed phrenitis. The second was
-characterized by sadness and caused by black bile. The
-third was accompanied in some cases by false images,
-while in others the whole mind or judgment was impaired.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-The Roman law divided the dementes or mad into two
-classes, the excited or violent (furiosi) and those deficient
-in intellect (menti capti). Aretaeus<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> discussed
-mania, melancholia and dementia, apparently regarding
-them as all manifestations of some one disease process.
-Melancholia, he said, "does not affect all the faculties
-of the mind; the patients are sad and dismayed; they
-are without fever." He described it as only an initial
-stage of mania. Caelius Aurelianus<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> did not regard
-melancholia as a form of insanity, "from which disease
-it differs in that the stomach chiefly suffers, while in
-Madness it is the head." Galen in his writings referred
-to amentia or dementia, imbecility, mania and melancholia.</p>
-
-<p>In the sixteenth century Felix Plater<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> devised the
-following classification: 1. Mentis imbecillitas: Hebetudo,
-tarditus, oblivio, imprudentia. 2. Mentis consternatio:
-Somnus immodicus, carus, lethargus, apoplexia,
-epilepsia, convulsio, catalepsis, ecstasis. 3. Mentis alienatio:
-Stultitas, temulentia, amor, melancholia, hypochondriacus
-morbus, mania, hydrophobia, phrenitis, saltus
-viti. 4. Mentis defatigatio: Vigiles, insomnia.
-Linnaeus<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> in 1763 called his fifth class of diseases Mentales,
-divided into three orders: Ideales, Imaginarii and
-Pathetici. Sauvages in the same year included Hallucinationes,
-Morositates and Deliria under the heading of
-Vesaniae in his "Nosologia Methodica." Vogel<a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> in
-1764 divided Paranoiae into mania, melancholia, and
-amentia. Cullen in 1772 included insanity or the Vesaniae
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-in the neuroses, divided into four groups&mdash;Amentia, Melancholia,
-Mania and Oneirodinia. He described eight
-varieties of melancholia and three of mania. Oneirodinia
-included somnambulism and nightmare. According to
-Jelliffe, Plocquet described six varieties of delirium in
-his treatise on paranoia in 1772. Pinel in 1791 limited
-himself to four classes of insanity&mdash;mania, melancholia,
-dementia and idiotism. He looked upon melancholia as
-a delirium exclusively directed upon one object or series
-of objects and accompanied by sadness. Idiotism was
-an advanced form of dementia. Esquirol in 1838 modified
-Pinel's scheme somewhat and described Lypemania,
-Monomania, Mania, Dementia and Imbecility or Idiocy.
-The active discussion of classifications of various kinds
-led Pritchard<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> to make the following interesting comment
-in 1822: "I cannot conceive anything more preposterously
-absurd than the attempt to classify diseases
-with all the divisions and technology of a botanical or
-zoological system, and to force what is essentially disorder
-and confusion to assume the appearance of that
-order and symmetry which nature displays in the arrangement
-of the organized world. An aetiological classification
-is the only mode of terminology and arrangement
-that can be of any practical advantage, and that
-is all that we have to consult." He nevertheless published
-a classification of his own which was essentially
-psychological in principle, although containing nothing
-new.</p>
-
-<p>The German school of this time was exceedingly
-prolific in the production of classifications, as will be
-shown by the following interesting and elaborate scheme
-of Flemming's<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> published in 1844:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
-<p class="st4">FAMILY-AMENTIA&mdash;MENTAL DISEASES</p>
-
-<p class="pr1"><i>First Group</i>&mdash;Infirmitas (Feeblemindedness).</p>
-
- <p class="pr2a">Varieties:</p>
- <p class="pr2">A. According to etiology:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Inf. primaria, or congenita (Idiocy)</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Inf. secundaria, or acquisita (Imbecility)</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Inf. e. morbo (Brain injuries, encephalitis, epilepsy, etc.)</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Inf. senilis</p>
-
- <p class="pr2">B. According to degree:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Inf. adstricta, or partial feeblemindedness (Weakness of a single mental faculty)</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Dysmnesia (weakness of memory)</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Inf. adstr. surdo-mutorum (feeblemindedness of the deaf and dumb)</p>
- <p class="pr4">c. Inf. adstr. coecorum (feeblemindedness of the blind)</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Inf. sparsa&mdash;General (absolute or relative weakness of general mental faculties)</p>
-
-<p class="pr1"><i>Second Group</i>&mdash;Vesania.</p>
-
- <p class="pr2a"><i>First Order</i>:&mdash;Dysthymodes or Dysthymia.</p>
- <p class="pr2a">Varieties:</p>
- <p class="pr2">A. According to types:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Dys. transitoria or subita (acute)</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Dys. continua (chronic)</p>
- <p class="pr3">3. Dys. remittens (remittent)</p>
-
- <p class="pr2">B. According to degree:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Dys. adstricta (limited or partial)</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Dys. atra (melancholia or lypemania)</p>
- <p class="pr5">1. Homesickness.</p>
- <p class="pr5">2. Ferocitas et morositas ebriosorum (Alcoholic excitement and ill humor)</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Dys. candida (cheerful dysthymia or melancholia hilaris)</p>
- <p class="pr4">c. Dys. mutabilis (changeable or alternating)</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Dys. sparsa (apathica)&mdash;General dysthymia (melancholia attonita).
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p>
-
- <p class="pr2a"><i>Second Order</i>:&mdash;Vesania anoëtos or Anoësia&mdash;Deliria of various forms.</p>
- <p class="pr2a">Varieties:</p>
- <p class="pr2">A. According to types:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Anoësia transitoria or subita (acute)</p>
- <p class="pr3">Species:</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. A. e febre&mdash;fever delirium</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. A. e potu&mdash;alcoholism</p>
- <p class="pr4">c. A. ex affectu&mdash;affective</p>
- <p class="pr4">d. A. semisomnis&mdash;confusion of drunken sleep</p>
- <p class="pr4">e. A. Somnambula&mdash;somnambulism</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Anoësia continua&mdash;chronic</p>
- <p class="pr3">3. Anoësia remittens&mdash;remittent.</p>
-
- <p class="pr2">B. According to degree:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Anoësia adstricta&mdash;partial or limited</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. A. ad sensationes&mdash;hallucinatory delirium</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. A. ad cogitationes&mdash;delusional delirium</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Anoësia sparsa&mdash;general</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Delirium tremens</p>
-
- <p class="pr2a"><i>Third Order</i>:&mdash;Vesania Maniaca (Mania).</p>
- <p class="pr2a">Varieties:</p>
- <p class="pr2">A. According to types:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Mania transitoria or subita&mdash;acute</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. M. s. a febre&mdash;encephalitic delirium</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. M. s. a potu&mdash;alcoholic mania</p>
- <p class="pr4">c. M. s. ex affectu&mdash;affective mania</p>
- <p class="pr4">d. M. s. e partu&mdash;puerperal mania</p>
- <p class="pr4">e. M. s. e mordo occulto&mdash;amentia occulta, which includes the above forms.</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Mania continua&mdash;chronic mania</p>
- <p class="pr3">3. Mania remittens&mdash;remittent mania</p>
-
- <p class="pr2">B. According to degree:</p>
- <p class="pr3">1. Mania adstricta seu instinctiva&mdash;partial or limited
- mania. (Mania sine delirio of Pinel.) (Moral
- insanity, monomania.)</p>
- <p class="pr3">2. Mania sparsa&mdash;general mania.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">This is said to have been based on Jacobi's somato-aetiological
-theory (1830) that "there is no disease of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-mind existing as such, but that insanity exists solely as
-the consequence of disease, either functional or organic,
-in some parts of the body system." Heinroth<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> saw in
-the various mental disorders a disturbance of one or
-the other of the normal functions of the mind which he
-divided into three classes. "If the cause of derangement
-is in relation to one of these manifestations of mental
-existence&mdash;and to one or another it must belong, since
-the mind is ever occupied with phenomena related to
-one out of the three classes&mdash;we have only to inquire to
-which modification the disorder actually refers itself, or
-whether it affects the feelings, the understanding, or
-the will. Since one of these has possession of our consciousness,
-or is at least predominant at every point
-of time, whichever function of the mind happens to be
-that which is falling into disorder, by it the form of
-insanity is determined." Griesinger<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> in 1845, on the
-other hand, was of the opinion that all classifications
-must in the end return to the principal forms previously
-described&mdash;mania, melancholia and dementia. In 1860
-Morel announced his well-known classification: Hereditary
-Insanity, which included imbecility and idiocy; Toxic
-Insanity (alcohol, lead, mercury, etc., as well as cretinism);
-Insanity produced by the transformation of other
-diseases (hysterical, epileptic, hypochondriacal); Idiopathic
-Insanity (general paresis, etc.); Sympathetic Insanity,
-and Dementia, "a terminative state."</p>
-
-<p>Maudsley spoke of Affective or Pathetic, and Ideational
-Insanity. The former was divided into maniacal
-perversion, melancholic depression and moral alienation.
-The latter included general forms (mania or melancholia),
-partial forms (monomania or melancholia),
-dementia (primary and secondary), general paralysis
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-and imbecility. Régis described five forms of mania, five
-of melancholia, two of insanity of double form, and a
-systematized progressive insanity. In addition to these,
-he divided constitutional insanity into two groups&mdash;the
-degeneracy of evolution and the degeneracy of involution.
-Krafft-Ebing<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a> included melancholia, mania, primary
-dementia, exhaustion psychoses and terminal conditions
-in his group of psychoneuroses. Under the heading of
-degenerative forms he described constitutional affective
-insanity, paranoia and periodical insanity. Neurasthenic,
-epileptic, hysterical and hypochondriacal psychoses
-were grouped together under the constitutional
-neuroses. In addition to this he described chronic intoxications,
-organic brain diseases and arrested development.
-At a meeting of the International Congress of Alienists
-in 1889 the following classification was adopted: 1.
-Mania; 2. Melancholia; 3. Periodical Insanity; 4. Progressive
-Systematical Insanity; 5. Dementia; 6. Organic
-and Senile Dementia; 7. General Paralysis; 8. Insane
-Neurosis (hysteria, epilepsy, hypochondriasis, etc.); 9.
-Toxic Insanity; 10. Moral and Impulsive Insanity; and
-11. Idiocy. Ziehen<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> had a classification scheme which
-represented an advance in some respects. Mania and
-melancholia were described as affective psychoses, and
-paranoia as an intellectual disorder. He also referred
-to mixed or combined forms. Imbecility, general paresis,
-terminal deteriorations, etc., were grouped together
-under the general heading of psychoses with intellectual
-defects.</p>
-
-<p>The British Medico-Psychological Association has
-had an official classification for many years. This was
-quoted by Savage<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> in 1907 as follows:&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="pr0">1. Congenital or infantile mental deficiency (idiocy or imbecility) occurring as early in life
-as it can be observed:</p>
- <p class="pr3">(1) Intellectual</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Without epilepsy</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. With epilepsy</p>
- <p class="pr3">(2) Moral</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">2. Insanity arising later in life:</p>
- <p class="pr3">(1) Insanity with epilepsy</p>
- <p class="pr3">(2) General paralysis of the insane</p>
- <p class="pr3">(3) Insanity with the grosser brain lesions</p>
- <p class="pr3">(4) Acute delirium (acute delirious mania)</p>
- <p class="pr3">(5) Confusional insanity</p>
- <p class="pr3">(6) Stupor</p>
- <p class="pr3">(7) Primary dementia</p>
- <p class="pr3">(8) Mania</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Recent</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Chronic</p>
- <p class="pr4">c. Recurrent</p>
- <p class="pr3">(9) Melancholia</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Recent</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Chronic</p>
- <p class="pr4">c. Recurrent</p>
- <p class="pr3">(10) Alternating Insanity</p>
- <p class="pr3">(11) Delusional Insanity</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Systematized</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Non-systematized</p>
- <p class="pr3">(12) Volitional Insanity</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Impulse</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Obsession</p>
- <p class="pr4">c. Doubt</p>
- <p class="pr3">(13) Moral Insanity</p>
- <p class="pr3">(14) Dementia</p>
- <p class="pr4">a. Secondary or terminal</p>
- <p class="pr4">b. Senile</p>
-
-<p class="p2">An elaborate classification was also officially adopted
-by the Royal College of Physicians of England<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a> about
-the same time. This recognized seven varieties of mania,
-seven of melancholia and six of dementia. The subject of
-classifications would not be complete without a reference
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-to Kraepelin. His eighth edition (1910-1915) showed
-the following:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="pr0">1. Psychoses accompanying Injuries to the Brain:</p>
- <p class="pr7">Concussion<br />
- Traumatic delirium<br />
- Traumatic epilepsy<br />
- Traumatic enfeeblement
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">2. Psychoses accompanying Diseases of the Brain:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Meningitis<br />
- Brain tumors<br />
- Abscesses<br />
- Hemorrhages<br />
- Thrombosis<br />
- Embolism<br />
- Encephalitis<br />
- Multiple sclerosis<br />
- Lobar sclerosis<br />
- Huntington's chorea<br />
- Amaurotic idiocy<br />
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">3. The Intoxication Psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">Acute:</p>
- <p class="pr8">Endogenous&mdash;Uraemia, Eclampsia, Acute yellow atrophy of the liver.</p>
- <p class="pr8">Exogenous&mdash;Ether, Santonin, Hashish, Nitrous Oxide Gas, Atropin, Hyoscin, Carbonic Oxide Gas, etc.</p>
- <p class="pr7">Chronic:</p>
- <p class="pr8">Alcohol:</p>
- <p class="pr8a">
- Delusional (jealousy)<br />
- Delirium Tremens<br />
- Korsakow's Psychosis<br />
- Acute Hallucinosis (paranoid)<br />
- Alcoholic paralysis and pseudo-paralysis<br />
- </p>
- <p class="pr8">Morphine</p>
- <p class="pr8">Cocaine</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">4. The Infectious Psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Fever delirium<br />
- Infection delirium<br />
- Acute confusion (amentia)<br />
- Infective exhaustive conditions<br />
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">5. The Psychoses of Syphilis:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Syphilitic neurasthenia<br />
- Gummatous growths<br />
- Syphilitic pseudo-paralysis<br />
- Syphilitic apoplexy<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
- Syphilitic epilepsy<br />
- Paranoid forms<br />
- Tabetic psychoses<br />
- Hereditary syphilis
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">6. Dementia Paralytica:</p>
- <p class="pr7">Paralytic, Depressive, Expansive and Agitated forms</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">7. The Senile and Presenile Psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Presenile psychoses<br />
- Arteriosclerotic psychoses<br />
- Senile deterioration
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">8. The Thyroigenous Psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Basedow's Disease<br />
- Myxoedema<br />
- Cretinism
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">9. The Endogenous Dementias:</p>
- <p class="pr7">Dementia praecox:</p>
- <p class="pr8b">
- Dementia simplex<br />
- Hebephrenia<br />
- Depressive dementia<br />
- Circular form<br />
- Agitated form<br />
- Periodical form<br />
- Katatonia<br />
- Paranoid form<br />
- Schizophasia
- </p>
- <p class="pr7">Paraphrenia:</p>
- <p class="pr8b">
- Systematica<br />
- Expansiva<br />
- Confabulans<br />
- Phantastica
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">10. The Epileptic Psychoses.</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">11. The Manic Depressive Psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Manic form<br />
- Depressive form<br />
- Mixed form
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">12. The Psychogenic Disorders:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Nervous exhaustion<br />
- Dread neurosis<br />
- The Induced psychoses<br />
- The psychoses of the Deaf<br />
- The Accident or Traumatic neuroses<br />
- The Psychogenic disorders of Prisoners<br />
- The Querulants
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">13. Hysteria</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">14. Paranoia</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pr0">15. The Constitutional Disorders:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- Nervousness<br />
- The Compulsion neuroses<br />
- The Impulsion neuroses<br />
- Sexual perversions
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">16. The Psychopathic Personalities:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- The Excitable<br />
- The Unstable<br />
- The Impulsive<br />
- The Eccentric<br />
- The Liar and Swindler<br />
- The Antisocial<br />
- The Quarrelsome
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">17. Defective Mental Development (oligophrenia)</p>
-
-<p class="p2">At the annual meeting of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association in 1869 Nichols called attention
-to the statistical studies proposed by the International
-Congress of Alienists in 1867. As a result of his efforts
-a series of twenty-one statistical tables was prepared
-and used unofficially for several years, although never
-formally adopted. A committee reported again on this
-subject in 1896, but without any definite action being
-taken. The Italian psychiatrists have had a classification
-which has been in general use by them for some time.
-Interest in this subject has been stimulated by the frequent
-publications of Kraepelin during the last thirty
-years. Meyer and Hoch have been largely responsible
-for bringing his work to the attention of the profession
-in this country, and Kraepelin's classification with some
-modifications has come into very general use here. It
-was not until the publication of its twenty-first annual
-report in 1909 that the New York State Commission in
-Lunacy adopted a modern classification of psychoses.</p>
-
-<p>At that time there were practically as many different
-forms of statistical reports in the United States as there
-were hospitals. In the meanwhile almost every textbook
-published during the last fifty years has announced
-a new classification of mental diseases. They have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-based on etiology, pathology, symptomatology and
-psychology. English, French, German, Italian and
-American classifications have appeared, each representing,
-as a rule, different schools of psychiatry. Kempf<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a>
-would discard the term psychosis altogether and speak
-only of neuroses as "more consistent with the integrative
-functions of the nervous system." For diagnostic purposes
-he proposes to separate the benign from the pernicious
-processes and classify them according to their
-psychological mechanisms as suppression, repression,
-compensatory, regression and dissociation neuroses. The
-easiest way out of all these difficulties, as Southard<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a>
-has said, would be "to deny the existence of entities in
-mental disease. There are two forms of this contention;
-first, that mental disease is nothing more or less than
-insanity, an entity itself, a genus with but one species,
-or secondly, that all victims of mental disease are individually
-to be provided with entities, that is, all examples
-of mental disease are sui generis. The development of
-psychiatry has killed the former contention stone dead,
-but the latter contention still flourishes to an extent
-among those who overstress the individual factor. And
-this latter contention is bolstered up by the existence of
-so many psychopathic patients of whom a diagnosis cannot
-be rendered for practical or theoretical reasons.
-However, there are no really consistent advocates of the
-sui generis plan of classification." It is interesting to
-note that he concedes ... "that the American Medico-Psychological
-Association's classification, adopted as it
-has been by a great number of American institutions and
-by the United States Government for war purposes, is
-a reasonably good classification and aware that its constituent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-elements fairly well correspond with what all
-American psychiatrists agree upon."</p>
-
-<p>Southard<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> raises the question as to how this classification
-can be used for diagnostic purposes. He answers
-this query by suggesting "A key to the practical
-grouping of mental diseases"<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> ... "to be followed,
-when necessary, like a botanical key in the search for the
-classification of a plant."... "It is a key to study and
-not an analytical classification with any pretence to
-finality."... "The plan is not so much an excursion
-into nosology as an essay in the technique of psychiatric
-diagnosis for the tyro."</p>
-
-<p>The problem presenting itself in the adoption of a
-classification purely for statistical purposes was not a
-question of a scientific grouping of the psychoses based
-on either etiological, anatomical, pathological, clinical
-or prognostic considerations. It was a question of compiling
-a tabulation or list of clinical entities recognized
-generally by American psychiatrists, subject to such
-changes and modifications as may be necessary to make it
-conform to accepted standards. As a matter of fact, no
-adequate reason for a classification of mental diseases
-for any other than statistical purposes has even been advanced
-by the authors of our textbooks on psychiatry.
-They do not contribute anything of value whatever to our
-knowledge of symptomatology, diagnosis or treatment.
-Practically the only point on which the writers of our
-textbooks agree is that there is no one fundamental principle
-upon which a satisfactory classification can be
-based. It is unfortunate that tradition seems to demand
-the serious consideration of a problem which many believe
-admits of no solution and which would mean little
-or nothing to the future of psychiatry if it were solved.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-The views of the Committee on Statistics are shown by a
-quotation from the report made to the Association at its
-meeting in New York in 1917:&mdash;"Your Committee feels
-that the first essential of a uniform system of statistics in
-hospitals for the insane is a generally recognized nomenclature
-of mental diseases. The present condition with
-respect to the classification of mental diseases is chaotic.
-Some states use no well-defined classification. In others
-the classifications used are similar in many respects but
-differ enough to prevent accurate comparisons. Some
-states have adopted a uniform system, while others leave
-the matter entirely to the individual hospitals. This condition
-of affairs discredits the science of psychiatry and
-reflects unfavorably upon our Association, which should
-serve as a correlating and standardizing agency for the
-whole country. The large task of your Committee therefore
-has been the formulation of a classification which
-it could unanimously recommend for adoption by the Association.
-The task was accomplished only after several
-prolonged conferences at which classifications now in use
-in various states and countries, and the recommendations
-of leading psychiatrists were considered. The classification
-finally adopted is simple, comprehensive and complete;
-it copies no other classification but includes the
-strong features of many others; it meets the demands of
-the best modern psychiatry but does not slavishly follow
-any single system. In short, your Committee has endeavored
-to formulate a classification that could be easily
-used in every hospital for the insane in this country and
-that would meet the scientific demands of the present
-day."</p>
-
-<p>Since the compilation of statistical data relating to
-the various activities of the hospitals for mental diseases
-in this country was definitely decided upon by the Association
-at its meeting in 1913, the membership of the Committee
-on Statistics has from time to time included the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-following:&mdash;Dr. Thomas W. Salmon, Medical Director,
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene; Dr. Owen Copp,
-Physician in Chief and Superintendent, Pennsylvania
-Hospital, Department for Nervous and Mental Diseases;
-Dr. E. Stanley Abbot, Medical Director, Public Charities
-Association of Pennsylvania; Dr. Henry A. Cotton, Medical
-Director, New Jersey State Hospital, Trenton; Dr.
-L. Vernon Briggs, Boston, former member of the Massachusetts
-State Board of Insanity; Dr. Adolf Meyer,
-Professor of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University; Dr.
-Albert M. Barrett, Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology,
-University of Michigan; Dr. George H. Kirby,
-Director of the Psychiatric Institute, New York City;
-Dr. Samuel T. Orton, Professor of Psychiatry and
-Director of the Psychopathic Hospital, University of
-Iowa; Dr. Frankwood E. Williams, Associate Medical
-Director, National Committee for Mental Hygiene; Dr.
-Elmer E. Southard, Director of the Massachusetts State
-Psychiatric Institute; Dr. C. Macfie Campbell, Director
-of the Boston Psychopathic Hospital, and the writer.
-Associated with the committee officially were: Dr. August
-Hoch, formerly Director of the Psychiatric Institute,
-New York; Dr. H. M. Pollock, Statistician of the New
-York State Hospital Commission; Miss Edith M. Furbush,
-Statistician of the National Committee for Mental
-Hygiene, and various others.</p>
-
-<p>The Association's classification of mental diseases at
-this time (1921) is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">1. Traumatic psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Traumatic delirium<br />
- (b) Traumatic constitution<br />
- (c) Post-traumatic mental enfeeblement (dementia)<br />
- (d) Other types
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">2. Senile psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Simple deterioration<br />
- (b) Presbyophrenic type<br />
- (c) Delirious and confused types<br />
- (d) Depressed and agitated type<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
- (e) Paranoid types<br />
- (f) Pre-senile type<br />
- (g) Other types
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">3. Psychoses with cerebral arteriosclerosis</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">4. General paralysis</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">5. Psychoses with cerebral syphilis</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">6. Psychoses with Huntington's chorea</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">7. Psychoses with brain tumor</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">8. Psychoses with other brain or nervous diseases:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Cerebral embolism<br />
- (b) Paralysis agitans<br />
- (c) Meningitis, tubercular or other forms (to be specified)<br />
- (d) Multiple sclerosis<br />
- (e) Tabes dorsalis<br />
- (f) Acute chorea<br />
- (g) Other diseases (to be specified)
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">9. Alcoholic psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Pathological intoxication<br />
- (b) Delirium tremens<br />
- (c) Korsakow's psychosis<br />
- (d) Acute hallucinosis<br />
- (e) Chronic hallucinosis<br />
- (f) Acute paranoid type<br />
- (g) Chronic paranoid type<br />
- (h) Alcoholic deterioration<br />
- (i) Other types, acute or chronic
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">10. Psychoses due to drugs and other exogenous toxins:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Opium (and derivatives), cocaine, bromides, chloral, etc., alone or combined
-(to be specified)<br />
- (b) Metals, as lead, arsenic, etc. (to be specified)<br />
- (c) Gases (to be specified)<br />
- (d) Other exogenous toxins (to be specified)<br />
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">11. Psychoses with pellagra</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">12. Psychoses with other somatic diseases:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Delirium with infectious diseases<br />
- (b) Post-infectious psychosis<br />
- (c) Exhaustion delirium<br />
- (d) Delirium of unknown origin<br />
- (e) Cardio-renal diseases<br />
- (f) Diseases of the ductless glands<br />
- (g) Other diseases or conditions (to be specified)
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">13. Manic-depressive psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Manic type<br />
- (b) Depressive type<br />
- (c) Stuporous type<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
- (d) Mixed type<br />
- (e) Circular type<br />
- (f) Other types
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">14. Involution melancholia</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">15. Dementia praecox:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Paranoid type<br />
- (b) Catatonic type<br />
- (c) Hebephrenic type<br />
- (d) Simple type<br />
- (e) Other types
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">16. Paranoia or paranoid conditions</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">17. Epileptic psychoses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Epileptic deterioration<br />
- (b) Epileptic clouded states<br />
- (c) Other epileptic types (to be specified)
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">18. Psychoneuroses and neuroses:</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Hysterical type<br />
- (b) Psychasthenic type<br />
- (c) Neurasthenic type<br />
- (d) Anxiety neuroses<br />
- (e) Other types
- </p>
-
-<p class="pr0">19. Psychoses with psychopathic personality</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">20. Psychoses with mental deficiency</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">21. Undiagnosed psychosis</p>
-
-<p class="pr0">22. Without psychosis</p>
- <p class="pr7">
- (a) Epilepsy without psychosis<br />
- (b) Alcoholism without psychosis<br />
- (c) Drug addiction without psychosis<br />
- (d) Psychopathic personality without psychosis<br />
- (e) Mental deficiency without psychosis<br />
- (f) Others (to be specified)
- </p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 id="PART_II"><span class="st6">PART II</span><br /><br /></h2>
-
-<p class="st6">THE PSYCHOSES</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE TRAUMATIC PSYCHOSES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Traumatic affections of the nervous system have been
-recognized in a general way for centuries, although the
-psychoses resulting directly from injuries have been
-given very little consideration or attention in the past.
-Concussion of the brain, referred to in the writings of
-Hippocrates, Galen and Celsus, was first studied postmortem
-in 1705 by Littré. It is now discussed in all
-textbooks on surgery. Usually milder forms are described
-with evidences of shock or collapse&mdash;a brief
-period of unconsciousness, partial or complete, with
-visual and auditory disturbances, dizziness, muscular relaxation
-or temporary paralysis, respiratory symptoms,
-dilated pupils, weakness of the pulse, lowered temperature,
-etc. Delirium and stupor or coma are associated
-with more severe injuries. If the cortex is lacerated,
-twitchings or convulsions often occur. Returning consciousness
-shows various reactions&mdash;headache, vomiting,
-amnesia, etc., and may be succeeded by convulsions, encephalitis
-or mental disturbances. DaCosta<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> says that
-some cases are followed by a complete change in the personality,
-forgetfulness, headache, insomnia, attacks of
-depression, lassitude and vertigo with increased susceptibility
-to alcohol, heat and physical exertion. Acute
-surgical injuries, and compression due to growths, hemorrhages,
-fractures, etc., have been exhaustively studied.
-Compression has been differentiated surgically<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> by the
-later appearance of a gradual unconsciousness, more definite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-paralysis, usually on the side opposite the injury,
-slow pulse and stertorous respirations, unequal immobile
-pupils, choked disc, convulsive movements, etc. Traumatic
-encephalitis and meningitis have long been recognized
-but present no definitely characteristic symptoms
-which distinguish them from simple inflammatory reactions.</p>
-
-<p>One of the earliest accurate descriptions of brain injury
-associated with mental symptoms was that of the
-well-known "crowbar" case. It will be recalled that
-while blasting in Vermont in 1848 a man by the name of
-Gage had an iron bar driven through the frontal region
-of his skull, making a complete recovery and living for
-over twelve years after the accident. An autopsy showed
-that only the prefrontal cortex was involved. A very
-interesting report on his mental condition was made by
-Dr. John M. Harlow:<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a> "His contractors, who regarded
-him as the most efficient and capable foreman in their
-employ previous to his injury, considered the change
-in his mind so marked that they could not give him his
-place again. The equilibrium, or balance, so to speak,
-between his intellectual faculties and animal propensities
-seems to have been destroyed. He is fitful, irreverent,
-indulging at times in the grossest profanity (which was
-not previously his custom), manifesting but little deference
-for his fellows, impatient of restraint or advice
-when it conflicts with his desires, at times pertinaciously
-obstinate yet capricious and vacillating, devising many
-plans of future operations, which are no sooner arranged
-than they are abandoned in turn for others appearing
-more feasible. A child in his intellectual capacity and
-manifestations, he had the animal passions of a strong
-man. Previous to his injury, though untrained in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-schools, he possessed a well balanced mind, and was
-looked upon by those who knew him as a shrewd, smart
-business man, very energetic and persistent in executing
-all his plans of operation. In this regard his mind was
-radically changed, so decidedly that his friends and acquaintances
-said he was 'no longer Gage.'"</p>
-
-<p>Various other cases reported have established the fact
-that mental deterioration usually follows extensive injuries
-to the frontal lobes. Witmer<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> summarizes this
-as consisting of "slight intellectual degradation, moral
-and emotional perversion, deficiency of attention, and
-volitional inefficiency."</p>
-
-<p>A work by Ericksen in 1866 on "Railway Injuries to
-the Nervous System" and Page's book in 1882 on "Injuries
-of the Spine" pointed the way to an extensive
-study of the so-called traumatic neuroses. This characterization
-of the functional disturbances of the nervous
-system following injuries was apparently the result of a
-monograph by Oppenheim on that subject in 1889. They
-had previously been considered as purely organic in
-origin. Traumatic hysteria was discussed very fully at
-various times by Charcot, whose work is so well known
-as to require no comment. In 1892 Friedmann described
-a vasomotor complex due to concussion. This is accompanied
-by such symptoms as headache, dizziness, loss of
-capacity for both physical and mental work with an increased
-fatigability, irritability, memory defects, and
-changes in personality, such as sensitiveness and eccentricity
-with a marked intolerance to alcohol. This condition
-appears some time after the symptoms of concussion
-and shock have subsided and may last for some months.
-Friedmann looked upon this as purely a vasomotor disturbance.
-It is probably an important factor, in some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-cases at least, of "shell shock". Traumatic epilepsy may
-result from foci of softening or other local areas of
-injury to the brain. Neurasthenia, hysteria and other
-neuroses are now generally looked upon as being essentially
-functional and not organic in origin, although they
-may follow a trauma. The simulation of these conditions
-has led to a great deal of discussion, notwithstanding the
-fact that Oppenheim found them in only about four per
-cent of his cases. Köppen (1897) made a very elaborate
-study of the postmortem lesions in the "traumatic neuroses".
-He found that violence to the skull often resulted
-in small injuries at the base of the frontal area,
-at the apices of the parietal lobes or in the occipital region.
-The pathological changes involved represented
-localized encephalitis with hemorrhagic infiltration. Foci
-of softening were often found in the cerebral cortex.
-He noted coma and convulsions with only minute areas
-of destruction of the basal cortex at autopsy. This would
-indicate a severe irritation, probably due to circulatory
-disturbances. The resulting symptoms he thought were
-very likely to be confused with general paresis. In cases
-of extreme dementia following traumatism he often found
-no pathological lesion other than a cicatrix in the cerebral
-cortex.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most important contributions to the literature
-of traumatism as associated with psychoses was
-made by Adolf Meyer<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> in 1903. Notwithstanding the
-statements of such observers as Savage, appearing as
-late as 1905, he expressed the opinion that traumatism
-and general paresis are not directly related except that
-injuries may rarely act as precipitating factors. He
-does not expect to find psychoses resulting from small
-lacerations or other similar lesions in the cortex. As a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-result of his observations Meyer<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> described the following
-forms of traumatic disorders:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="p0">1. The direct post-traumatic deliria with the following subdivisions:</p>
- <p class="p7a">a. Preeminently febrile reactions;</p>
- <p class="p7a">b. The delirium nervosum of Dupuytren, not differing
- from deliria after operations, injuries,
- etc.;</p>
- <p class="p7a">c. The delirium of slow evolution of coma, with or
- without alcoholic basis;</p>
- <p class="p7a">d. Forms of protracted deliria, usually with numerous
- tabulations, etc. (with or without alcoholic
- or senile basis).</p>
-
-<p class="p0">2. The post-traumatic constitution:</p>
- <p class="p7a">a. Types with mere facilitation of reaction to alcohol,
- grippe, etc.;</p>
- <p class="p7a">b. Types with vasomotor neurosis;</p>
- <p class="p7a">c. Types with explosive diathesis;</p>
- <p class="p7a">d. Types with hysteroid or epileptoid episodes,
- with or without convulsions (such as most reflex
- psychoses);</p>
- <p class="p7a">e. Types of paranoic development.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">3. The traumatic defect conditions:</p>
- <p class="p7a">a. Primary defects allied to aphasia;</p>
- <p class="p7a">b. Secondary deterioration in connection with epilepsy;</p>
- <p class="p7a">c. Terminal deterioration due to progressive alterations
- of the primarily injured parts, with or
- without arteriosclerosis.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p0">4. Psychoses in which trauma is merely a contributing factor:</p>
- <p class="p7a">a. General paralysis, with or without traumatic
- stigmata;</p>
- <p class="p7a">b. Manic-depressive and other transitory psychoses,
- catatonic deterioration and paranoic
- conditions, with or without traumatic stigmata.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">5. Traumatic psychoses from injury not directly affecting the head.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">The most interesting feature perhaps of this classification
-is the post-traumatic constitution. Meyer<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a>
-quotes Köppen's excellent description of this condition as
-follows:&mdash;"Men who have suffered from a cranial lesion
-in which there has been a severe damage of the brain, with
-or without an injury to the cranial bones, on their recovery
-from the immediate results complain especially of
-all kinds of sensations in the head, which they describe
-either as pain or as pressure with feeling of crawling
-or dullness of the head, more or less definitely located at
-the point where they were hit. They frequently become
-dizzy, and at times even faint for a short time without
-any epileptic attack. Although slight attacks of dizziness
-may recur frequently, epilepsy with typical attacks need
-not develop. There is further in our patients a great irritability
-and nervosity. The formerly good-natured or
-even-tempered persons become irascible, hard to get along
-with; formerly conscientious fathers cease to care for
-their family. The irritability at times increases to excessive
-violence in which actions occur of which they have no
-remembrance; the nervous system is not only under the
-influence of psychic irritation but especially susceptible
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-to the influence of alcohol or tobacco, in even small
-quantities. The working capacity of our patients is very
-poor. It suffers variously, although such individuals
-often give an impression of perfect capacity; and since
-the morbid symptoms are essentially subjective, they always
-arouse doubts whether they could not do something
-at least, even if they are unable to work in a noisy shop
-or on a high scaffolding. It is, however, certain that the
-patients are very forgetful; in giving orders or doing errands
-they make the most incredible blunders; frequently
-everything must be written down. Their capacity for
-thought has suffered, as is sometimes shown, especially
-in the great slowness of thought. These patients are
-unable to concentrate their attention, not even in occupations
-which serve for mere entertainment, such as reading
-or playing cards. They like best to brood unoccupied;
-even conversation is rather obnoxious. This point is so
-characteristic that it gives a certain means of distinction
-from simulation, which as a rule does not interfere with
-taking part in the conversations and pleasures of the
-ward and playing at cards, which means as a rule too
-much of an effort for the brain of actual sufferers. The
-patients are usually advised to take light physical work,
-but even there they are perfectly useless. Excessive sensitiveness
-of their head obliges them to avoid all work
-which is connected with sudden jerks, bending over is
-especially troublesome; and there is hardly any physical
-work in which this can be avoided; the blood rushes to
-the head, headache increases, dizziness sets in and the
-work stops. Patients feel best when in the open air,
-inactive and undisturbed. There are but few objective
-signs, such as increase of pulse, flushing of the face, dermatographia,
-trembling and uncertainty in the Romberg
-position, such as is shown in all general nervosity. But
-the complaints are so exceedingly uniform that the uniformity
-of the subjective complaints justifies the conclusion
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-that they are well founded. The picture thus is
-briefly that of a mental weakness shown by easy fatigue,
-slowness of thought, inability to keep impressions, irritability,
-and a great number of unpleasant sensations,
-before all headaches and dizziness."</p>
-
-<p>It is exceedingly interesting to note that Schläger in
-discussing disorders resulting from concussion of the
-brain, in 1857, as quoted by Griesinger,<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> makes the following
-comment on these cases:&mdash;"Very often the character
-and disposition changes; in 20 cases great irascibility,
-an angry, passionate manner even to the most
-violent outbursts of temper was remarked&mdash;less frequently
-over-estimation of self, prodigality, restlessness,
-disquietude; in 14 cases there were attempts at suicide,
-frequently weakness of memory, confusion." Meyer
-found, furthermore, in his analysis "all the possible degrees
-of episodes of more or less dazing and dream
-states; from a temporary dazed feeling to episodes of
-hysteriform or epileptoid absences. Apart from the
-subjective feeling of haziness, the characteristic trait is
-the occurrence of complete dream interpretations and
-peculiar fabrications, which color the primary traumatic
-insanity as well as the subacute and episodic types, and
-even the paranoic type."</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> describes concussion and compression,
-traumatic delirium, traumatic epilepsy and traumatic
-mental enfeeblement. He finds these conditions due to
-concussion, compression or injury to the brain substance
-either at the site of traumatism or at some point opposite.
-There may be contusions, lacerations of the brain
-tissue or hemorrhages, usually in the frontal, occipital
-or parietal regions. Injuries to the cortex are not demonstrable
-in all cases. The circulatory disturbances he considers
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-an important factor and thinks that they account
-for smaller lesions of the cerebral tissue in many instances
-where no gross changes are apparent. More or less disturbance
-of consciousness is to be expected in these conditions.
-The patient is somewhat dull, drowsy, clumsy,
-forgetful and absentminded. Memory is sometimes much
-affected. In more severe cases there is a complete loss
-of consciousness which may last a few minutes only or be
-a matter of hours or days. On waking, the patient is
-bewildered and confused, with a marked disturbance of
-apprehension. Perception is involved as in the recognition
-of complicated pictures or the understanding of long
-and detailed statements. A clear comprehension of
-events and surroundings is lacking. The patients may
-know that they are in a hospital without knowing what
-hospital it is or why they are there and are unable to
-recognize persons around them. Occasionally hallucinations
-of sight or of hearing occur. At times delusional
-ideas are expressed, usually of a depressive type. They
-have no realization whatever of their own condition. The
-memory disturbance may take the form of a Korsakow's
-complex. Memory gaps appear sometimes for events
-just before the accident and in other cases cover long
-periods of time. While as a rule events of the remote
-past are retained, recent impressions are quickly lost.
-They cannot repeat what is read to them, do not remember
-the names of persons about them, and sometimes show
-evidence of falsification of memory with fabrication. All
-idea as to time is usually lost. Mental reactions become
-noticeably difficult. The patient is distractible, cannot
-count accurately, has difficulty in repeating dates and
-numbers and forms no correct judgment as to his own
-personal affairs. Many express themselves, however, on
-the other hand, with great facility and readiness. Some
-show considerable fatigability. The mood is often elated
-with a tendency to facetiousness, although frequently
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-tearful and anxious, particularly at night. Irritable,
-faultfinding trends usually appear later. As a rule they
-are talkative, restless, sensitive, abusive or even insolent.
-Bonhöffer has reported stereotypies as well as stuporous
-and other catatonic types. In speech the patients often
-become incoherent, make mistakes, forget words or coin
-new ones. Similar mistakes appear in reading and writing.
-Asymbolism and parapraxia are observed. Residual
-symptoms of the brain injury are headaches, dizziness,
-fainting attacks and convulsions. The pupils are
-contracted and do not react properly to light. The pulse
-is frequently very slow.</p>
-
-<p>In fractures at the base of the brain there is likely
-to be a hemorrhage from the ears and deafness from injuries
-to the labyrinth. Involvement of the pyramidal
-tracts may cause unilateral weakness or even paralysis,
-with increased knee-jerks and occasionally a Babinski
-reflex. Usually the mental symptoms appear promptly
-after the injury. Sometimes, however, there is for a
-while only a slight dulness. The patients are unable to
-go about the house unassisted, and act peculiarly, becoming
-clouded or delirious after a few hours or days. Improvement
-begins to show itself in a few weeks as a
-rule unless some intercurrent affection intervenes, but
-the symptoms may persist for several months. Meningitis
-or abscess formation often causes death. These
-developments are usually indicated by a marked delirium
-or coma. There may also be paralysis, convulsions, disturbances
-of speech, rise of temperature, etc. The subsidence
-of active delirious symptoms is sometimes succeeded
-by Kraepelin's traumatic neurosis. Following
-the traumatic delirium or concussion psychosis described,
-mental enfeeblement sometimes appears. Clouding of
-consciousness is not a factor in this condition. There is
-usually a complete change in the psychic personality.
-The patients tire easily, are incapable of sustained mental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-efforts, forgetful, absentminded, complain of dizziness,
-dulness, noises in the ears, pressure in the head, migraine,
-palpitation, etc. Or they may be irritable, with outbursts
-of anger often alternating with apathy. Some are depressed,
-anxious or hypochondriacal. There is a greatly
-increased susceptibility to alcohol and intoxication often
-induces excitements, epileptiform attacks, stupors or
-rarely actual dreamstates.</p>
-
-<p>Wildermuth found a history of traumatism in 3.8 per
-cent of his cases of epilepsy. The statistics of the German
-Army show 4.2 per cent. When the convulsive manifestations
-are in the foreground and the picture is one
-of traumatic epilepsy, advanced mental deterioration
-may be exhibited, with impairment of mental capacity
-and disturbance of memory. These cases remain apathetic,
-forgetful, dull, irritable and childish. At autopsy
-there are often no evidences of any great injury to the
-brain. Occasionally extensive areas of softening may,
-however, be found. Usually there is a widespread destruction
-of the nerve cells and their associated fibres.
-There is often a proliferation of the glia, with changes
-in the vessel walls which may be thickened and dilated,
-with capillary hemorrhages and softenings. Extensive
-areas of the cortex may be involved. Bleuler's description
-of the traumatic psychoses is not essentially different
-from that of Kraepelin.</p>
-
-<p>The differentiation of these conditions as suggested
-in the statistical manual of the American Psychiatric
-Association is as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The diagnosis should be restricted to mental disorders
-arising as a direct or obvious consequence of a
-brain (or head) injury producing psychotic symptoms
-of a fairly characteristic kind. The amount of damage
-to the brain may vary from an extensive destruction of
-tissue to simple concussion or physical shock with or
-without fracture of the skull.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Manic-depressive psychoses, general paralysis, dementia
-praecox, and other mental disorders in which
-trauma may act as a contributory or precipitating cause,
-should not be included in this group.</p>
-
-<p>"The following are the most common clinical types
-of traumatic psychosis and should be specified in the
-statistical record of the hospital:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"(a) Traumatic delirium: This may take the form
-of an acute delirium (concussion delirium), or a more
-protracted delirium resembling the Korsakow mental
-complex.</p>
-
-<p>"(b) Traumatic constitution: Characterized by a
-gradual post-traumatic change in disposition with vasomotor
-instability, headaches, fatigability, irritability or
-explosive emotional reactions; usually hyper-sensitiveness
-to alcohol, and in some cases development of paranoid,
-hysteroid, or epileptoid symptoms.</p>
-
-<p>"(c) Post-traumatic mental enfeeblement (dementia):
-Varying degrees of mental reduction with or without
-aphasic symptoms, epileptiform attacks or development
-of a cerebral arteriosclerosis.</p>
-
-<p>"(d) Other types."</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">We have not as yet, unfortunately, sufficient data at
-our disposal to warrant intelligent conclusions as to the
-frequency of the various forms of traumatic psychoses.
-One hundred and twenty-seven cases reported from the
-New York state hospitals during a period of six years
-were classified as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-
- <table class="a" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Form</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Per cent</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Traumatic delirium</td>
- <td class="td04">38</td>
- <td class="td04">29.32</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Traumatic constitution</td>
- <td class="td04">32</td>
- <td class="td04">25.19</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Post traumatic mental enfeeblement</td>
- <td class="td04">32</td>
- <td class="td04">25.19</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Others, not specified</td>
- <td class="td04">25</td>
- <td class="td04">19.70</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">Undoubtedly with a more definite understanding as to
-the delimitation of these different conditions more complete
-information will be available later. We are nevertheless
-justified in feeling that the frequency of the traumatic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-psychoses considered as a group can be determined
-with a fair degree of accuracy. Of 49,640 first admissions
-to the New York hospitals during a period of eight years,
-161, or .32 per cent, were definitely ascribed to traumatism.
-Twenty-one other hospitals in fourteen different
-states reported forty-five cases of traumatic psychoses
-(.24 per cent) in 18,336 admissions. Two hundred and
-seventeen cases (.3 per cent) have therefore been reported
-in a total of 70,987 first admissions to forty-eight
-state hospitals for mental diseases in this country.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE SENILE PSYCHOSES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Never until very recently has any great importance
-been attached to the psychoses due solely to age or much
-interest manifested in them. These forms of insanity in
-the majority of our textbooks have appeared only under
-the designation of senile dementia. This is true of
-the earlier editions of Krafft-Ebing and many other
-writers. Clouston referred to senile dementia as one of
-four varieties of mental enfeeblement. "Most cases,"<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a>
-he says, "fall under three varieties. The first has as
-its chief characteristics depression and lethargy. The
-second consists chiefly of excitement, sometimes with a
-certain exaltation, but always with irritability, restlessness,
-unreason, suspicion, and change of affection. The
-third variety consists chiefly of the abolition of mind
-in all its forms, or senile dementia, and of complete
-dotage. In some cases those three varieties form three
-different stages in the same case. In others they do
-not change." Régis, in a work on mental medicine covering
-668 pages in all, devoted two and one-half pages to
-a consideration of the insanity of old age. Ziehen<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> in
-1894 included "dementia senilis" with general paralysis,
-epileptic, alcoholic and terminal deteriorations in his
-group of "acquired defect psychoses" and characterized
-it as "a chronic organic psychosis of advanced years, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-principal symptom of which is a progressive intelligence
-defect." Excitements, depressions, confusional states,
-deliria, deteriorations, mental mechanisms of any and
-all kinds, occurring late in life, were usually disposed
-of without any effort at differentiation by the very convenient
-method of relegating them to the obscure domain
-of senile dementia. This is a field which on exploration
-has been found to be one of considerable interest. It has
-been pointed out that manic-depressive insanity not infrequently
-occurs in persons of advanced age. Uncomplicated
-alcoholic psychoses are not at all rare. Bleuler has
-advanced the theory that dementia praecox and certain
-of the senile conditions are similar if not identical processes.
-General paresis has been demonstrated in the
-later periods of life by modern laboratory methods and
-the diagnosis confirmed at autopsy. Cerebral syphilis
-certainly cannot be left out of consideration. Toxic deliria
-are encountered now and then. Even the psychoneuroses
-are possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin first established the importance of involution
-melancholia as a form of depression warranting
-separate consideration. The anxiety psychoses occurring
-late in life have since been made the subject of exhaustive
-study by various observers. It was discovered that many
-of the mental disturbances of the aged could be attributed
-directly to arteriosclerosis alone. Korsakow's syndrome
-has been found to be as frequently due to senility as it
-is to alcoholism. Some of our more modern works on
-psychiatry have included very elaborate chapters on
-purely "presenile" conditions. Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> in his last
-edition devotes twenty pages to a review of this subject.</p>
-
-<p>He divides the presenile psychoses into melancholia,
-anxieties, late katatonia, depressive delusional conditions,
-anxious delusional types terminating in advanced
-deterioration, depressive states with deterioration, excitements
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-and paranoid forms. The development of
-Kraepelin's conception of melancholia has been fully discussed
-in another chapter. He speaks also of the occasional
-occurrence of anxious conditions in late life
-with excitements or an exalted mood with grandiose ideas
-or even paranoid manifestations. These may present a
-catatonic picture with more or less inaccessibility, stereotypies,
-peculiar attitudes and movements, absurd resistance,
-impulsiveness, desultoriness and disconnected
-speech. Our knowledge as to the exact causation and
-nature of katatonia still being far from complete, he
-knows of no reason why a process of that kind should
-not be recognized as one of the presenile conditions.
-Thalbitzer suggested the name, depressive delusional insanity
-(depressiven Wahnsinn), for the conditions exhibiting
-numerous delusions and active hallucinations with
-an emotional reaction "determined by the course of the
-disease." Rehm also described a similar form associated
-with arteriosclerotic changes and characterized by hallucinations
-of hearing, together with mannerisms and
-sterotypies.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> describes first a group of presenile cases
-showing the development of depressive ideas and anxious
-states with a progressive mental enfeeblement. Delusions
-of self-accusation and persecution present themselves
-early in the course of the disease. Symptoms of
-a more decidedly hypochondriacal type may occur later.
-Hallucinations and somatic delusions also develop, often
-with nihilistic trends. Everyone is dead, the patient is
-the only one left in the world, has no legs, cannot go out
-of the house, has entirely disappeared, does not exist
-any more, etc. The consciousness is usually fairly clear,
-orientation is well preserved and there is no marked disturbance
-of thought. Anxious excitement is often an important
-feature. The termination is in mental enfeeblement
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-invariably. This condition manifests itself usually
-at about the fortieth year. He is of the opinion that this
-symptom complex cannot be considered either as belonging
-to manic-depressive insanity or attributable to
-arteriosclerosis, nor is it catatonic in its origin.</p>
-
-<p>He finds another group of cases occurring in women
-between forty-five and fifty years of age, characterized
-pathologically by striking anatomical changes and clinically
-by a very unfavorable course. A depression first
-appears, followed by anxiety with thoughts of suicide.
-Hallucinations do not occur as a rule. Restless and agitated
-excitement is a prominent symptom leading finally
-to confusion, clouding of consciousness, and disorientation.
-This is followed by a condition of mental enfeeblement
-terminating in early death. Well-defined postmortem
-changes have been found, such as the "grave alteration"
-described by Nissl, proliferation of the glia, swelling
-of the protoplasmic bodies with cell enclosures, etc.,
-but no fibril formation. Large quantities of lipoid material
-are found in the surrounding vessels and in the
-vascular sheaths. This condition, also observed by
-Nitsche and Döblin, Kraepelin looks upon as probably
-a presenile process of autotoxic origin, there being no
-other cause demonstrable. He does not consider this disease
-process as being related to "late katatonia," genuine
-katatonia or manic-depressive insanity.</p>
-
-<p>He would also separate out another smaller group as
-probably belonging to the presenile forms&mdash;cases with
-excitements of long duration, terminating in a marked
-deterioration. This condition is likely to be of sudden
-onset, with depressive ideas of self-accusation, later
-showing an active restlessness. These patients soon become
-clouded and confused, often with grandiose ideas
-suggesting general paresis. They may show memory
-falsifications. Stuporous states occasionally intervene,
-followed by an active excitement. Echolalia is common.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-The excitement may last for months or even for a year
-or more and often stops suddenly, always with deterioration
-later. In the cases which have come to autopsy Alzheimer
-has reported severe and widespread cell alterations,
-fibre loss, glia reactions, and changes in the vessel
-walls, somewhat suggesting the pathological findings in
-general paresis. The cases in this group usually have
-been of the male sex between sixty and seventy years of
-age. Kraepelin speaks of the clinical picture as a mixture
-of the symptoms of general paresis, katatonia and
-manic-depressive psychoses and it is usually diagnosed
-as one or the other of these conditions.</p>
-
-<p>The paranoid presenile forms occur usually in women.
-Consciousness is clear, although there may be a mild
-anxiety or hypochondriasis. The persecutory ideas are
-variable and changeable. Delusions of jealousy are common
-although hallucinations are infrequent. Memory
-is often somewhat impaired and retrospective falsifications
-are occasionally observed. The mood is as a rule
-anxious and suspicious. Suicidal tendencies often appear.
-Restlessness, excitement, impulsive actions and
-outbursts of anger are noted at times. Rarely a more
-cheerful mood develops. The disease may become stationary
-and show no marked changes for years.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin himself seems to be very uncertain as to
-the significance and the delimitation of these various presenile
-forms. It must be confessed that some of the types
-described very strongly suggest the condition formerly
-looked upon by him as involutional melancholia. It will
-be noted that he considers as possible etiological factors
-the disturbance of metabolism which may result from regressive
-or involutional processes. The differentiation
-from manic-depressive forms, from arteriosclerotic disorders
-and from senile psychoses must also be looked
-upon as presenting some difficulties which cannot be entirely
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-disregarded. Many possibilities suggest themselves.</p>
-
-<p>In the senile deteriorations Kraepelin notes particularly
-a loss in the capacity of apprehension and perception,
-with a sluggishness of the train of thought, a dulling
-of the emotions, a reduction of energy and the development
-of conduct disorders. Ranschburg in psychological
-tests noticed a lengthening of the reaction time, with a
-delay in the choice of action, the reading of words, the
-performance of addition, and the formation of judgment.
-The retardation was shown particularly in psychic processes
-and the association time. The reactions were, moreover,
-much more monotonous, irregular and unreliable
-than in the young. Memory tests also showed poor associations.</p>
-
-<p>The most advanced form Kraepelin describes as senile
-dementia, a progressive mental enfeeblement in which
-the loss of apprehension and memory becomes a conspicuous
-feature. The perception of external impressions is
-diminished and delayed and there is a profound disorder
-of attention. Memory of the remote past is much better
-than it is for current events. Retrospective falsification
-is a common symptom. The patient is, moreover, unable
-to change old viewpoints or acquire new ones. Delusional
-manifestations such as childish egotism, foolish suspicions
-or notions of impending illness develop. Grandiose
-ideas often occur, delusions of great wealth being
-common. These symptoms are transitory and come and
-go without apparent reason. In some cases the hallucinations
-resemble those found in the alcoholic psychoses.
-Sooner or later there is a disturbance of consciousness
-leading to a dreamlike existence suggesting a delirium.
-There is a noticeable dulling of the emotional feelings.
-The patients become indifferent and apathetic, losing interest
-in their surroundings, and are often irritable and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-excitable. In a certain number of cases depressive states
-develop, sometimes with suicidal tendencies. The delusions
-may be hypochondriacal or nihilistic in character.
-Complaints of persecution are common. Some of the
-patients show a simple, childish deterioration with seclusive
-tendencies. Stuporous or cataleptic states may
-develop. Others become uneasy, wander in the streets,
-remove their clothes, collect rubbish, or show sexual excitement.
-Restlessness at night is especially suggestive.</p>
-
-<p>Delirious excited states ("Senile Delirium") characterized
-a certain number of Kraepelin's cases. In these,
-clouding of consciousness is marked. The presbyophrenic
-complex described by Kahlbaum often occurs.
-These cases are fairly clear mentally at first, as far as
-their surroundings are concerned, but show memory disturbances,
-particularly for recent events. Orientation is
-lost very soon and they fail to recognize old friends and
-relatives. Fabrications are resorted to for the purpose
-of remedying these defects of memory and delusions are
-very common. Nevertheless, judgment about many
-things is well retained. In some instances, however, orientation
-for time, place and person is completely lost.
-Kraepelin is in doubt as to whether presbyophrenia
-should be looked upon as constituting a definite entity or
-only a form of senile insanity. It may last for years or
-terminate in a marked deterioration. In some of the
-senile cases arteriosclerotic changes in the cortex are
-very pronounced. This is more noticeable in the depressive
-and anxious forms and in the incoherent varieties.
-These individuals become clouded, incoherent, and deteriorate
-rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>There is also a characteristic paranoid form of senile
-psychosis. Delusions of suspicion and jealousy are common
-in these cases. They usually develop persecutory
-trends and often exhibit hallucinations of hearing. They
-sometimes show partial disorientation and gaps in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-memory. The mood is usually irritable and often anxious.
-There is very likely to be a disturbance of sleep
-and often signs of physical enfeeblement. There may be
-neurological symptoms caused by the arteriosclerotic
-complications, such as headache, pupillary changes,
-tremors of the tongue and disturbance of the reflexes.
-Tremors are also shown in the writing. Paraphasia occurs
-and there may be sensory aphasia or apraxia.</p>
-
-<p>In severe cases of senile dementia Kraepelin expects
-to find definite lesions at autopsy. The brain weight is
-always decreased, sometimes to a very striking degree.
-The volume of the brain is reduced and the ventricles enlarged.
-The cortex is diminished in thickness, the frontal
-region being most affected. The parietal region may be
-involved, but not to any such extent as in general paresis.
-There may be localized areas of atrophy. Pachymeningitis
-and hemorrhagic membranes are often found. The
-microscope shows a proliferation of the glia cells and
-there is often some disturbance of the layering of the
-cortex. Cell alterations appear, with fatty degeneration,
-some neurones showing little more than a darkly colored
-nucleus. The glia cells are enlarged. There should be
-no marked changes in the vessels. Fatty changes in the
-ganglion cells are very noticeable. There is also some
-loss in the tangential fibres.</p>
-
-<p>Quite characteristic of the senile brain is the occurrence
-of the miliary plaques or "drusen" described by
-Redlich in 1898. Fischer in 1907 reached the conclusion
-that these "drusen" were pathognomonic of presbyophrenia,
-as he did not find them in senile dementia, in
-other psychoses or in normal brains. Hübner, however,
-noted them in alcoholics and "circular" cases as well as
-in normal individuals. Oppenheim also found them in
-the brains of the aged when no psychoses were observed.
-The interior of the plaque is a homogeneous, dark-staining,
-structureless mass. Sometimes there is a clear space<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-around this center, with club- or spindle-shaped bodies
-in the periphery, representing remnants probably of
-neurones, glia cells or axis cylinders. The whole structure
-is encapsulated in glia fibres. These so-called
-plaques were spoken of by Fischer as "miliare Nekrosen"
-and by Redlich as "miliare Sclerosen." Kraepelin is
-of the opinion that they are associated either with senile
-cases showing arteriosclerotic changes or presbyophrenia.
-Alzheimer has described a senile atrophy of
-the brain with wedgeshaped areas showing cell loss.
-This is due to a gradual occlusion of the smaller vessels
-extending down from the meninges into the cortex, and
-may result in a hemorrhage, a softening or merely an
-atrophic area characterized by an absence of ganglion
-cells. He has also described another group of cases showing
-characteristic cell changes.</p>
-
-<p>This condition has been given the name "Alzheimer's
-disease" by Kraepelin.<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> It is marked clinically by a
-gradual senile deterioration with organic brain changes.
-These eases show some thought defect, loss of memory,
-confusion, and clouding. Later they become restless,
-talkative, sing and laugh, etc. Aphasic disturbances develop
-early, with paraphasia or apraxia. There are
-speech disturbances ending in a senseless jargon and
-writing becomes impossible. An advanced deterioration
-ensues. Physically there is a general weakness and uncertain
-gait, sometimes with epileptiform attacks. The
-pupillary reaction may be lost and evidences of arteriosclerosis
-usually appear. The disease may last for many
-years. At autopsy "drusen" are common in the cortex
-and almost a third of the nerve cells are found to be destroyed.
-These are replaced by darkly-staining fibril
-bundles. There is marked neuroglia reaction, particularly
-around the "drusen" and retrogressive changes
-are found in the vessel walls. This disease usually
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-appears about the fortieth year and may be looked upon,
-Kraepelin says, as a "senium praecox," although its
-significance is not clear.</p>
-
-<p>He finds the senile psychoses occurring usually between
-the ages of sixty-five and eighty, although they
-occasionally appear before sixty. Seven and sixty-seven
-hundredths per cent of his cases were between sixty and
-sixty-five years of age; ten per cent between sixty-five
-and seventy; thirty-five per cent between seventy and
-seventy-five; 27.8 per cent between seventy-five and
-eighty; 22.2 per cent between eighty and eighty-five;
-10.5 per cent between eighty-five and ninety; and 2.78
-per cent were over ninety years of age. Of 183 cases
-studied, twenty-three per cent were cases of presbyophrenia;
-sixty-three per cent of simple deterioration;
-eight per cent of arteriosclerotic origin; and the remainder,
-of delusional forms. More than half of the
-cases of presbyophrenia occurred in persons over
-seventy-five. The paranoid and arteriosclerotic forms
-occurred in younger individuals. In the alcoholic cases
-the Korsakow complex was common. The analysis of
-presenile psychoses made by Kraepelin is, to say the
-least, exceedingly interesting. Such clear-cut differentiations
-as he describes are, however, not always possible or
-necessary. Very few other writers have gone into the
-question so exhaustively, nor is his classification of these
-conditions generally accepted. Bleuler<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> in 1918 in discussing
-the presenile psychoses quotes Kraepelin's classification
-and also refers to Gaupp's anxious depressive
-forms. Under the senile deteriorations he describes "dementia
-senilis" and presbyophrenia. He also calls attention
-to the fact that Binswanger spoke of a "pre-senile
-dementia" occurring between the fortieth and fiftieth
-years of age and characterized by an emotional dulness
-and a diminished capacity for work. Bleuler speaks of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-the affective disturbances in advanced years as senile
-mania and melancholia, which he says may recover, the
-former frequently, the latter more rarely.</p>
-
-<p>The American Psychiatric Association has only attempted
-to cover the principal groupings of the characteristic
-senile forms. The differentiation of these conditions
-as suggested in the statistical manual is as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"A well defined type of psychosis which as a rule
-develops gradually and is characterized by the following
-symptoms: Impairment of retention (forgetfulness) and
-general failure of memory more marked for recent experiences;
-defects in orientation and a general reduction
-of mental capacity; the attention, concentration and
-thinking processes are interfered with; there is self-centering
-of interests, often irritability and stubborn opposition;
-a tendency to reminiscences and fabrications.
-Accompanying this deterioration there may occur paranoid
-trends, depressions, confused states, etc. Certain
-clinical types should therefore be specified, but these
-often overlap:</p>
-
-<p>"(a) Simple deterioration: Retention and memory
-defects, reduction in intellectual capacity and narrowing
-of interests; usually also suspiciousness, irritability and
-restlessness, the latter particularly at night.</p>
-
-<p>"(b) Presbyophrenic type: Severe memory and retention
-defects with complete disorientation; but at the
-same time preservation of mental alertness and attentiveness
-with ability to grasp immediate impressions and conversation
-quite well. Forgetfulness leads to absurd contradictions
-and repetitions; suggestibility and free fabrication
-are prominent symptoms. (The general picture
-resembles the Korsakow mental complex.)</p>
-
-<p>"(c) Delirious and confused types: Often in the early
-stages of the psychoses and for a long period the picture
-is one of deep confusion or of a delirious condition.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-"(d) Depressed and agitated types: In addition to
-the underlying deterioration there may be a pronounced
-depression and persistent agitation.</p>
-
-<p>"(e) Paranoid types: Well marked delusional
-trends, chiefly persecutory or expansive ideas, often accompany
-the deterioration and in the early stages may
-make the diagnosis difficult if the defect symptoms are
-mild.</p>
-
-<p>"(f) Pre-senile types: The so-called 'Alzheimer's
-disease.' An early senile deterioration which usually
-leads rapidly to a deep dementia. Reported to occur
-as early as the fortieth year. Most cases show an irritable
-or anxious depressive mood with aphasic or apractic
-symptoms. There is apt to be general resistiveness
-and sometimes spasticity.</p>
-
-<p>"(g) Other types."</p>
-
-<p>The frequency of senile cases is shown by the fact
-that of 84,143 admissions to the New York hospitals during
-a period of sixteen years, 12,017, or 14.2 per cent,
-were over sixty years of age, while 8.4 per cent were
-between sixty and seventy years old, and 4.5 per cent
-between seventy and eighty. Of 49,640 first admissions
-to the New York state hospitals during eight years
-4,724 cases, or 9.52 per cent, were diagnosed as senile
-psychoses. They constituted 9.63 per cent of the admissions
-in Massachusetts during 1919 and 10.61 per
-cent of the 18,336 admissions to twenty-one hospitals in
-fourteen other states. Of 70,987 admissions to all of the
-institutions referred to, 6,961, or 9.8 per cent, were senile
-psychoses.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">During a period of eight years in the New York state
-hospitals, when the present classification was not adhered
-to absolutely, 4,724 senile psychoses were divided
-into types as follows:&mdash;Simple deterioration, 52.01 per
-cent; presbyophrenia, 5.75 per cent; delirious and confused
-states, 12.99 per cent; depressed and agitated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-forms, 8.25 per cent; and paranoid varieties, 16.23 per
-cent. During the same period less than one per cent of
-presenile psychoses were reported. Since the Association's
-classification has been in use the same institutions
-show the following distribution of 1,351 senile psychoses
-during 1918 and 1919:&mdash;Simple deterioration, 56.24 per
-cent; presbyophrenia, 4.14 per cent; delirious and confused
-states, 13.53 per cent; depressed and agitated
-forms, 18.65 per cent; and paranoid varieties and presenile
-forms, less than one per cent. The senile psychoses
-in the Massachusetts hospitals during 1919 were
-divided as follows:&mdash;Simple deterioration, 56.94 per
-cent; presbyophrenia, 7.79 per cent; delirious and confused
-states, 7.45 per cent; depressed and agitated forms,
-7.11 per cent; paranoid conditions, 18.64 per cent; and
-presenile forms, 2.03 per cent. In nineteen hospitals in
-other states 1,823 cases were classified as follows:&mdash;Simple
-deterioration, 64.39 per cent; presbyophrenia,
-11.62 per cent; delirious and confused states, 9.59 per
-cent; depressed and agitated forms, 4.71 per cent; paranoid
-conditions, 6.91 per cent; and presenile forms, .27
-per cent. The total of 6,842 cases referred to above were,
-therefore, distributed as to type as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-
-<table class="a" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td05b"><i>Per Cent</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Simple deterioration</td>
- <td class="td08">55.52</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Presbyophrenia</td>
- <td class="td08">7.40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirious and confused states</td>
- <td class="td08">11.83</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Depressed and agitated forms</td>
- <td class="td08">7.26</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paranoid conditions</td>
- <td class="td08">13.85</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="p2ab">Four hundred and nineteen cases reported by the Ohio
-state hospitals in 1920 and not included in the above
-summary were shown as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
- <table class="a" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td05b"><i>Per Cent</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Simple deterioration</td>
- <td class="td08">49.88</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Presbyophrenic types</td>
- <td class="td08">6.20</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirious and confused forms</td>
- <td class="td08">18.61</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Depressed and agitated conditions</td>
- <td class="td08">7.39</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paranoid states</td>
- <td class="td08">15.75</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Presenile types</td>
- <td class="td08">2.14</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span></p>
-<p class="p2">These constituted in all 14.4 per cent of the 2,895 first
-admissions during the year, a much higher rate than
-that shown in other states. In analyzing these findings
-it should be borne in mind that the American classifications
-do not take into consideration presenile conditions
-as such, they being all reported with the senile psychoses,
-with the exception of involutional melancholia, which is,
-of course, shown separately.</p>
-
-<p>Southard<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> has called attention to the margin of error
-in the diagnosis of senile psychoses. Forty-two cases
-unanimously diagnosed as "senile dementia" were "reviewed
-clinically and anatomically, with a surprisingly
-low general percentage of accuracy (sixty-six per cent)
-where either cerebral atrophy or cortical arteriosclerosis
-or both were regarded as confirmatory, and with still
-lower percentages: (48 per cent) where cortical arteriosclerosis
-was considered essential and (38 per cent) where
-cerebral atrophy was considered essential for a correct
-diagnosis." It is significant that exactly one-third of the
-cases studied were found by Southard to more properly
-"belong in a group of acute psychoses or other mental
-diseases occurring in old age but not dependent on recognizable
-senile changes."</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES WITH CEREBRAL
-ARTERIOSCLEROSIS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sufficient weight has not been attached heretofore
-to the important influence of cerebral arteriosclerosis in
-the production of mental diseases. Unquestionably it
-has been a complicating factor in many of the generally
-recognized psychoses which has not been given adequate
-consideration. Its relation to involution melancholia as
-well as the presenile and senile disorders has been given
-a great deal of attention, but cannot as yet be clearly
-defined. Only in its syphilitic forms can it be looked
-upon as contributing to the clinical picture in general
-paresis. It is, however, productive of late deterioration
-in the chronic alcoholic conditions and in the manic-depressive
-psychoses occurring in advanced years. It plays a
-part frequently in the terminal stages of dementia
-praecox. In paranoia and the paranoid conditions
-of long standing it often becomes a factor to be reckoned
-with. Certainly in the differentiation of the epilepsies of
-the aged it must be taken into definite account.</p>
-
-<p>The importance of arteriosclerosis, a term used first
-by Lobstein some seventy-five years ago, has long been
-recognized. Osler in referring to this subject made the
-following interesting comment:&mdash;"To a majority of men
-death comes primarily or secondarily through this portal.
-The onset of what may be called physiological arteriosclerosis
-depends, in the first place, upon the quality of
-arterial tissue (vital rubber) which the individual has inherited
-and secondarily upon the amount of wear and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-tear to which he has subjected it. That the former plays
-the most important rôle is shown in the cases in which
-arteriosclerosis sets in early in life in individuals in
-whom none of the recognized etiological factors can be
-found. Entire families sometimes show this tendency
-to early arteriosclerosis, a tendency which cannot be
-explained in any other way than that in the make-up of
-the machine bad material was used for the tubing."</p>
-
-<p>Our present knowledge as to the relation of syphilis
-to this disease has not changed the significance of the
-observations made by Osler in any way. Heredity more
-than any other one factor undoubtedly determines the
-development of both senility and arteriosclerosis.
-"When," as Lambert<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> expresses it, "physiological involution
-anticipates in time or exceeds in direction, extent
-and severity normal senescence, the various senile
-and arteriosclerotic disorders are the result." It is as a
-rule only in the later stages of the disease when focal
-symptoms occur or a psychosis develops that hospital
-care becomes necessary. Practically any of the vessels
-of the brain may be involved and it frequently happens
-that more than one is affected either directly or indirectly.
-The neurological symptoms resulting depend entirely
-on the location and extent of the lesion. Lambert<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a>
-has made the following excellent anatomical
-classification of the more common arteriosclerotic processes:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2a">I. Incipient type.</p>
-<p class="p2a">II. Focal types.</p>
- <p class="p3">(a) Trunk disorders.</p>
- <p class="p4a">1. Basilar-carotids.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
- <p class="p3">(b) Branch disorders.</p>
- <p class="p4a">1. Inferior cerebellar.</p>
- <p class="p4a">2. Superior cerebellar.</p>
- <p class="p4a">3. Posterior cerebral.</p>
- <p class="p4a">4. Middle cerebral.</p>
- <p class="p4a">5. Anterior cerebral.</p>
- <p class="p3">(c) Twig disorders.</p>
- <p class="p4a">1. Medullary.</p>
- <p class="p4a">2. Cortical.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">Some reference should be made, perhaps, to the focal
-symptoms resulting from more or less sharply circumscribed
-lesions which are productive of certain fairly well
-known complexes, whether due to arteriosclerotic softenings,
-hemorrhages, or growths. These have been concisely
-summarized by Barker<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> somewhat as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>Frontal Lobes&mdash;Lesions of the left inferior frontal in
-righthanded persons cause motor aphasia. Subcortical
-involvements cause word dumbness. Disturbances in the
-anterior part of the frontal region are sometimes associated
-with the Witzelsucht of the German writers&mdash;a
-tendency towards joking and witticisms.</p>
-
-<p>Central and Paracentral Lobules&mdash;Contralateral sensory,
-motor symptoms or a combination of the two.
-Monoplegias, anesthesias and Jacksonian epilepsies are
-characteristic. Contralateral tactile agnosia and apraxia
-occur, especially in lesions of the left hemisphere. An
-involvement of the left side may also cause a homolateral
-apraxia, dyspraxia or a tactile agnosia.</p>
-
-<p>Parietal Lobes&mdash;Lesions in the anterior part cause
-contralateral somesthetic disturbances, tactile agnosia
-or apraxia. Involvement of the left angular gyrus may
-cause optic aphasia or alexia; if deep enough, hemianopsia
-results. The voluntary movement of the eye may be
-interfered with.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
-<p>Temporal Lobe&mdash;Lesions in the posterior half of the
-first temporal may cause Wernicke's sensory aphasia
-and a subcortical involvement, word deafness. Bilateral
-destruction of the first and transverse temporals causes
-cortical deafness. Extensive bilateral lesions in the lower
-part of these lobes result in mind deafness. Irritative
-lesions in the uncinate gyrus lead to hallucinations of
-taste and smell, with smacking of the lips and tongue
-movements.</p>
-
-<p>Island of Reil&mdash;Lesions of the anterior part cause
-symptoms resembling Broca's motor aphasia. Lesions
-of the posterior part result in symptoms suggesting
-Wernicke's sensory aphasia. Transcortical motor and
-sensory aphasia may result.</p>
-
-<p>Occipital Lobes&mdash;Lesions of the calcarine area give
-rise to hemianopsia, and bicortical involvements lead to
-cortical blindness. Bilateral lesions of the lateral surface
-may cause mind blindness.</p>
-
-<p>Disturbances in the centrum ovale may cause monoplegias
-or monoanesthesias, and lesions in the corpus
-callosum, apraxic symptoms. Characteristic of cerebellar
-lesions are ataxias and disturbances of equilibrium,
-often with vertigo and paroxysmal vomiting.</p>
-
-<p>An involvement of the corpora quadrigemina may
-cause pupillary changes, unilateral or bilateral paralysis
-of eye muscles, nystagmus, visual disturbances, deafness
-and ataxia or anesthesia.</p>
-
-<p>Lesions of the cerebral peduncles may give rise to
-very characteristic syndromes. If the tegmentum and
-pes pedunculi (basis pedunculi) are both involved, there
-may be a complete hemiplegia of the opposite side with
-an oculomotor paralysis on the same side (Weber-Gubler
-syndrome). Or there may be in addition to this a marked
-tremor in the limbs of the paralyzed side (Benedikt's
-syndrome). A unilateral oculomotor paralysis may be
-combined with a cerebellar ataxia (Nothnagel's syndrome).<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-The thalmic syndrome of Déjerine and Roussy shows
-a contralateral hemianesthesia, violent and persistent
-pains on the anesthetic side, hemiataxia, hemichorea or
-hemiathetosis, slight temporary hemiparesis and sometimes
-hyperesthesia. Lesions further back, possibly involving
-the internal capsule, may cause hemianesthesia
-of touch, pain and temperature senses.</p>
-
-<p>S. A. K. Wilson in 1912 called attention to a particularly
-important syndrome, designated by him as "progressive
-lenticular degeneration" and characterized by
-dysarthria, dysphagia, general tremors of the extremities,
-forced laughing and crying, muscular rigidities and
-contractures, with a slight intellectual impairment. Interesting
-features of this disease complex are that it is
-familial in type, but not hereditary, comes on early in
-life, usually progressing to a fatal termination, and is
-associated with a cirrhosis of the liver which is not alcoholic
-in origin. At autopsy degenerations of the nucleus
-lentiformis have been found. J. Ramsey Hunt in
-1916 called attention to the association of both paralysis
-agitans and Huntington's chorea with lesions in the
-globus pallidus. Oppenheim has recently differentiated
-a striatum syndrome to which he gave the name "dystonia
-musculorum." Difficulties in writing, tremors, disturbance
-of the gait, rigidities, tonic and clonic movements
-of the muscles and other neurological symptoms
-are present. Several cases reported by Abrahamson in
-1920 showed definite emotional disturbances. Cecile and
-Oskar Vogt have recently (1919) studied the striatum lesions
-from a standpoint of both pathology and symptomatology.
-As summarized by Lhermitte<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> their work
-shows that athetosis, paralysis agitans, Huntington's
-chorea, dystonia musculorum, probably paralysis agitans
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-and various other neurological syndromes are to be attributed
-directly to conditions involving the striate
-bodies. Prominent among these are softenings and hemorrhages
-which may result from arteriosclerosis. In
-view of these facts a careful study of the focal lesions
-associated with the arteriosclerotic disorders is exceedingly
-important.</p>
-
-<p>The pathological processes involved have been carefully
-studied by Heubner and others. He was originally
-of the opinion that cerebral arteriosclerosis was always
-of specific origin. Baumgarten, however, subsequently
-showed that this was not the case. The more characteristic
-changes in the larger vessels manifest themselves
-in the form of patches of atheromatous thickening so
-common at autopsy. As a result of degenerative changes
-in the elastica and media, and a consequent weakening
-of the vessel wall, intimal thickening takes place. This
-is not the circular, uniform, concentric involvement found
-in syphilitic processes but a localized proliferation of the
-intima at some one point. There may be an infiltration
-of colloid and calcareous material in the media. This
-leads to further intimal thickening. In the smaller vessels
-arteriocapillary fibrosis has been described&mdash;a uniform
-thickening of the vessel walls with a connective tissue
-formation. Endarteritis obliterans, first described
-by Friedländer in 1876, is probably always of syphilitic
-origin.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the vascular changes in the cerebral
-vessels Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> finds usually atheromatous changes
-in the aorta and its branches, particularly the coronaries,
-with ulcerations or calcareous plates, hypertrophy and
-dilatation of the heart, myocarditis, interstitial nephritis
-and infarctions of various organs. At autopsy the dura
-and pia are usually thickened and adherent, with a general
-atrophy of the cerebral convolutions. There are
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-often fresh hemorrhages under the membranes as well
-as cyst formations and dilatation of the brain ventricles.
-He particularly emphasizes a splitting of the elastica in
-the larger cerebral vessels with a thickening and tortuosity,
-fatty infiltration and calcareous deposits. Hyaline
-degeneration is common in the elastica and muscularis
-with fatty granular cells in the adventitia. Capillary
-aneurysms are often found. Glia proliferation is to be
-expected in the surrounding area. A condition described
-by Alzheimer as perivascular gliosis often occurs. There
-is a disappearance of the perivascular nervous elements
-with consequent proliferation of the neuroglia. In a
-general way Kraepelin differentiates several distinct
-pathological groups&mdash;a diffuse cortical involvement, circumscribed
-processes in the neighborhood of vessels,
-hemorrhages and softenings. There is also a loss of
-nerve fibres which are replaced by neuroglia. Binswanger
-has described a "chronic subcortical encephalitis"
-due to arteriosclerosis. This consists of an atrophy
-of the white matter due to an involvement of the deeper
-marrow vessels. Large gaps and lacunae are found in
-the course of the vessels. There is an extensive atrophy
-of the fibres and there may be occasional foci of softening.
-As a general rule involvement of the large vessels is
-liable to affect the medullary substance while sclerosis of
-the smaller vessels leads to cortical disturbances. It is
-also possible to have extensive lesions without mental
-symptoms and well developed psychoses with only a
-slight physical basis. The site of the damage to the
-vessels determines this. On the other hand, the mental
-condition may be due to cardiovascular complications resulting
-usually in anxiety psychoses. The symptomatology
-may be complicated by senility, alcoholism or
-syphilis.</p>
-
-<p>Clinically Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> divides the arteriosclerotic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-psychoses into deteriorations, or milder forms of mental
-enfeeblement, dementias, depressions, excitements, late
-epilepsies, and apoplectic dementia. In the milder forms
-there is a gradual change in the entire psychic personality,
-with a later development of more marked changes,
-either physical, mental or both. The early symptoms are
-a general reduction of the mental capacity and an impairment
-of memory. The patient tires easily and loses
-all evidences of energy, with no inclination to undertake
-anything new. Familiar names and dates are forgotten.
-Recent occurrences are particularly lost to memory. The
-real is confused with the false. In business the patient
-becomes careless and unreliable, overlooks important
-transactions and forgets appointments. There are often
-subjective feelings of impending illness. The mood becomes
-depressed, whining and tearful. Irritability and
-outbursts of anger occasionally appear, characterized by
-a marked emotional instability, varying rapidly from
-tears to laughter. Suicidal tendencies are sometimes
-noted. Mild confusional states may be induced by alcoholic
-indulgences. Early physical symptoms are headache,
-sensations of fulness and pressure in the head,
-followed by a feeling of dizziness, fatigue, exhaustion,
-debility, etc. Sooner or later, following a seizure of some
-kind, neurological signs appear&mdash;drooping of the mouth,
-lateral deviation of the tongue, weakness of an arm,
-dragging of one leg, loss of sensation on one side, ankle
-clonus, an increase, decrease or inequality of the patellar
-reflexes, and sometimes a Babinski reflex. The pupils
-are very likely to be unequal and sluggish in reaction.
-The features present a tired, sleepy expression and
-speech becomes tremulous and monotonous. There may
-be a difficulty in finding words, or the misuse of words.
-There are usually tremors of the fingers and movements
-are uncertain, the gait being unsteady. Romberg's
-symptom may be present. Dizzy spells and fainting attacks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-also occur, sometimes followed by genuine convulsions.
-Apoplectiform seizures may be observed, with
-unconsciousness for hours or days. These may be followed
-by sensory or motor aphasia, unilateral paralysis
-with or without disturbances of sensation, hemianopsia,
-alexia, agraphia, asymbolism or apraxia. Cardiac disturbances
-with anxieties are often complications. These
-apoplectiform and other severe attacks sometimes occur a
-long time after mental symptoms have appeared. They
-are likely to recur, mental deterioration progressing
-rapidly with the repetition of the seizures.</p>
-
-<p>Apprehension is much disturbed and memory weakened,
-in the advanced cases of deterioration. The patients
-cannot remember anything for more than a short
-time. They become disoriented as to time, place and
-person and forget their own names. Genuine "confabulation"
-sometimes appears. There are often confusional
-and delirious states. The mood is frequently depressed
-or anxious, sometimes irritable or quarrelsome and
-at times humorous. There is a group of cases showing
-genuine depressions, usually with hypochondriacal
-delusions, sometimes with delusions of persecution,
-self-accusation, and ideas of sinfulness. Even delusions
-of grandeur are observed. Hallucinations
-are not infrequent in these cases. States of excitement
-may intervene with occasional delusions and
-confused attacks. These excitements are usually of
-the agitated, restless type, sometimes with suicidal inclinations.
-Stuporous or even cataleptic states may follow.
-In the highest forms of excitement sensory or motor
-aphasia may develop, often with speech disturbances,
-sometimes of a genuine scanning type. Paraphasias are
-common. The writing is ataxic or paragraphic. Ideational
-or motor apraxia often is a symptom. Cyanoses
-and other evidences of general arteriosclerotic involvement
-appear. There may be an albuminuric retinitis.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-Albumen and sometimes sugar appear in the urine. The
-radials and temporals are thickened or hardened and
-cardiac murmurs are often found. Blood pressure is
-greatly increased in many instances, although Romberg
-found it in only ten per cent of his cases. Sleep is
-usually interfered with to a marked degree.</p>
-
-<p>In a certain number of the more advanced cases of
-arteriosclerosis late epilepsies appear. The attacks
-usually begin between the forty-fifth and sixty-fifth years.
-There may be fainting spells or genuine convulsions recurring
-at frequent intervals. These may be associated
-with brief periods of delirium or may even occur without
-loss of consciousness. Forgetfulness and mental
-enfeeblement soon appear in such cases. They also show
-physical changes with tremors, disturbed reflexes, paralyses,
-increased blood pressure, etc. Alcoholism seems to
-be a strongly predisposing factor in this form of arteriosclerotic
-disorder. Kraepelin found that the epileptic attacks
-almost invariably appeared in cases which showed
-a previous history of alcoholic excesses.</p>
-
-<p>In nearly half of his cases Kraepelin found apoplectiform
-attacks appearing without any marked psychosis
-preceding them. In some instances no mental symptoms
-appeared for many years. The attacks were, however,
-immediately followed, usually, by periods of confusion
-and clouding, sometimes of excitement and violence. The
-acute disturbance as a rule subsides rather quickly and
-clears up partially or completely. Usually there remains
-a memory defect, an increased fatigability and a depressed
-or irritable mood. These he refers to as cases
-of apoplectic deterioration or mental enfeeblement. Recurrent
-apoplectiform seizures may result in excitement,
-depressions or deliria. Gradual progressive deterioration
-is the usual picture. As a general rule the cases with
-marked excitements, depressions and deliria are of short
-duration and have a bad prognosis.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin finds that the arteriosclerotic psychoses
-appear a decade earlier than the senile psychoses. Less
-than one per cent developed at the age of forty; 2.7 per
-cent at forty-five; 3.7 per cent at fifty; 7.4 per cent at
-fifty-five; twenty-two per cent at sixty; twenty-two per
-cent at sixty-five; 18.57 per cent at seventy; twelve per
-cent at seventy-five, etc. In the cases observed at a particularly
-early age he believes heredity to be a very important
-factor. Seventy-one and five-tenths per cent of
-his cases were men. Sixty-two per cent of the men and
-fifty-three per cent of the women were less than sixty-five
-years of age. The epileptic and demented forms appear
-earlier than the apoplectiform variety. Arteriosclerotic
-involvement of the smaller vessels occurs earlier than
-that of the larger arteries. Kraepelin found alcoholism
-more common in the history of his cases than syphilis.
-He is uncertain whether specific infections can produce
-a genuine arteriosclerosis or not.</p>
-
-<p>Erb has shown that by the experimental injection of
-adrenalin into the blood stream artificial arteriosclerosis
-can be produced, with an increase of blood pressure, splitting
-of the elastica, thickening of the vessel walls and
-aneurysm formation. Thoma considers alcohol, tobacco,
-coffee, tea, and infectious poisons important causes.
-Cramer found the disease more common in innkeepers,
-actors, directors, officers, bankers and parliamentarians.
-Alcohol, syphilis, overwork and high living are important
-etiological factors. Kraepelin assumes the existence of
-certain metabolic products in the blood, possibly the result
-of infections which affect blood pressure and the
-structure of the vessel walls during a period of lowered
-resistance.</p>
-
-<p>The pathological changes associated with the arteriosclerotic
-psychoses are quite clearly demarcated. Clinical
-differentiations, however, are not so well established.
-There is some question as to the justification of the separate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-entities into which Kraepelin would divide the arteriosclerotic
-processes. For statistical purposes the Association's
-committee felt that a determination of the frequency
-of occurrence of the arteriosclerotic group as a
-whole is all that should be attempted at this time. The
-following suggestions were offered in the manual as to
-the delimitations of these <span class="no-break">conditions:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"The clinical symptoms, both mental and physical, are
-varied depending in the first place on the distribution and
-severity of the vascular cerebral disease and probably to
-some extent on the mental make-up of the person.</p>
-
-<p>"Cerebral physical symptoms, headaches, dizziness,
-fainting attacks, etc., are nearly always present, and
-usually signs of focal brain disease appear sooner or
-later (aphasia, paralysis, etc.).</p>
-
-<p>"The most important mental symptoms (particularly
-if the arteriosclerotic disease is diffuse) are impairment
-of mental tension, <i>i.e.</i>, interference with the capacity to
-think quickly and accurately, to concentrate and to fix
-the attention; fatigability and lack of emotional control
-(alternate weeping and laughing), often a tendency to
-irritability is marked; the retention is impaired and with
-it there is more or less general defect of memory, especially
-in the advanced stages of the disease, or after some
-large destructive lesion occurs.</p>
-
-<p>"Pronounced psychotic symptoms may appear in the
-form of depression (often of the anxious type), suspicions
-or paranoid ideas, or episodes of marked confusion.</p>
-
-<p>"To be included in this group are the psychoses following
-cerebral softening or hemorrhage, if due to arterial
-disease. (Autopsies in state hospitals show that in
-arteriosclerotic cases softening is relatively much more
-frequent than hemorrhage.)</p>
-
-<p>"Differentiation from senile psychosis is sometimes
-difficult particularly if the arteriosclerotic disease manifests<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-itself in the senile period. The two conditions may
-be associated; when this happens preference should be
-given in the statistical report to the arteriosclerotic disorder.</p>
-
-<p>"High blood pressure, although usually present, is not
-essential for the diagnosis of cerebral arteriosclerosis."</p>
-
-<p>In the 49,640 admissions to the New York state hospitals
-during a period of eight years the 2,318 cases
-diagnosed as psychoses with arteriosclerosis constituted
-4.67 per cent of the total number. In twenty-one
-hospitals in other states there were 18,336 admissions,
-of which 492, or 2.68 per cent, were cases of arteriosclerosis.
-On the other hand, the Massachusetts hospitals
-show 9.63 per cent of their first admissions during 1919
-as arteriosclerotic psychoses. There would appear to be
-no way to harmonize these dissimilar findings unless it
-is merely a question of differentiation between the senile
-psychoses and those due to arteriosclerosis. In a total
-of 70,987 admissions to all institutions, there were 3,100
-cases of arteriosclerotic psychoses, a percentage of 4.36.
-It is worthy of note that in all of the various groups of
-institutions the percentage of senile and arteriosclerotic
-cases combined is practically the same. This would
-strongly suggest varying standards of diagnosis which
-will undoubtedly be reconciled in time. It is only recently
-that any great amount of attention has been given to
-the psychoses due to arteriosclerosis and it must be confessed
-that there has been entirely too great a tendency
-to dismiss without further interest as senile psychoses
-all mental disturbances occurring in persons of advanced
-years. On the other hand, the custom of basing a diagnosis
-of arteriosclerotic psychosis on the mere presence
-of an increased blood pressure without the existence of
-any of the other symptoms which characterize that condition
-indicates, if nothing else, the necessity of a greater
-uniformity in our methods of diagnostic procedure.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">GENERAL PARALYSIS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>General paralysis of the insane, general paresis, or
-dementia paralytica, as it is variously known, from the
-standpoint of etiology, symptomatology and pathology,
-is unquestionably the most clearly differentiated and
-sharply circumscribed of the psychoses at this time. Its
-history, like its pathology, is inseparable from that of
-syphilis&mdash;a subject of never failing interest and importance,
-from the time of the first appearance of that word
-in a poem (Syphilidis, sive morbi Gallici) written by the
-Italian physician and poet Fracastoro in 1530. Guarinoni
-referred to epilepsies due to syphilis in the seventeenth
-century. Frequent allusions are made in the literature
-of that period to manifestations of the disease in
-the nervous system. Thomas Willis called attention to
-the association of paralysis with mental disorders as
-early as 1672. A form of mania due to syphilis was described
-by Sanché in 1777. Jelliffe found references in
-literature to a specific leptomeningitis in 1766 and paraplegias
-in 1771. Haslam, a pharmacist at the Bethlem
-Hospital, is said to have given a fairly accurate description
-of general paresis in 1798. A French writer, A. L.
-Bayle, is usually spoken of as having clearly differentiated
-the disease in 1822. The work of Calmeil, "De la
-Paralysie Consididérée chez les aliénés," in 1826, was, however,
-the first elaborate monograph ever written on this
-important psychosis and established its recognition as
-an entity. Griesinger looked upon it as a combination of
-different mental conditions. Esquirol is credited with
-having been the first to describe the speech defect now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-considered such an important symptom. Baillarger is
-said to have introduced the term dementia paralytica in
-1846.</p>
-
-<p>The etiology of the disease was a subject of controversy
-for many years. The early writers ascribed it to
-sexual excesses, masturbation, alcoholism, heredity, overwork,
-and various other causes. It was looked upon by
-some as one of the sequelae of syphilis and was described
-as a "meta syphilitic" disease by Möbius and a "para
-syphilitic" disorder by Fournier. It was noted by many
-as occurring only in the more intellectual and highly developed
-races and was therefore referred to by Krafft-Ebing
-as a disease of "syphilization and civilization."
-Both Bayle and Esquirol mentioned syphilis very casually
-in their writings. Sandras in 1852 spoke of it as one of
-the principal causes of general paresis. Its etiological
-importance was, however, first given serious consideration
-by Esmarch and Jessen, prominent Danish writers,
-in 1857. Their views were corroborated by Steenberg in
-1860 and by Kjellberg in 1863. The theory of an exclusively
-specific origin was not generally accepted, however,
-for many years. Rieger published elaborate statistics
-in 1886 showing that the incidence of general paresis
-was sixteen or seventeen times as great in syphilitics as
-it was in healthy persons. The fact that a definite history
-of infection was not available in many cases led to
-considerable doubt. Such eminent authorities as Charcot,
-Binswanger and Déjerine went so far as to deny that
-there was any relation between the two diseases. That
-some uncertainty was warranted by the information at
-hand is shown by the fact that Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> found a history
-of syphilis in seventy-eight per cent of his cases,
-while Sprengeler reported 41.5 per cent, Räcke 57.3 per
-cent, Torkel fifty-one per cent, Marcus seventy-six per
-cent, Houghberg 86.9 per cent, and Alzheimer over ninety
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-per cent. This is not at all surprising in view of the
-statement made by Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> that Hirschl could find a
-definite history of an initial lesion in only thirty-six per
-cent of his cases of tertiary syphilis. Hudovernig found
-that 42.3 per cent of the women suffering from syphilis
-did not know when they were infected. In discussing
-this subject in 1897 Krafft-Ebing reported the inoculation
-of nine paretics with syphilitic virus without the appearance
-of luetic symptoms in any instance, although
-reinfections have been mentioned by other authorities.</p>
-
-<p>One of the first advances which contributed materially
-to the ultimate solution of the general paresis problem
-was the study of the cerebrospinal fluid by Widal, Sicard
-and others after the introduction of lumbar puncture by
-Quincke in 1890. This led eventually to discoveries which
-were of great diagnostic importance. The isolation of
-the spirochaeta pallidum, now known as the treponema
-pallidum, by Schaudinn in 1905 settled the question for
-all time as to the cause of syphilis. The adaptation of
-the principle of complement fixation, the so-called Bordet-Gengon
-phenomenon, to the study of syphilitic fluids by
-Wassermann, Neisser and Bruck in 1906 practically removed
-all doubt as to the relation between that disease
-and general paresis. The demonstration of the treponema
-in the cortex of paretics by Moore and Noguchi
-in 1913 was practically the only other contribution necessary.
-They have since been found in the cerebrospinal
-fluid. Notwithstanding the fact that general paresis
-must now be looked upon as being a manifestation of
-syphilis beyond all peradventure of a doubt, it is nevertheless
-true that we are unable to explain why that disease
-does not always yield to specific treatment. This
-is undeniably the case at this time. Just why this should
-be so cannot be explained in the light of our present
-knowledge. It is, however, presumably for the same reason
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-that tabes and other diseases of the cord and nervous
-system, the specific origin of which cannot logically be
-questioned, are equally resistant to salvarsan and mercury,
-whatever that reason may be.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the findings of the Wassermann reaction
-became evident, renewed efforts on the part of clinicians
-to find a cure for general paresis naturally followed.
-One of the first suggested was the Swift-Ellis treatment.
-This was based on the injection of salvarsanized
-blood serum into the subdural space of the spinal canal.
-Results were exceedingly encouraging for a while, but
-time showed that this was not the solution of the problem.
-Intravenous salvarsan administration was next
-tried. This, too, gave excellent results at first. The
-cases which were apparently cured, however, eventually
-relapsed sooner or later in almost every instance. The
-intraspinous use of salvarsan in minute doses has been
-no more successful than the Swift-Ellis method. Intracranial
-subdural treatments have been tried and salvarsan
-has even been injected directly into the lateral ventricles.
-The logical conclusion is either that the destruction
-of the nervous tissue has already reached a stage
-which is beyond repair or that the treatment does not
-reach the site of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>Clinically we are on much safer ground. In his third
-edition Krafft-Ebing<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> referred to dementia paralytica
-as "periencephalomeningitis diffusa," the term originally
-employed by Calmeil. "Clinically this disease is
-manifested as a rule as a chronic disease of the brain
-with vasomotor, psychic, and motor, functional disturbances,
-progressive in course, with a duration of from two
-to three years and nearly always a fatal termination."</p>
-
-<p>Régis,<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a>
-before the cause of the disease was definitely
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-determined, defined general paralysis as a "cerebral disorder,
-sometimes cerebro-spinal (diffuse chronic interstitial
-meningo-myelo-encephalitis) essentially characterized
-by progressive symptoms of dementia and paralysis
-(paralytic dementia) with which are frequently associated
-various accessory symptoms, and especially an
-insanity of the maniacal, melancholic, or circular type
-(paralytic insanity)."</p>
-
-<p>Since the time the disease was described by Bayle,
-general paresis has usually been spoken of as being represented
-clinically by three different stages. White<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a>
-speaks of a prodromal period, one of full development
-and a terminal stage. In the first period he emphasizes
-the importance of physical symptoms, more particularly
-the oculomotor and tendon reflex disturbances. These
-include the sluggish reaction to light (28.3 per cent) or
-an actual Argyll-Robertson pupil (45 per cent), with an
-increased, decreased or absent knee-jerk, the exaggerated
-form being the most common. The mental symptoms
-may be entirely overlooked in the first stage. There is
-a gradual progressive deterioration of the personality,
-with a loss of efficiency, impairment of memory, and failure
-of judgment. There may be episodes of excitement,
-depression or delirium, with or without hallucinations
-and delusions, the latter being either hypochondriacal or
-grandiose. "The demented type, without marked delusions
-or sensory falsifications, is the truly typical variety
-of the disease and the dementia the basal element of
-all forms" (White). There may be an incipient speech
-disorder and beginning tremor.</p>
-
-<p>Characteristic of the second stage is a marked increase
-of the physical symptoms already described, together
-with the appearance of seizures. Muscular weakness
-develops and the patient often shows a marked gain
-in weight. The mental symptoms are merely an exacerbation
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-of those shown in the first stage. The expansive
-variety constitutes the classic form so often spoken of.
-There may be agitations, depressions, alternations of
-these symptoms or even paranoid forms.</p>
-
-<p>In the third stage there is a continued exaggeration
-of the physical signs of the disease with an advancing
-mental deterioration. The patient becomes helpless and
-practically speechless, contractures and bedsores develop,
-and death often occurs as the result of an unusually violent
-seizure. The description of this disease in the three
-traditional stages so often referred to is practically
-without significance and of very questionable value. It
-is, of course, a well-known fact that the disease may progress
-rapidly to a termination in two or three years or
-may continue for an almost indefinite period of time.
-It may manifest itself, furthermore, in various ways.
-The physical signs show much greater constancy than the
-mental symptoms.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> describes demented, depressed, expansive
-and agitated forms of general paresis. The "demented"
-form he finds to be much more common than the
-others. This is characterized by a progressive mental deterioration
-with "paralysis." The onset is marked by a
-poverty of thought, forgetfulness, moodiness, instability
-and indifference. Consciousness gradually becomes somewhat
-clouded and the patient more or less disoriented.
-Transitory delusions supervene. These are of a depressive
-type, somatic or expansive in nature. The delusional
-ideas as a general rule are rather childish. Memory
-disorder becomes conspicuous and delirious excitements
-occur at times. All of this leads to a gradual deterioration.
-Speech defects appear sooner or later and conduct
-disorders are common. Kraepelin finds that fifty-three
-per cent of his Heidelberg cases were of the demented
-form. At Munich they constituted fifty-six per cent of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-the men and seventy-three per cent of the women. Forty-four
-per cent of the cases died within the first two years.</p>
-
-<p>The "depressive" form of paresis as described by
-Kraepelin is characterized by emotional depression or
-anxiety with delusions of various kinds. It may begin
-with a general sensation of illness and a gradual weakness
-of memory or intellect followed by symptoms of
-mental dulness. The unpleasant ideas are hypochondriacal
-in nature and often of an extravagant type. The delusions
-are quite frequently somatic in origin. Sometimes
-these are associated with self-accusation or there
-may be complaints of persecution. Hallucinations occur
-at times. In spite of this deplorable state of affairs a
-marked indifference on the part of the patient is the
-rule. Excitement, violence or suicidal impulses nevertheless
-occur, and stuporous states are described. Kraepelin
-found that the depressive form constituted twelve
-per cent of his cases at Heidelberg. He is of the opinion
-that the duration is short, much more so than in some of
-the other types of the disease. Fifty-eight and six-tenths
-per cent died within the first two years. Convulsions,
-however, were less frequent.</p>
-
-<p>The "expansive form," according to Kraepelin, may
-begin with an initial depression or show excitement early.
-Megalomanic symptoms of the most extravagant variety
-soon appear. The marked mental weakness is, however,
-very manifest. Hallucinations of sight and hearing are
-frequently present but transitory. The mood is usually
-happy, although hypochondriacal ideas occur for short
-periods now and then. Excitability is more common,
-sometimes with unusual violence. The course tends to
-a complete deterioration, with occasional exacerbations
-of excitement. Kraepelin found that the expansive form
-constituted about thirty per cent of his Heidelberg cases.
-Convulsions were less frequent and remissions more common
-than in other types. He found that this form of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-disease, moreover, occurred later in life. Forty per
-cent died within the first two years. Some cases, on the
-other hand, were of long duration; one of seven, another
-of eight, and one of fourteen years. He also noted mixed
-varieties with alternations between excitement and depression.</p>
-
-<p>The "agitated" form as described by Kraepelin is
-that type in which extreme excitements predominate. It
-is often of sudden onset. Grandiose ideas, even more
-extravagant than those of the expansive form, appear.
-A flight of ideas may be observed at times and stupor
-often intervenes. The most severe cases are those which
-have been referred to by some writers as "galloping"
-paresis. An actual delirium may lead to an early termination
-in death. The agitated type constituted 6.3 per
-cent of Kraepelin's cases. He finds this condition somewhat
-analogous to the delirious states due to alcoholism.</p>
-
-<p>Remissions are more common in the agitated and expansive
-forms of the disease and may vary in duration
-from a few months in some instances to one of fourteen
-years reported by Dobrschansky. Nissl confirmed the
-diagnosis of paresis at autopsy in a case observed by
-Tuczek which had been stationary for nearly twenty
-years. Alzheimer reported another with a known duration
-of thirty-two years. Kraepelin has found, however,
-that fifty per cent of his paretics die within the first two
-years. He reports unequal pupils in from fifty to sixty
-per cent of those examined. He also finds that pupillary
-irregularity is one of the earliest physical signs in many
-individuals. Complete loss of light reaction was found
-in from fifty to sixty per cent of all cases, with a reduced
-range of reaction in from thirty to forty per cent. He
-found epileptiform or other attacks present in from
-thirty to forty per cent of those studied. Decreased or
-absent patellar reflexes were noted about twice as often
-as were increased reflexes. In from two-thirds to three-fourths<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-of all cases he found both the posterior column
-and lateral tracts of the cord involved.</p>
-
-<p>The characteristic physical signs noted in all textbooks
-are described in detail by Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> as common
-to all of the clinical forms of the disease. The inequality,
-irregularity and immobility of the pupils, the speech defect,
-difficulty in writing, tremor of the lips, facial muscles
-and tongue, the marked changes in both superficial
-and deep reflexes, the alterations in the gait, the muscular
-incoordination, the presence of the Babinski reflex
-or ankle clonus, the sensory, motor, vasomotor and
-trophic disturbances constitute a combination of physical
-signs which is to be found practically nowhere else
-within the domain of psychiatry. The seizures, either
-epileptiform, apoplectiform or resembling syncopes, are
-almost pathognomonic when taken into consideration
-with the physical signs alone.</p>
-
-<p>The pressure of the cerebrospinal fluid is from three
-to five times as great as in normal individuals. The
-albumen content of the fluid is increased about six times
-(Kraepelin). The increase in the globulin content has
-been very frequently referred to in the literature of general
-paresis. Kraepelin states that it also occurs in tabes,
-syphilis, brain abscess, occasional cases of extra medullary
-tumors, multiple sclerosis and in some infectious diseases.
-He attaches a great deal of importance to the increase
-in the cellular elements of the spinal fluid.
-"Cases with repeated normal findings are so rare that
-the correctness of the diagnosis may be justly doubted."
-The Wassermann findings no longer require comment.
-The colloidal gold test of Lange is equally well known.
-Nowhere else in psychiatric procedure does the laboratory
-render such valuable diagnostic assistance as is the
-rule in cases of general paresis. A positive Wassermann
-reaction in the spinal fluid, the presence of an increase
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-in the albumen and globulin content, with a marked
-lymphocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid and a positive
-gold test, is quite sufficient evidence on which to base a
-definite diagnosis. The results of an examination of the
-spinal fluid for diagnostic purposes at the time of autopsy
-are highly unreliable. An increase in the cell count,
-which may be misleading, is found in the spinal fluid of
-non-paretics in all cases after death. The number of
-cells depends entirely on the time of examination. It is
-not at all unusual to find from one to three hundred per
-cubic millimeter when a count is made from twenty-four
-to forty-eight hours after the death of the patient.<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> Another
-interesting fact is that the presence of sugar always
-shown by Fehling's solution during life cannot be demonstrated
-postmortem, at least after the lapse of a few
-hours.<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> The significance of this change is not clear.
-Nor is the increase in the globulin content of the spinal
-fluid, when taken alone, pathognomonic of either general
-paresis or syphilis, as was pointed out in 1909.<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> One of
-the most elaborate studies ever made of the spinal fluid,
-that of F. W. Mott, shows that this increase is due to
-degenerative processes of the nervous system which may
-be due to a variety of causes.<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a></p>
-
-<p>In no other psychosis do we find such clear-cut pathological
-findings at autopsy as are readily demonstrable
-in general paresis. We are very largely indebted to the
-exhaustive researches of Nissl and Alzheimer, (1904)<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a>
-for our information on this subject. Macroscopically
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-adhesions of the dura to the calvarium and of the pia to
-the cortical substance are quite common. Opacities of the
-meninges are practically always present. Pachymeningitis
-hemorrhagica, externa or interna, is common, often
-with the formation of extensive hemorrhagic membranes.
-Ependymitis may be readily observed in the floor of the
-fourth and lateral ventricles. There is usually a reduction
-in the general brain weight, with atrophy of various
-parts, usually one side or the other of the cerebrum. The
-sulci are widened and the frontal lobes are often noticeably
-smaller in size. Less frequently the temporal, parietal
-or occipital regions are affected. Often there are
-localized foci of atrophy with cyst formation. The ventricles
-are frequently widely dilated, with an increase of
-cerebrospinal fluid.</p>
-
-<p>Microscopic examination always shows a more or
-less diffuse leptomeningitis with a markedly thickened
-pia infiltrated with lymphocytes and plasma cells. In
-the superficial layers of the cortex there is a neuroglia
-proliferation with characteristic "spider cells." There
-is an obvious disturbance of the normal layering of the
-cortex which is very striking. The adventitia of the vascular
-walls shows an extensive infiltration by lymphocytes
-and particularly by plasma cells which are often
-very numerous. Rod cells or "stäbchenzellen" as described
-by Alzheimer are very noticeable as are also satellite
-cells or free nuclei. The neurones are often diminished
-in number and frequently show the "acute" or "grave"
-alterations described by Nissl, as well as shrinkage,
-sclerosis, pigmentary deposits, vacuolization, etc. The
-characteristic axonal alteration originally described by
-Turner as occurring in central neuritis is sometimes observed.
-Degeneration of the nerve fibres may be
-brought out by proper staining processes. Intimal
-thickening of the vessel walls and a capillary proliferation
-or budding should also be mentioned. Foci of softening<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-sometimes are to be found in the cortex. The presence
-of occasional gummata is now conceded, although formerly
-denied by Alzheimer. The changes in the cerebellum
-are not essentially different, but are usually not
-so conspicuous. In the cord a pachymeningitis and leptomeningitis
-are usually present, as well as the vascular
-changes described above. The important findings, however,
-are the degeneration of the posterior columns and
-lateral tracts, or mixed forms involving both of these.
-Owing doubtless to defects in staining technique, the
-demonstration of the treponema is difficult and unsatisfactory.
-It must be admitted that some of the above histopathological
-changes in themselves, the cell alterations,
-for instance, do not, when considered alone, prove the
-existence of general paresis. The whole picture as shown
-by the microscope, however, leaves no room for argument.
-The postmortem diagnosis is absolutely conclusive.</p>
-
-<p>A consideration of the subject of general paresis
-without some reference to the juvenile form, first described
-by Clouston in 1877, would be manifestly incomplete.
-Although this term may be applied to a type of
-the disease acquired in childhood, it is usually used as
-referring to hereditary syphilis. Symptoms generally
-appear at or before the age of puberty. As a general
-rule the child is more or less defective mentally from
-birth, although this is not always true. Ordinarily the
-course of the disease is one of progressive deterioration,
-with an occasional episode of excitement. Convulsive
-seizures are frequent, and contractures are often noted.
-These cases are likely to be mistaken for idiocy and overlooked.
-The duration usually extends over a period of
-several years. The pathology is practically the same as
-that of the adult form of the disease. Almost invariably
-a positive Wassermann is obtained on examining the
-blood of the parents. It is equally interesting to note<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-that the children of syphilitic parents often show a positive
-Wassermann reaction without any evidence of paresis,
-or at least for some time before it develops.</p>
-
-<p>The only question remaining at this time is whether
-general paresis and cerebral syphilis are separate and
-distinct disease entities. For many years this was held
-to be the case. Certainly gummata and other syphilitic
-processes are to be found in the brain where there is no
-such pathological picture as characterizes general paresis.
-In any event the latter must be recognized as a very
-well defined form of syphilis of the nervous system. In
-view of the very definite etiology, symptomatology and
-pathology of general paresis, the various clinical differentiations
-of Kraepelin and other writers are looked upon
-by many as not being of very great importance. In any
-and all clinical types, however described, we are unquestionably
-dealing with the same sharply circumscribed disease
-process. This subject is one of academic interest
-only.</p>
-
-<p>The American Psychiatric Association in its classification
-of psychoses made no attempt to differentiate
-types. For purposes of statistical study the following
-suggestions appear in the manual:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The range of symptoms encountered in general
-paralysis is too great to be reviewed here in detail. As
-to mental symptoms, most stress should be laid on the
-early changes in disposition and character, judgment
-defects, difficulty about time relations and discrepancies
-in statements, forgetfulness and later on a diffuse memory
-impairment. Cases with marked grandiose trends
-are less likely to be overlooked than cases with depressions,
-paranoid ideas, alcoholic-like episodes, etc.</p>
-
-<p>"Mistakes of diagnosis are most apt to be made in
-those cases having in the early stages pronounced psychotic
-symptoms and relatively slight defect symptoms,
-or in cases with few definite physical signs. Lumbar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-puncture should always be made if there is any doubt
-about the diagnosis. A Wassermann examination of the
-blood alone is not sufficient as this does not tell us
-whether or not the central nervous system is involved."</p>
-
-<p>A study of the statistics of the thirteen New York
-state hospitals in the "pre-Wassermann" days and before
-we had acquired our present accurate knowledge of
-the pathology of general paresis shows that there were
-84,152 admissions during the fourteen years ending on
-October 1, 1888. Of this number 5,697, or 6.76 per cent,
-were diagnosed as general paresis. In the same hospitals,
-from 1912 to 1919 inclusive, 6,374 cases of general paresis
-were reported,&mdash;12.71 per cent of the 49,640 first admissions.
-During the years 1918 and 1919 that disease constituted
-13.19 per cent of all admissions. This apparent
-increase undoubtedly is due to the fact that modern
-methods have materially improved facilities for accuracy
-of diagnosis. It is not at all probable that the admission
-rate has doubled during the period in question for any
-other reason. In the Massachusetts hospitals during the
-year 1919, only 7.90 per cent of the first admissions were
-diagnosed as general paresis. There was, however, an
-unusually high rate of cerebral syphilis. In twenty-one
-hospitals in fourteen other states, reports based on the
-present classification show a total of 18,336 admissions,
-mostly in 1917, 1918 and 1919. Of this number 1,233, or
-6.72 per cent, were cases of general paresis. Thus, in a
-total of 70,987 admissions based on the present classification
-of psychoses as used by the American Psychiatric
-Association there were 7,845 cases of general paresis in
-all,&mdash;a percentage of 11.05. It is, of course, a well-known
-fact that general paresis is largely a psychosis of densely
-populated communities. This is readily shown by the
-New York statistics. During the year 1919, 9.6 per cent
-of the admissions at Binghamton were cases of general
-paresis. The percentage at Buffalo was 15.5; at Gowanda,
-17.3; Hudson River (Poughkeepsie), 9.0; at Middletown,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-3.7; Rochester, 8.6; St. Lawrence (Ogdensburg),
-9.2; Utica, 10.1; and Willard, 13. In the institutions
-caring for the insane of New York City 16.3 per cent
-were reported at the Manhattan State Hospital, 13.5
-per cent at Kings Park, and 14.7 per cent at Central Islip.
-The percentage at the other institutions, except at Buffalo
-and Gowanda, which care almost entirely for residents
-of the city of Buffalo, is determined very largely
-by the transfer of patients from the hospitals of New
-York City and the metropolitan district. General paresis
-constitutes approximately ten per cent of the commitments
-in the city of Boston. On the other hand, we find
-an admission rate of 2.3 per cent for the Vermont State
-Hospital (1917 and 1918), 1.5 per cent for the Central
-State Hospital, Virginia (1919), 2.5 per cent for the
-Columbia State Hospital (South Carolina) (1918), and
-a period of two years at the Spencer State Hospital,
-West Virginia (1917 and 1918) with 262 admissions and
-no cases of general paresis. Of 2,895 first admissions reported
-by the Ohio state hospitals for the year ending
-June 30, 1920, 438, or 15.12 per cent, were cases of general
-paresis. It is interesting, at least, to note that
-Letelier<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> showed an admission rate for this disease of
-seven per cent at the Casa de Orates at Santiago, Chili.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES WITH CEREBRAL SYPHILIS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The indications are at the present time that the psychiatry
-of the future will not deal with a consideration
-of general paralysis and cerebral syphilis, as such, but
-will differentiate preferably between parenchymatous
-and interstitial, or mesoblastic, syphilitic processes of
-the nervous system. The retention of the designation
-general paresis is little, if anything, more than a concession
-to the claims of tradition. Cerebral syphilis may be
-said in a general way at this time to include all syphilitic
-involvements of the brain other than general paresis,
-which must be accorded the precedence due to priority
-of recognition if nothing else. In the light of
-our present knowledge we may speak in rather definite
-terms in considering cerebral syphilis from
-the standpoint of pathology. On an anatomical basis
-it is usually divided into three forms,&mdash;the meningitic,
-the endarteritic and the gummatous types.
-It is, of course, not to be understood that these represent
-separate and distinct processes. Combined forms are
-nearly always to be expected and the different types practically
-always coexist more or less.</p>
-
-<p>The onset of the disease may be expected anywhere
-from one to ten or even fifteen years from the date of the
-initial lesion. The early appearance of cerebral symptoms
-would indicate brain syphilis as a general rule
-rather than general paresis. Oppenheim<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> in his second
-edition says that cerebral syphilis often develops within
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
-a year after infection, a majority of the cases being noted
-within two years. He finds it a very rare occurrence
-after ten years. "Because," as Barker<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a> puts it, "of the
-lawlessness of the occurrence of syphilitic lesions in the
-central nervous system, all clinical classifications of these
-cases are based only on the predominance of certain
-associations of lesions." Certainly the pathology of the
-disease is quite varied in its manifestations.</p>
-
-<p>The meningeal form is the one most often encountered.
-This may appear on the convexity or on the base
-of the brain and is spoken of as being either localized
-or diffuse in character. It may or may not be associated
-with gummatous formations or cortical vascular involvement.
-The essential process is a leptomeningitis. The
-pia is thickened, opaque and adherent to the cortex. The
-microscope shows the presence of inflammatory elements
-consisting largely of lymphocytes and plasma cells which
-may be confined entirely to the meninges or may extend
-downward to the superficial cortical layers directly or
-by extension along the adventitial sheaths of the vessels.
-An examination of the cortex, however, shows a
-limitation of this invasion to the immediate neighborhood
-of the meninges. The cortical involvement, in other
-words, is entirely secondary and is not the important
-part of the pathological picture that it always is in general
-paresis. The meningeal condition is practically the
-same in the two diseases but more likely to be localized
-in syphilitic processes. Dunlap<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> calls attention to the
-important fact that in a group of cases occurring many
-years after infection he found involvements of the deeper
-cortical layers strongly suggesting general paresis pathologically
-and impossible of differentiation clinically. In
-these cases, even in the deep cortical vessel walls, occasional
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-lymphoid and plasma cells were found, as well as
-typical syphilitic endarteritis in some instances. There
-is frequently, in addition to the simple meningeal involvement
-at the base, a widespread gummatous infiltration of
-the pia-arachnoid or in some instances numerous miliary
-granulomas. This is especially common in the region
-of the chiasm and may involve the origin of various
-cranial nerves, obviously in such cases determining the
-symptomatology to be expected. The optic and oculomotor
-nerves particularly are affected. The large vessels
-at the base are often involved either by syphilitic inflammatory
-processes or by direct invasion of their
-walls by gummas. An extensive specific meningo-encephalitis
-may lead either to foci or extensive areas of
-actual softening.</p>
-
-<p>The endarteritis which occurs in syphilis is characteristic
-and diagnostic. This has been studied exhaustively
-by Heubner. The smaller vessels show an infiltration
-of lymphoid and plasma cells in their adventitia, as
-well as in the perivascular lymph spaces. The larger
-vessels show a great thickening of the intima which is
-consecutive, or, as Lambert described it, "girdling" in
-character. This is associated with a splitting of the membrana
-elastica. The proliferated intimal tissue is very
-susceptible to degenerative processes. Thrombosis and
-the formation of anemic infarctions may follow the obliteration
-of the vascular channels. The involvement of
-the larger vessels may lead to very distinctive focal symptoms.
-Thus, as Barker<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> has pointed out, there may
-be an obliterating process in the middle cerebral with
-hemiplegia and aphasia, invasion of the basilar artery
-with pontile or bulbar symptoms, or an involvement of
-the posterior cerebral may lead to hemianesthesia or
-hemianopsia, while an affection of the vertebral may
-show a unilateral bulbar paralysis with hemianesthesia
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-of the same side and a hemiplegia of the opposite side.
-The extensive involvements of the base are usually meningeal,
-with gumma formation and with a secondary endarteritis
-in addition. Large solitary gummata may,
-moreover, occur practically anywhere in the brain, although
-they are somewhat unusual. On microscopical
-examination they show a characteristic infiltration of
-the periphery and a caseous center. They are more
-likely to occur in the course of a large vessel.</p>
-
-<p>The symptomatology of brain syphilis necessarily
-varies with the nature, extent and location of the lesion.
-In the earlier stages of a diffuse meningitis the prominent
-symptoms to be expected first are headache and dizziness.
-In an individual with a definite specific history a persistence
-of such symptoms should suggest salvarsan therapy.
-Vomiting is a common complication. Cranial nerve palsies,
-optic neuritis or hemiplegia in such a case would, of
-course, be conclusive. Stuporous, confused or delirious
-states may occur, with or without hallucinations. When
-the syphilitic process is an extensive one with a widespread
-meningitis or gummatous involvement of the base,
-numerous focal symptoms are to be expected. Choked
-disc, optic tract lesions, paralysis of the ocular muscles,
-facial neuralgias, facial palsies, deafness, or anesthesias
-may occur. Mental deterioration naturally advances
-with the progress of the disease, but the personality is
-much better preserved than in general paresis. Periods
-of unconsciousness are not infrequent and convulsive attacks
-may appear. These may be general or local and
-paralyses often follow. These may assume the form of
-a hemiplegia or may involve only certain groups of muscles.
-Ptosis is often noted. Paralysis of other eye muscles
-is common, and pupillary rigidity is sometimes a
-symptom. Hemianopsia and diplopia are often observed:
-An important feature of the disease is the fact that these
-conditions are more or less transitory and rarely become
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>
-permanent. Apoplectiform attacks followed by hemiplegia
-are results of gummatous growth or may be associated
-with areas of softening. These are due to vascular
-disturbances. Aphasia is not an unusual occurrence.
-Hemiplegias appearing suddenly in individuals under
-forty years of age are likely to be of specific origin.
-Epilepsies developing in later years should always be
-viewed with suspicion. The Korsakow symptom complex
-has been found in some cases of brain syphilis.
-Memory defect is present in most instances. When a
-marked mental deterioration takes place it is usually late
-in the disease. Argyll-Robertson pupils are infrequent in
-cerebral syphilis. Speech defect is practically never so
-conspicuous as it is in general paresis. Writing difficulties
-are also much less marked. Euphoria and grandiose
-delusions occasionally occur in brain syphilis but much
-less frequently than in general paresis. Hemiplegias,
-when they occur, are much more likely to be permanent
-than they are in general paresis. Paranoid complexes
-are sometimes clinical features of the disease and if they
-persist strongly suggest syphilis rather than paresis.</p>
-
-<p>There should be a positive Wassermann reaction in
-the blood serum of both diseases. It is more persistent,
-however, in the syphilitic form. In the spinal fluid the
-reverse is the case and negative results are often noted
-in cerebral syphilis. There is usually some increase
-sooner or later in the albumen and globulin content in
-both diseases. There may be a lymphocytosis in both,
-although usually much greater in general paresis. A
-typical colloidal gold reaction is more indicative of general
-paresis than syphilitic conditions. Several clinical
-groupings have been proposed. Plant, for instance,
-speaks of various forms of mental deterioration, pseudo-paresis,
-paranoid types, epileptiform varieties, symptomatic
-disturbances and affective reactions suggesting
-manic-depressive insanity. The important contribution<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
-made by Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> to the literature of this subject is
-worthy of careful study. He describes a syphilitic neurasthenia,
-a mental disturbance due to the psychic effect
-of the disease, and various conditions resulting from
-gummatous growths. His most important group is a
-syphilitic pseudo-paralysis, which he divides into a simple
-dementia, delirious forms, expansive types and a variety
-showing the characteristic Korsakow syndrome. He also
-speaks of syphilitic apoplexies and epilepsy, tabetic psychoses
-and syphilitic paranoid conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Syphilitic neurasthenia as described by Kraepelin is
-an affection which is likely to occur early in the disease
-and manifest itself shortly after the initial infection. In
-the milder forms, evidences of nervousness appear,&mdash;difficulty
-of thought, irritability, disturbances of sleep,
-pressure in the head, with indefinite and changeable abnormal
-sensations and vague pains. Later, feelings of
-anxiety, depression, dizziness, mental dulness, a difficulty
-in finding words, transient weaknesses, disturbances of
-sensation, nausea and a slight rise of temperature are observed.
-He admits that there is some question as to
-whether this constitutes a clinical entity and if so,
-whether it is directly due to the infectious process or is
-to be attributed to psychic disturbances. Nervous reactions
-of various kinds are to be found in syphilitics without
-psychosis. Thus, Meyer in sixty-one cases of secondary
-syphilis found eighteen with sluggish pupils, thirty-two
-with increased reflexes, and twelve with general
-nervous manifestations such as headache, vertigo, etc.,
-appearing shortly after the period of infection. In only
-five of these patients were there any evidences of an
-organic disease. In twelve tertiary cases he found indications
-of an involvement of the nervous system in only
-two. In thirty examinations following lumbar puncture
-a lymphocytosis and an abnormal protein content were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
-observed. Buttino, in a study of thirty syphilitics, reported
-that fourteen showed a diminished light reaction
-within one year of the time of infection. Later, after
-unmistakable symptoms of cortical involvement have
-existed for some time, neurasthenic complexes are common.
-These take the form of a difficulty of thought, absentmindedness,
-forgetfulness, and a reduction of interests.
-The mood may be irritable, surly, depressed, anxious,
-fearful, and changeable, showing at the same time
-considerable indifference and dulness. Some are quiet
-and reserved while others are excited and violent. Severe
-headaches may be common, more often at night.
-There are also occasional attacks of dizziness or fainting,
-disturbances of sensation, sleeplessness, sensitiveness
-to alcohol, and occasional diplopia. These are preliminary
-to more severe disturbances, which simulate
-nervous exhaustion, and are not strikingly unlike the
-earlier stages of general paresis. They may be differentiated
-by examination of the spinal fluid.</p>
-
-<p>Another group of cases is characterized by conditions
-due to an increased intracranial pressure. These are
-marked by thoughtlessness, dulness, and indifference terminating
-in a complete lethargy and somnolence, during
-which the patient occasionally demonstrates that he is not
-so badly damaged mentally as he appears. Physically
-there may be weakness, twitchings, fainting spells, convulsions,
-ataxias, paralyses, dysesthesias, choked disc,
-etc. The basis of this disturbance is a gummatous
-growth, its location, of course, largely determining the
-symptoms. Kraepelin suggests the possibility of getting
-this disease picture in a syphilitic as the result of a
-growth of some other kind&mdash;a glioma or endothelioma.</p>
-
-<p>Slightly more than a third of the cases encountered
-in his clinic showed the symptom-complex which he describes
-as syphilitic pseudo-paresis. As a rule these cases
-are of the simple demented type with a general mental
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
-deterioration. The patients show some disturbance of
-apprehension and attention, tire easily and are quite
-forgetful and dull. Delirious states may supervene, with
-clouding, confusion and disorientation, as well as hallucinations
-of sight and hearing. Memory is markedly impaired
-and confabulation may be noted. Judgment is
-not so much interfered with as in paresis. The patients
-have some insight into their condition and complain of
-headache, difficulty of thought, etc. Occasional delusions
-are observed. These may be of a hypochondriacal type
-or grandiose in character. As a rule the mood is cheerful,
-but it may be depressed, anxious or fearful, with suicidal
-tendencies. Sleep is disturbed and there is considerable
-restlessness, usually at night. With all of these
-symptoms there are the physical signs of a severe cortical
-involvement, dizziness, fainting spells, twitchings,
-seizures or frank convulsions, occasional paralyses, etc.
-Disturbance of sensation and motion may appear with
-a perfectly clear consciousness at times. Aphasic symptoms
-are not uncommon. The eye muscles are affected
-in many cases, with ptosis, double vision, strabismus, etc.
-The pupils are usually immobile or sluggish, frequently
-only one being involved. The field of vision is narrowed
-and choked disc is common. Speech is affected, as well
-as writing. All kinds of paralyses occur and they persist
-for some time. The gait may be spastic or ataxic.
-The reflexes are usually increased and often different
-on the two sides. Romberg's sign often appears. A
-Babinski reflex and ankle clonus may be found. The
-patients are usually untidy in their habits. Blood pressure
-is increased in some cases and the pulse slow. There
-may be variations in temperature. Often there are evidences
-of old syphilitic processes on the skin surface,
-enlarged glands, residuals of choroiditis, etc. Usually
-Kraepelin found a positive Wassermann reaction in the
-blood, but not in the spinal fluid, which showed a slight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
-cell increase, often from fifteen to twenty per cubic millimeter,
-rarely in larger numbers. He found the course
-of the disease rapid, but with occasional remissions.
-There may be a sudden collapse and death. It usually
-terminates, however, in a profound dementia, often with
-a hemiplegia and epileptiform seizures. There are other
-conditions suggesting general paresis. Marcus, for instance,
-has described a delirious, confusional state occurring
-usually in the first year after the infection, sometimes
-later, but as a rule developing suddenly. The
-patients become sleepless, confused, anxious and disoriented.
-Numerous hallucinations appear, both of hearing
-and vision, usually of a very unpleasant type. The
-patients often become excited and violent or even suicidal.
-Physical signs more or less similar to those already
-described are to be expected. According to
-Marcus, these cases always respond to syphilitic treatment.</p>
-
-<p>A small group of cases, as pointed out by Westphal,
-shows excitements strongly simulating the expansive
-type of general paresis. This form begins ordinarily
-with a depression, sometimes appearing suddenly, followed
-by irritability, marked restless excitement, headache,
-and fainting attacks. Usually there are hallucinations,
-and delusional ideas of a grandiose type. Above
-all there are pupillary disturbances, increased or decreased
-reflexes, seizures, paralyses, etc., strongly resembling
-paresis. All of these symptoms may disappear
-under syphilitic treatment in time. Some cases, however,
-last for years, dying as a rule in a seizure. Kraepelin
-also describes at some length a group showing the Korsakow
-complex. He suggests that the fact that this condition
-usually develops in alcoholics is not without
-significance.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin is of the opinion that the mental picture is
-the conspicuous and characteristic feature of general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>
-paresis standing out more prominently than the physical
-evidences of the disease. In syphilitic pseudo-paresis, on
-the other hand, there is a clearer sensorium without such
-marked disorientation, and memory is not usually so
-much affected. At the same time, the physical signs are
-relatively more prominent, although the speech difficulty
-and writing defects may not be so marked. The pupils
-sometimes show no changes. Hemiplegias with ankle
-clonus and a Babinski reflex are, however, disproportionately
-common. The eye muscles are much more often
-involved than they are in general paresis. Loss of pain
-sense is not so noticeable. An advanced form of deterioration
-of many years standing is against a diagnosis
-of paresis and favors cerebral syphilis. In these cases
-the physical signs drop somewhat into the background.
-There are, nevertheless, stationary cases of general paresis
-which can be differentiated with great difficulty if
-at all. The development of pseudo-paresis is slower
-and more irregular. After a seizure and a paralysis
-there may be a long remission. The disease, furthermore,
-does not, like general paresis, always terminate
-in death.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin finds the apoplectiform type of brain
-syphilis very common. After a few premonitory symptoms
-such as headache, dizziness, irritability, weakness
-of memory, etc., a typical apoplexy takes place, leaving
-a hemiplegia with or without a speech defect. This
-sometimes occurs without any loss of consciousness.
-The patient presents the appearance of an ordinary
-hemiplegic with increased reflexes on one side and ankle
-clonus followed by a Babinski reflex, etc. Writing is
-usually affected as well as speech. There may not be
-another attack for some years. There is, however, a
-progressive mental deterioration. Occasional confusional
-states or excitements may be met with. In the
-meanwhile, numerous physical signs appear, papillary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
-changes, disturbances of the reflexes, ptosis, tremors,
-hemianopsia, etc. Epileptiform attacks may occur. The
-blood pressure is usually quite high. There is an increase
-in the cells in the spinal fluid, often with a negative Wassermann,
-although the blood serum is positive. Death
-usually results from a seizure. Three-fourths of Kraepelin's
-cases developed before the age of forty-five, which,
-of course, assists materially in the diagnosis.</p>
-
-<p>In younger individuals usually, cerebral syphilis may
-manifest itself in the form of an epilepsy. Kraepelin is
-of the opinion that these conditions usually result from
-endarteritic involvements. In their development they
-show nothing differing in any way from an ordinary epilepsy.
-The attacks are usually mild at first, gradually
-increasing in severity, and are much aggravated by alcohol.
-There are, however, the usual physical signs of
-brain lues and later speech defects appear. There is
-eventually an emotional and intellectual deterioration.
-The changes in the spinal fluid are those described as
-characteristic of the other form of syphilis.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin describes the paranoid forms as very uncertain
-in type and not so well defined. Hallucinations
-and delusions play the principal part with physical disturbances
-in the background. They become more or less
-prominent, however, eventually. The patient is usually
-anxious, restless, suspicious and develops delusions with
-characteristic ideas of jealousy on a sexual basis. Full-fledged
-persecutory trends also appear, usually with numerous
-hallucinations. Occasionally delusions of sin and
-self-accusation are noted, although ideas of grandeur
-mixed with complaints of persecution are more common.
-Consciousness remains undisturbed as a rule and there
-is no disorientation. The mood is changeable, at times
-depressed, tearful, anxious, irritable, complaining, but
-often cheerful and self-satisfied. There is usually more
-or less emotional dulness, with an indifference to the surroundings.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
-The emotional life is shallow and superficial.
-Sudden excitements may occur at times with outbursts of
-anger. There are usually no striking conduct disorders.
-There may be occasional seizures of a mild form, fainting
-attacks, dizziness, rarely epileptiform attacks or
-slight apoplectiform symptoms. Sooner or later the
-physical signs of brain syphilis develop. The course of
-the disease is slow. Similar pictures are noted in tabes.
-The therapeutic test is not to be relied upon too strongly
-in making a diagnosis or differentiating between paresis
-and syphilis. It must be remembered that after all we
-are dealing here with one disease process. It has been
-found that in many syphilitics, even in recent cases, a
-positive Wassermann reaction, an increase in the cell
-count or in the protein content may occasionally be demonstrated
-in the spinal fluid.</p>
-
-<p>In a study of 428 cases of neurosyphilis treated in
-Boston, Raeder<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> reported that 129, or practically thirty
-per cent, showed definite improvement, both physical and
-mental. He did not make any extravagant claims as to
-final results to be expected. "The therapia praesens
-of neurosyphilis is but a transition state in rational
-syphilography. Medical science has discovered several
-good clues which must be followed up; and others ferreted
-out and run down before the solution of the problem
-is complete. Indeed the successful treatment of
-paresis and tabes, as well as general vascular syphilis
-and visceral tertiaries, such as the crippling cradio-pathia,
-etc., may ultimately be realized in the field of preventive
-medicine. With chemotherapy, however, Ehrlich
-has doubtless found the most vulnerable approach to the
-treponemiatic diseases, but further research is necessary
-and other combinations must be found before the life of
-this anthropophagus pest is successfully snuffed out."
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
-<p>Warthin<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> at autopsy found evidences of active
-syphilis in a series of forty-one inactive or "cured" cases
-investigated by him. Eleven of these had been treated,
-were supposed to have recovered and showed no syphilitic
-manifestations at the time of death. Five had received
-an extended course of salvarsan therapy and in twenty-five
-there was no history of syphilis at all. Spirochaetes
-were demonstrated by the Levaditi method in thirty-six
-of the forty-one cases&mdash;in the aorta in thirty-two, in the
-testes in thirty-one, in the liver in four, in the adrenals in
-six, in the pancreas in six, in the spleen in one and in
-the nervous system in five. In some of these cases the
-Wassermann reaction was reported as negative. Warthin
-concluded that cured syphilis in many if not all instances
-is in a latent condition, spirochaetes of a low
-virulence still remaining active.</p>
-
-<p>For purposes of statistical study the American Psychiatric
-Association has not attempted any clinical differentiation
-of the various types of this disease, a procedure
-which was felt to be inadvisable at this time. The following
-suggestions appear in the manual as to the classification
-of psychoses due to cerebral syphilis:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Since general paralysis itself is now known to be
-a parenchymatous form of brain syphilis, the differentiation
-of the cerebral syphilis cases might on theoretical
-grounds be regarded as less important than formerly.
-Practically, however, the separation of the non-parenchymatous
-forms is very important because the symptoms,
-the course and therapeutic outlook in most of these
-cases are different from those of general paralysis.</p>
-
-<p>"According to the predominant pathological characteristics,
-three types of cerebral syphilis may be distinguished,
-viz.: (a) Meningitic, (b) Endarteritic, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-(c) Gummatous. The lines of demarcation between these
-types are not, however, sharp ones. We practically always
-find in the endarteritic and gummatous types a certain
-amount of meningitis.</p>
-
-<p>"The acute meningitic form is the most frequent type
-of cerebral syphilis and gives little trouble in diagnosis;
-many of these cases do not reach state hospitals. In most
-cases after prodromal symptoms (headache, dizziness,
-etc.) there is a rapid development of physical signs, usually
-cranial nerve involvement, and a mental picture of
-dulness or confusion with few psychotic symptoms except
-those related to a delirious or organic reaction.</p>
-
-<p>"In the rarer chronic meningitic forms which are apt
-to occur a long time after the syphilitic infection, usually
-in the period in which we might expect general paralysis,
-the diagnostic difficulties may be considerable.</p>
-
-<p>"In the endarteritic forms the most characteristic
-symptoms are those resulting from focal vascular lesions.</p>
-
-<p>"In the gummatous forms the slowly developing focal
-and pressure symptoms are most significant.</p>
-
-<p>"In all forms of cerebral syphilis the psychotic manifestations
-are less prominent than in general paralysis
-and the personality is much better preserved as shown by
-the social reactions, ethical sense, judgment and general
-behavior. The grandiose ideas and absurd trends of the
-general paralytic are rarely encountered in these cases."</p>
-
-<p>It is only of comparatively late years that the hospitals
-of this country have shown the frequency of psychoses
-due to cerebral syphilis in their reports. Statistical studies
-indicate that such mental conditions are quite unusual
-as compared with other well recognized clinical entities.
-In a total of 49,640 first admissions reported by the New
-York state hospitals during a period of eight years
-only 342, or .67 per cent, were reported as mental diseases
-due to cerebral syphilis. The Massachusetts hospitals
-during 1919 reported only twenty-seven cases, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
-percentage of .89. Twenty-one hospitals in fourteen
-other states, in a total of 18,336 admissions, showed only
-124 cases (.67 per cent) of cerebral syphilis. This represents,
-therefore, a total of 70,987 admissions with only
-493 diagnosed as psychoses due to cerebral syphilis,&mdash;a
-percentage of .69. When this is compared with eleven
-per cent as shown by the admissions for general paresis
-it is probably a very fair index of the comparative frequency
-of the two diseases in our institutions. It is interesting
-to note that the incidence of cerebral syphilis
-as shown by the hospitals of the various states is almost
-exactly the same. The admission rate for the Casa de
-Orates in Santiago, Chili, in 1918, as shown by Letelier,
-was .90 per cent.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES WITH HUNTINGTON'S CHOREA,
-BRAIN TUMOR AND OTHER BRAIN
-OR NERVOUS DISEASES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Huntington's chorea is said to have been referred to
-first by C. O. Waters of Franklin, N. Y., in Dunglison's
-"Practice of Medicine" in 1842. An article on the subject
-by Irving W. Lyon also appeared in the <i>American
-Medical Times</i> in 1863. The name by which the disease
-is now generally known was the result of an elaborate
-description of its symptomatology by George Huntington
-in the <i>Medical and Surgical Reporter</i> in 1872. He particularly
-called attention to the fact that it is hereditary
-in origin, occurs in adult life, is associated with suicidal
-tendencies and often exhibits mental symptoms. On the
-important subject of heredity Huntington made the following
-observation: "If one or both of the parents have
-shown manifestations of the disease, and more especially
-when these manifestations have been of a serious nature,
-one or more of the offspring almost invariably suffer
-from the disease if they live to adult life; and if by any
-chance these children get through life without it, the
-thread is broken and the grandchildren or great grandchildren
-may rest assured that they are free from the
-disease. Unstable and whimsical as the disease may be
-in other respects, in this it is firm; it never skips a generation
-to manifest itself in another; as soon as it has
-yielded its claims, it never regains them." A well known
-monograph on the subject by Osler appeared in 1894.</p>
-
-<p>McCarthy<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> refers to the mental condition associated
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
-with this disease as "a severe and gradually progressive
-deterioration, ultimately ending in absolute dementia.
-In some cases the mental defect is noted from
-the onset of the symptoms, in others the mentality may
-remain unimpaired for years. Mental deterioration is
-the rule, and it is associated with a loss of memory and a
-tendency to self-destruction which gradually develops.
-When the mental degeneration is well marked, outbreaks
-of violence are sometimes noted. In one of the writer's
-patients, as the disease progressed, the clinical picture
-of paresis was presented. The chronic delusional state
-is more often noted than would be inferred from Huntington's
-description." Hamilton,<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> who made a clinical
-study of a considerable series of cases in 1907, expressed
-the opinion that mental deterioration occurs in
-the majority of instances before the onset of choreiform
-symptoms. He found a special tendency to deterioration
-in the cases appearing early in life, while irritability and
-delusional ideas were more often observed in those developing
-in later years. Delusions of persecution and deterioration,
-however, were symptoms more or less
-common to both groups. Diefendorf,<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> in a study of
-twenty-eight cases in 1908, called attention particularly
-to the irritability with occasional outbursts of violence as
-well as attacks of despondency. He emphasizes emotional
-deterioration and indifference.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> also refers to the fact that the mental
-symptoms may precede the choreiform manifestations in
-appearance, sometimes by a number of years. The patients
-become forgetful, defective in judgment, somewhat
-dull, show a poverty of thought and an incapacity for
-orderly activities. Generally there is an emotional depression,
-often with irritability and more rarely euphoric
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
-symptoms. Delusions gradually develop. These are of
-a persecutory nature, although ideas of grandeur appear
-at times. Suicidal tendencies are common. Disturbances
-of perception and memory may be very pronounced. The
-relation of the patient to his environment becomes very
-much confused. In some cases, on the other hand, the
-mental symptoms are not very striking. Anxious states,
-outbursts of anger or emotional excitements may appear
-at times. Appetite and sleep are often interfered with.
-The pathology of this disease is not characteristic. There
-may be a chronic meningitis or extensive atrophies. The
-cells of the third layer of the cortex, according to Kraepelin,
-are decreased in number with an increase of glia
-nuclei. The remaining cells are shrunken with deeply
-staining processes, and there is a considerable loss of
-tangential fibres. Sclerotic changes with thickened walls
-are noted in the blood vessels. Hyaline degeneration and
-miliary hemorrhages have been observed, although Nissl
-and Alzheimer found no vascular lesions worthy of note.
-The cortical changes, according to Räcke, are more pronounced
-in the central convolutions, being much less conspicuous
-in the frontal and occipital regions. Alzheimer
-found the corpus striatum particularly involved. Here
-he noted a striking cell loss, with glia proliferation but
-no vascular changes. D'Ormea, according to Kraepelin,
-traced the disease through five generations in one family
-and Browning went as far back as two hundred years in
-another.</p>
-
-<p>The observations on the subject of Huntington's
-chorea in the statistical manual of the American Psychiatric
-Association are as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Mental symptoms are a constant accompaniment of
-this form of chorea and as a rule become more marked as
-the disease advances. Although the disease is regarded
-as being hereditary in nature, a diagnosis can be made
-on the clinical picture in the absence of a family history.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The chief mental symptoms are those of mental inertia
-and an emotional change, either apathy and silliness
-or a depressive irritable reaction with a tendency to passionate
-outbursts. As the disease progresses the memory
-is affected to some extent, but the patient's ability to
-recall past events is often found to be surprisingly well
-preserved when the disinclination to cooperate and give
-information can be overcome. Likewise the orientation
-is well retained even when the patient appears very apathetic
-and listless. Suspicions and paranoid ideas are
-prominent in some cases."</p>
-
-<p>Statistical reports from American institutions show
-that comparatively few cases of Huntington's chorea
-are committed. In 49,640 first admissions to the New
-York state hospitals only forty-eight, or .09 per cent,
-were diagnosed as Huntington's chorea during a period
-of eight years. The admission rate to the Massachusetts
-hospitals during 1919 was exactly the same. In twenty-one
-hospitals in fourteen other states twenty-four cases
-(.13 per cent) in 18,336 admissions were reported as
-Huntington's chorea. There were only seventy-five cases
-(.1 per cent) in 70,987 admissions to forty-eight hospitals
-in sixteen different states.</p>
-
-
-<p class="st5"><i>Psychoses with Brain Tumor</i></p>
-
-<p>Brain tumors are more common perhaps than is generally
-understood. Cushing<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> shows that they were
-found in fifty-five, or 1.7 per cent, of 3,150 autopsies at
-the Johns Hopkins Hospital. He refers to Siedel, who
-observed them in 1.25 per cent of his cases in Munich and
-states that Blackburn found them in about two per cent
-of 1,642 autopsies at the St. Elizabeths Hospital in
-Washington. He also quotes Bruns as saying that two
-per cent of all neurological cases show intracranial
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-growths. In the first twenty-five hundred surgical conditions
-admitted to the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in
-Boston eight per cent were diagnosed as brain tumor.
-Cushing found that 66.6 per cent of 130 carefully studied
-growths were gliomata. Nearly four per cent were endotheliomas.
-In another series of seventy cases he found
-twenty-seven gliomas (38.5 per cent), seventeen adenomas
-(twenty-four per cent), seven endotheliomas (ten
-per cent), five interpeduncular and mixed growths (seven
-per cent), and other forms in smaller percentages. Many
-of the endotheliomas have undoubtedly been included in
-the past with the sarcomas. This may also be said of
-gliomas.</p>
-
-<p>According to Cushing, growths in the brain may give
-rise to no disturbance whatever, show well defined focal
-signs, occasion only general manifestations, or have both
-general and focal symptoms, depending on the location
-of the neoplasm. General symptoms may be briefly summarized
-as follows:&mdash;headache, vomiting, choked disc,
-vertigo, drowsiness, convulsions, disturbances of the
-pulse rate, respiration and temperature, as well as mental
-disorders. The focal signs depend wholly on the site
-of the growth. Cushing mentions the following symptom
-complex as resulting from lesions of the frontal lobes:&mdash;"Indifference,
-unpunctuality, mental enfeeblement, loss
-of memory and power of attention, change in disposition
-with more or less marked irritability or taciturnity
-or obstinacy or jocularity, etc., often a rambling speech,
-lack of realization of the illness, and change in the general
-conduct of life with habits of untidiness. These, in greater
-or less degree, characterize most of the cases, although
-it is often astonishing to find how inconspicuous the symptoms
-may be with a very extensive growth. They may
-often be of rather abrupt onset and not until the situation
-of the lesion is definitely disclosed and careful interrogation
-made into the patient's previous mental state is it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
-possible to learn that in all probability some mental alteration
-has been of long standing."</p>
-
-<p>Bruns did not find psychoses associated very often
-with frontal lesions. Jacobi, however, in reviewing the
-literature of growths in that region, found mental symptoms
-in forty-nine per cent. Schuster observed them in
-from fifty to sixty per cent of all brain tumors. Redlich<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a>
-described mental conditions as being either incidental
-and not related to the growth, or definitely caused
-by it, and was even of the opinion that the neoplasm
-could in some instances be the result of a psychosis. Two
-of Redlich's patients, moderately alcoholic, showed a
-typical Korsakow syndrome. He refers to the fact that
-in cases reported by Oppenheim, Friedrich and Fürstner,
-"Witzelsucht," or the tendency to joke, disappeared
-after growths were removed from the frontal region. A
-patient of Begerthal, who had hallucinations, delusions
-and somatic symptoms, recovered after a tubercle was
-excised from the paracentral lobule. A case of Friedrich's
-which showed an alteration of the personality,
-erotic symptoms, sudden explosive laughter, poor memory,
-etc., recovered after a sarcoma was removed from
-the right frontal lobe. A patient of Thoma's after three
-attacks of mental depression showed a gliosarcoma in the
-occipital lobe at autopsy. Schuster, Bruns and Schönthal
-have reported cases of brain tumor with hysterical
-manifestations.</p>
-
-<p>Redlich described the psychoses associated with cerebral
-growths as being epileptiform in character and origin
-and resembling post-epileptic psychoses in their symptomatology,
-with irritability, excitement or violence, confusion,
-delirium and hallucinations, often followed by
-partial amnesia. Epileptic manifestations may occur
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
-in the form of equivalents during the development of the
-growth. Bernhardt and Oppenheim have called attention
-to episodes of vertigo, irritability, excitement, clouding
-and occasional delirium with amnesia following intense
-paroxysms of headache. These attacks also strongly
-suggest the characteristics of epileptic psychoses. Nothnagel,
-Bernhardt, Oppenheim, Schuster, Ziehen and
-others attribute the mental symptoms associated with
-brain tumor to increased intracranial pressure producing
-an anaemia. Klippel, Maillard, Vigouroux, Kaplan and
-others believe that they are due to toxins originating
-in the growth. This view is based largely on the appearance
-of psychoses similar to the Korsakow syndrome.
-Knapp in 1906 called attention to the prominence of
-mental symptoms in growths occurring in the anterior
-portion of the corpus callosum. These may be associated
-with intellectual defects, apraxia, speech disturbances
-and stupor. Gianelli found mental disturbances in 209
-of 318 cases examined.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> attributes the mental symptoms of
-growths to an injury of the brain structure, changes in
-intracranial pressure, circulatory disturbances, and the
-absorption of toxic substances. A growth of considerable
-size but of slow development may permit of a readjustment
-of pressure, etc., and show few symptoms. On the
-other hand, a small neoplasm on account of its site or
-rapidity of growth may be accompanied by profound
-mental disturbances resulting from chemical irritation,
-obstruction of the aqueduct of Sylvius, or circulatory
-interferences. Kraepelin quotes Schuster (1902) as finding
-psychotic symptoms in all cases of growths in the
-corpus callosum, in two-thirds of those of the hypophysis,
-in one-third of those of the cerebellum and in one-fourth
-of the cases with involvement of the brain stem. These
-he looks upon as pressure symptoms except in the case
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span>
-of the callosal neoplasms. Schuster was of the opinion
-that growths in the cortex usually lead to actual psychoses
-and those in the deeper areas to dementia. He
-found a general mental deterioration in 423 out of a total
-of 775 cases of brain tumor. The patients were indolent,
-inattentive, clumsy, forgetful, dull, tired easily and lost
-more and more their capacity and inclination for sustained
-exertion. Thought, decision and mental processes
-generally, required an unusual amount of effort. The
-patients usually became somewhat confused and disoriented
-in regard to time, place and person, as well as incoherent
-in speech. In many cases there is a marked
-memory disturbance with a tendency to fabrication suggesting
-Korsakow's psychosis. Delirious states with
-hallucinations sometimes accompany growths in the posterior
-lobes. Kraepelin has also observed hallucinations
-in cases with tumor of the cerebellum. Many develop
-hypochondriacal ideas, others have delusions of persecution
-or self-accusation and suicidal tendencies. Rarely
-there are delusions of grandeur. The mood is usually
-anxious, depressed and at times irritable or apathetic.
-Occasionally the patients may, on the other hand, be
-cheerful in spite of the hopeless condition they are in.
-They may even show distractibility, flight of ideas, volubility
-and excitement. There is more often a childish
-elation with a tendency to joking and facetiousness.
-Schuster found this more common in frontal involvements.
-Kraepelin also called attention to restlessness
-and excitements often leading to violence. This may
-alternate with mental dulness and cataleptic states. The
-patients may repeat words and make meaningless response
-to questions, strongly suggesting katatonia. Mental
-dulness becomes more and more marked, however,
-even reaching a stuporous stage. To this is added, according
-to the location of the growth, focal symptoms of
-various kinds&mdash;headache, disturbance of vision, seizures,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span>
-paralyses, aphasia, agraphia, articulatory disturbance,
-ataxia, etc. Special symptoms arise where psychogenic
-factors play a part,&mdash;excitements with paralyses or disturbance
-of perception, etc. Hysterical stigmata may
-appear. Cases with growths in the frontal region occasionally
-simulate general paresis but should be distinguished
-without difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>The Association's statistical manual has the following
-to say of psychoses with brain tumor:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"A large majority of brain tumor cases show definite
-mental symptoms. Most frequent are mental dullness,
-somnolence, hebetude, slowness in thinking, memory failure,
-irritability and depression, although a tendency to
-facetiousness is sometimes observed. Episodes of confusion
-with hallucinations are common; some cases express
-suspicions and paranoid ideas.</p>
-
-<p>"The diagnosis must rest in most cases on the neurological
-symptoms, and these will depend on the location,
-size and rate of growth of the tumor. Certain general
-physical symptoms due to an increased intracranial pressure
-are present in most cases, viz.: headache, dizziness,
-vomiting, slowing of the pulse, choked disc and interlacing
-of the color fields."</p>
-
-<p>The number of cases reaching hospitals for mental
-diseases is, of course, small. In 49,640 first admissions
-to the New York state hospitals in eight years there were
-sixty-seven cases (.14 per cent) of psychoses with brain
-tumor. In 18,336 admissions to twenty-one hospitals in
-fourteen other states there were eighteen cases (.09 per
-cent) diagnosed as psychoses with brain tumor. There
-were ninety-three cases (.13 per cent) in 70,987 first admissions
-to forty-eight hospitals for mental diseases in
-sixteen different states.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="st5"><i>Psychoses with Other Brain or Nervous Diseases</i></p>
-
-<p>Cerebral hemorrhages, thrombosis and embolism are
-more or less intimately associated etiologically, pathologically
-and clinically. They all bear a rather definite
-relation to the general question of arteriosclerosis and
-may all lead to cerebral softening. Apoplexy is a term
-which was employed by Aristophanes, Demosthenes and
-Sophocles and has been in general use for centuries. It
-was known to Chaucer and was referred to in Shakespeare's
-works ("Henry IV"). It was studied very
-elaborately by Sydenham and many other early writers.
-Charcot and Bouchard in 1864 called attention to the
-relation existing between miliary aneurysms of the cerebral
-vessels and hemorrhages. In a study of the cerebral
-vascular lesions at the University College Hospital, London,
-Jones (<i>Brain</i>, 1905) found records of one hundred
-and sixty cases occurring during a period of sixty-five
-years. Of these, 123 showed hemorrhages; twenty-four,
-thrombosis; and thirteen were due to embolism.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> states that: "The symptoms following
-acute vascular lesions of the brain, whether the process
-be the rupture of a vessel or its occlusion, are in many
-respects identical; and clinically it is often impossible to
-determine which process has been effective." He calls
-attention to the fact that in thrombosis the final closure
-of a vessel may occur suddenly and the symptoms develop
-with great rapidity. On the other hand, the rupture of
-a vessel may mean the escape of only a small quantity
-of blood and after an embolism the circulation is not
-always stopped immediately. In an analysis of 401 apoplectic
-attacks Thomas found no loss of consciousness in
-202 cases, although it was interrupted or markedly disturbed
-in 199. Jones found a complete loss of consciousness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
-in 47.7 per cent of 201 cases of cerebral embolism
-and a partial disturbance in sixty per cent. He reported
-consciousness affected in seventy-five per cent of his cases
-of cerebral hemorrhage and in 45.5 per cent of those of
-thrombosis. When it occurs it is usually not the initial
-symptom in his experience, being preceded by headache,
-vertigo, weakness in certain parts of the body, etc. An
-analysis of the cases of embolism reported by Virchow,
-however, showed a sudden loss of consciousness as the
-initial symptom to be the general rule. Gowers is of
-the opinion that an initial softening is a more common
-occurrence than hemorrhage.</p>
-
-<p>In the young, apoplectic attacks are usually due to
-cerebral softening, thrombosis following acute disease
-or embolism resulting from endocarditis. Between the
-ages of twenty and forty apoplexies usually mean syphilitic
-thrombosis. In the later decades of life, either
-hemorrhage, thrombosis, embolism or softening may
-occur. Thomas<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> collected from various hospitals,
-statistics of 840 cases. Of these, 499 showed hemorrhages
-and 341 softenings. He is of the opinion that the presence
-of premonitory symptoms for some days indicate
-thrombosis, while shorter prodromal periods point to
-a hemorrhage. Rapidly developing coma suggests hemorrhage,
-while a widespread paralysis without much disturbance
-of consciousness is more common in thrombosis.
-A marked fall of temperature and rise of blood pressure
-as a rule means a hemorrhage. Repeated convulsions
-are more often associated with softening or embolism.
-If the symptoms indicate a capsular lesion it
-favors hemorrhage, and if of a cortical type, softenings
-are more likely. A positive Wassermann reaction suggests
-thrombosis or softening. The presence of endocarditis
-with heart murmurs points to embolism. Thomas
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-finds that, while the patient may recover from either
-of these conditions without apparent intellectual defect,
-he is liable to be petulant, emotional, depressed and tire
-easily.</p>
-
-<p>In psychoses following hemorrhage, thrombosis and
-embolism Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> as a rule finds very little relation
-between the nature of the lesion in question and the
-symptoms to be expected. Immediately following the
-seizure the patients become dull, clouded, confused and
-disoriented, and peculiar in their behavior. This is followed
-by an active excitement with loud cries, resistiveness
-and struggling. These acute disturbances usually
-subside, leaving, however, evidences of the arteriosclerosis
-or syphilitic endarteritis which caused the hemorrhage
-or thrombosis. Embolism may leave an apparently
-permanent mental deterioration with aphasic and paraphasic
-manifestations which often entirely clear up. In
-lesions of younger persons due to syphilis, mental enfeeblement
-may follow.</p>
-
-<p>Our knowledge of the psychoses accompanying paralysis
-agitans is very inadequate. The disease was first
-fully described by Parkinson in an English publication
-in 1817, although, according to Camp, similar cases were
-reported by Schwarz in 1766. The etiology of this condition
-is unknown and the pathology is not at all definite.
-It seems to be the rather general opinion of neurologists
-that mental disturbances are quite rare in Parkinson's
-Disease. Camp,<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> for instance, has the following to
-say on this subject:&mdash;"Mental conditions have also been
-described, but usually the patient's mind is entirely clear.
-In the very old the changes incident to senility, such as
-irritability, childishness, etc., insomnia and memory
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
-changes, might be expected and may require special treatment.
-Often these patients are emotionally unstable and
-spells of forced weeping or laughter occur." Krafft-Ebing
-refers to mental weakness in paralysis agitans and
-speaks of the frequency of melancholia with hallucinations
-and suicidal impulses occurring intermittently and
-appearing with exacerbations of the disease. He speaks
-of premature senility as playing the most important
-etiological rôle. McCarthy<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> expresses the opinion
-that: "Beyond a tendency on the part of some patients
-to adopt a whining and complaining manner, the mind
-remains very clear; in fact, the good nature and complaisance
-of most of the patients, in spite of the severity
-of the symptoms, is a matter of common observation.
-Dementia may, however, complicate a case of the disease."
-On the other hand, Parant, a French writer who
-made an elaborate study of this subject in 1883, described
-three distinct varieties of mental disturbance observed
-by him. In the milder cases he found changes in the
-personality. This is shown by irritability, egotism, restlessness,
-suspicion, undue sensitiveness regarding their
-disease, mild persecutory ideas, tendencies to depression,
-indifference and apathy. The second class of cases described
-included mental deterioration with difficulty of
-thought, loss of memory, etc. The third group includes
-definite psychoses characterized generally by depressions
-with or without hallucinations and delusions. Hallucinations
-of sight are said to be common. Delusions of persecution
-are prominent and hypochondriacal and somatic
-ideas frequently occur. Suicidal tendencies are very pronounced.
-According to Ball, these episodes come and go
-"with the aggravation of the sensory symptoms, and
-they seem to disappear when the tremor decreases or
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
-ceases entirely." The usual tendency in these cases, as
-shown by Parant, is to terminate in complete deterioration.</p>
-
-<p>Of the inflammatory conditions of the meninges
-Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a> makes special reference to mental disturbances
-associated with tuberculosis. The patient is depressed,
-anxious, irritable and apathetic, often with the
-first appearance of the disease. Dulness and memory
-disturbances become more and more apparent. The patient
-soon becomes clouded and disoriented, confused and
-delirious. Occasionally hallucinations appear. The disturbance
-of consciousness becomes more and more
-marked. The patient becomes incoherent, restless, noisy
-and often violent. The excitement may reach the stage
-of an actual mania with delirious confusion. Sometimes
-the symptoms are strongly suggestive of katatonia. In
-alcoholics a condition very similar to delirium tremens
-develops, terminating as a rule in stupor and coma.
-Speech disturbance, aphasia, convulsions, hyperesthesia
-or muscular weakness may be observed in such cases.
-Other forms of meningitis are quite similar but more
-rapid in development and of shorter duration. In some
-instances, as after epidemic cerebrospinal meningitis,
-states of mental enfeeblement may follow the disease.</p>
-
-<p>It must be admitted that our information on the subject
-of multiple sclerosis is far from being complete. In
-a discussion of the mental symptoms accompanying this
-condition, Henderson<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> expressed the following views:&mdash;"Cases
-of disseminated sclerosis which present definite,
-well marked psychoses are extremely rare. When
-mental symptoms do occur, they usually come on when
-the condition is well advanced, the most common symptoms
-are mild euphoria, labile mood, apathy and dullness,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-and a slightly defective memory. In some cases, however,
-depression has been described as the outstanding
-feature, while hallucinations of sight and hearing are
-not uncommon accompaniments. In certain cases the
-mental symptoms may come on early, and these are usually
-of excessive severity and are rapidly followed by
-complete dementia." Dunlap has described cases associated
-with general paresis and showing the characteristic
-lesions of both diseases at autopsy. According to
-Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> mental disturbances sometimes appear before
-physical symptoms are observed. These take the
-form of depression, anxiety, fear, with occasional deliria,
-hysterical manifestations, emotional dulness, variable
-moods and a marked irritability. Later in the disease
-more marked euphoric or depressive tendencies appear,
-with excitements and confusional states. Delusions of a
-persecutory nature, or ideas of grandeur may be observed.
-Hallucinations are infrequent. According to
-Kraepelin, from ten to thirty per cent of the cases terminate
-in a general mental enfeeblement which is not
-usually of an advanced degree. He also describes a lobar
-cortical sclerosis with much more marked mental disturbances
-suggesting dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>Various mental conditions have been attributed to
-tabes. Sachs<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> speaks of depressions and neurasthenic
-conditions with irritability as a special symptom.
-He has observed paranoid states and manic attacks, sometimes
-with periods of "transitory dementia" with or
-without aphasia. He also expresses the opinion that
-tabetics may develop all of the symptoms of general paresis,
-although he says that the coexistence of the two diseases
-is rare. Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> speaks of milder forms of
-psychoses characterized by uncertainty of memory, fatigability
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-and emotional instability. Many cases exhibit a
-hopeless, gloomy attitude with depression and fears, or
-they may be surly, irritable and quarrelsome. Others
-show a surprisingly good humor. The emotional disturbances
-often suggest general paresis. Kraepelin, however,
-describes the characteristic psychosis of locomotor
-ataxia as assuming a paranoid form and quotes Meyer as
-reporting paranoic conditions in twenty-six tabetics and
-depressions of various types in fourteen. He also speaks
-of hallucinatory excitements resembling alcoholic conditions.
-These are characterized by a sudden anxiety
-and restlessness with hallucinations of both hearing and
-vision. The patients complain of poisoning and sensations
-of electricity, but are cheerful in mood and well
-oriented. This condition may last for weeks or months,
-ending in a sudden recovery, often with relapses. Shorter
-hallucinatory delirious states resembling crises are also
-referred to by Kraepelin. More chronic conditions are
-noted, with hallucinations, persecutory delusions and
-ideas of grandeur. Delirium tremens, manic-depressive
-attacks, katatonia or senile psychoses may be associated
-with tabes.</p>
-
-<p>The literature of medicine contains many references
-to acute chorea. It was referred to, according to Paton,
-by Plat as early as 1614 and was discussed by Sydenham
-at some length. Wharton Sinkler, in describing chorea
-in Pepper's "System of Medicine" in 1886, made the
-following interesting remarks on the mental changes involved:&mdash;"The
-child is irritable and feverish, cries and
-laughs readily, or is sullen and morose. Sometimes he is
-violent to those about him but this is rare. Intellectually
-the patient suffers somewhat. He is not able to study
-as before, and the memory may be impaired. Sometimes
-there is a mild form of dementia." Burr<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> divides
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
-these conditions into four groups:&mdash;"First (and this includes
-the vast majority), patients in whom there is peevishness,
-fretfulness, some loss of the power of fixing the
-attention, and a slight loss of the moral sense shown by
-disobedience and selfishness. Second, those showing in
-addition to the above symptoms, night terrors, and transitory,
-visual, auditory, or other hallucinations. Third,
-those with distinct delirium, wild or mild, accompanied
-with fever. Fourth (and this group is very small when
-we remember how common chorea is), those showing
-stupor, or rather stupidity, and an acute dementia, which
-may follow the condition described under three, or appear
-without any preceding mental symptoms at all severe,
-and which is usually accompanied with trouble on
-articulation not caused by choreic movements of the lips
-and tongue, but the result of mental hebetude." White<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a>
-refers to the irritability and emotional instability of
-choreics and describes a psychosis in "chorea insaniens"
-characterized by an acute confusion, sometimes of a violent
-type with hallucinations, or a paranoic condition with
-delusions of persecution. This may develop into a stuporous
-state. Kraepelin describes the psychotic manifestations
-of acute chorea as forms of delirium due to
-infection with characteristic states of clouding, confusion,
-etc. Wechsler has expressed similar views.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">Encephalitis lethargica is a disease which has received
-a great deal of attention during the last few years. The
-term was first applied by von Economo<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> to a series
-of cases observed by him in Vienna in 1917, although, as
-he has pointed out, similar epidemics occurred as early
-as in 1712. This condition is characterized particularly
-by lethargy, facial and oculomotor paralyses and a rise
-of temperature. Cases were reported from England
-and France by various observers in 1918 and by Pothier,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
-Neal and others in this country in 1919. It has been suggested
-frequently that the disease is in some way associated
-with influenza. The pathological findings have
-also been confused with the African sleeping sickness due
-to trypanosomes. After such prodromal symptoms as
-headache, malaise and drowsiness with muscular weakness
-for a few days, a lethargic or stuporous state usually
-develops, interrupted occasionally by delirious attacks.
-Ptosis has been reported, sometimes with immobility of
-the pupils. Paralyses of the facial and eye muscles are
-very common. Buzzard and Greenfield<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> after a review
-of twenty-two cases suggested the following symptomatological
-classification:&mdash;1. Cases characterized by hemiplegia,
-hemianesthesia, hemianopsia, etc.; 2. Cases characterized
-by symptoms resembling those of paralysis
-agitans:&mdash;the basal ganglia group; and 3. Cases characterized
-by a disturbance of the cranial nerve functions.
-In a publication issued recently by the United
-States Public Health Service the various types of the disease
-were summarized as follows:&mdash;1. A clinical affection
-of the third pair of nerves; 2. Affections of the brain
-stem and bulb; 3. Affections of the long tracts; 4. The
-ataxic type; 5. Affections of the cerebral cortex; 6.
-Cases with evidence of spinal cord involvement; and 7.
-The polyneuritic type with involvement of the peripheral
-nerves. The Massachusetts Department of Public Health
-has recently recommended the use of the MacNulty classification,
-which is quite similar in some <span class="no-break">respects:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph3a">1. Symptoms of a general nature referable to the central
-nervous system with no localizing signs.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3a">2. General symptoms with third nerve paralysis.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3a">3. General symptoms with localizing signs of facial
-paralysis.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span></p>
-<p class="ph3a">4. General symptoms with localizing signs extending
-down to the cord.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3a">5. General symptoms with polyneuritic involvements.</p>
-
-<p class="ph3a">6. Mild and abortive cases.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Autopsies have shown meningeal and cortical congestion,
-degeneration of the nerve cells, and thickening of
-the vessels with endothelial proliferation of the glia.
-Venous thrombosis and multiple hemorrhages also occur.
-In a study of the cerebrospinal fluid Boveri<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> found
-the pressure slightly greater in many cases with an increase
-in the albumen and globulin content and a mild
-lymphocytosis in occasional cases. The findings are not
-characteristic or of great diagnostic value. Efforts to
-isolate the organism responsible for this disease have
-so far been unsuccessful.</p>
-
-<p>The mental symptoms associated with encephalitis
-lethargica have been studied recently by Abrahamson<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a>.
-He finds that the patient can be aroused from the
-initial lethargy and responds quickly and coherently to
-questions, relapsing again into an apparent sleep. Some
-irritability is shown. The attitude "expresses a desire
-to be left alone." If the somnolence disappears it is usually
-followed by a period of depression. The patient
-complains of weariness and inability to sleep. Choreic
-manifestations sometimes occur. The somnolence may
-terminate, on the other hand, in a profound stupor resembling
-a drug intoxication with a restless delirium.
-Even then the patient can be roused momentarily. Responses
-are automatic with no evidences of emotional
-disturbance. Flexibilitas cerea is often present. This
-condition may be followed by a period of confusion, disorientation
-and amnesia suggesting Korsakow's disease.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
-There is usually a period of mental depression with poverty
-of thought. Occasional hallucinations were also
-observed.</p>
-
-<p>An exceedingly important contribution to the literature
-of encephalitis lethargica is an analysis recently
-made of the symptoms shown in eighteen cases by Kirby
-and Davis.<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> "The psychic disturbances of epidemic
-encephalitis present the general characteristics of an
-acute organic type of mental reaction, corresponding
-more specifically to a toxic-infectious psychosis. In the
-acute stages of the disease, psychic torpor and delirium
-are the most frequently observed mental disturbances although
-other clinical pictures may be encountered, as the
-Korsakoff syndrome or more complex mental disorders
-in which various affective and trend reactions give a
-special cast to the psychotic disturbance." They report
-two types of sleep disturbance, hypersomnia and hyposomnia.
-The former is characterized by drowsiness,
-lethargy, stupor or coma, depending entirely on the degree
-reached. In the latter the patient is sleepless at
-night and somnolent during the daytime. Usually delirium
-was present at some time in both types of the disease.
-Often there was a brief period showing a mild depression
-or anxiety, following lethargy or delirium. Euphoria
-was observed in a number of instances. In the
-unrecovered cases they often found residuals&mdash;"depressive
-affects, emotional elevations, irritability, explosive
-reactions, stubbornness, apathy, etc." Their findings
-may be summarized perhaps in the statement that "definitely
-formulated and persistent trends are infrequent in
-epidemic encephalitis ... we have found much evidence
-of persisting emotional alteration with little evidence of
-organic mental defects or dementia."
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span></p>
-<p>A review of the statistics of American institutions
-shows that psychoses associated with brain and nervous
-diseases other than Huntington's chorea and brain tumor,
-which have already been discussed, are exceedingly
-rare. The percentage of cases reported in the New York
-hospitals was .95, in the Massachusetts institutions, 1.02,
-and in twenty-one other hospitals only 1.56. In a total
-of 70,987 first admissions there were only 787 cases (1.1
-per cent). The relative frequency of the various forms
-is illustrated by the statistics of the admissions to the
-New York state hospitals during a period of eight years.
-Of 462 cases, 160 were diagnosed as psychoses due to
-cerebral embolism; twelve, to meningitis; twenty, to
-multiple sclerosis; thirty-eight, to tabes; thirty-four, to
-acute chorea; and 163, to other conditions not specified.
-These figures are astonishing when the fact that 49,640
-patients were admitted during that time is taken into consideration.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE ALCOHOLIC PSYCHOSES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>According to Tuke,<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> one of the oldest of the Egyptian
-papyri in the British Museum (Papyrus Sallier I)
-makes the following very interesting reference to alcoholism:&mdash;
-"Whereas it has been told me that thou hast
-forsaken books, and devoted thyself to pleasure; that
-thou goest from tavern to tavern, smelling of beer, at the
-time of evening. If beer gets into a man it overcomes
-his mind.... Thou knowest that wine is an abomination,
-that thou hast taken an oath that thou wouldst not put
-liquor into thee. Hast thou forgotten thy resolution?"
-It is difficult to realize that this refers to one of the earliest
-periods of recorded history. Hebrew, Greek and
-Roman literature are prolific in equally significant testimonials
-to the antiquity of alcohol as an intoxicant. It
-was referred to at considerable length by Aristotle,
-Plutarch and Hippocrates. That Haslam appreciated
-the important relation existing between alcoholism and
-mental disorders is shown by the following comment on
-this subject written in 1808:&mdash;"Thus a man is permitted
-slowly to poison and destroy himself; to produce a state
-of irritation, which disqualifies him from any of the useful
-purposes of life; to squander his property among the
-most worthless and abandoned; to communicate a loathsome
-and disgraceful disease to a virtuous wife; to leave
-an innocent and helpless family to the meagre protection
-of the parish. If it be possible the law ought to define
-the circumstances under which it becomes justifiable to
-restrain a human being from effecting his own destruction,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
-and involving his family in misery and ruin. When
-a man suddenly bursts through the barriers of established
-opinion; if he attempts to strangle himself with a cord,
-to divide his large blood vessels with a knife, or swallow
-a vial full of laudanum, no one entertains any doubt about
-his being a proper subject for the superintendence of
-keepers; but he is allowed, without control, by a gradual
-process, to undermine the fabric of his health and destroy
-the property of his family."</p>
-
-<p>Curiously enough the word alcohol is of Arabic origin
-and was employed originally to describe a powder used
-in applications to the eyebrows for cosmetic purposes.
-It was subsequently used for centuries as referring to a
-fine powder of any kind, as is shown by the writings of
-Paracelsus and others. The chemical composition of alcohol
-was not known until 1808, when it was described
-by Lavoisier. On the other hand, Salvatori in 1817 and
-Hufeland in 1818 referred to dipsomania as a disorder
-due to alcoholism. Esquirol, Trélat and other early writers
-included it in the "partial" insanities. Morel described
-it as an impulsive form of "délire émotif" and
-looked upon it as an hereditary condition. It has been
-classified with the periodical insanities and even as a
-form of melancholia. Magnan saw in it an episode of the
-insanity of degeneracy. Magnus Huss was responsible
-for the introduction of the term "chronic alcoholism" as
-descriptive of a pathological condition in 1852.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that Caelius Aurelianus protested against
-the use of intoxicants in the treatment of the insane.
-Notwithstanding this early reference to a question of
-such importance, and the inauguration of the great temperance
-crusade which began in 1808, it has been shown
-by Tuke<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a> that alcoholic beverages were issued in a
-routine way to patients and employees of the British
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
-asylums for the insane less than forty years ago.
-"Thirty superintendents hold that they have observed
-very beneficial results from the course pursued. The improvement
-usually refers not only to the patients, but to
-the discipline of the asylum." The cost of beer supplied
-to the inmates at the Glamorgan Asylum at one time was
-reported to be as high as two hundred and sixty pounds
-per year (Tuke). Beer was not discontinued as a regular
-article of diet for patients at the Derby Asylum until
-1884.</p>
-
-<p>In 1844 Flemming<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> in his classification of psychoses
-mentioned the following forms of alcoholic insanity:&mdash;
-Ferocitas et morositas ebriosorum, anoësia e potu,
-anoësia semisomnis, delirium tremens, and mania à potu.
-Clouston<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> described acute and chronic forms&mdash;mania
-à potu, dipsomania, alcoholic dementia and degeneration.
-Krafft-Ebing<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> speaks of hallucinations of the inebriate,
-delirium tremens, alcoholic melancholia, mania gravis
-potatorum, hallucinatory insanity, alcoholic paranoia,
-alcoholic paralysis and epilepsy. Delirium tremens he
-ascribes either to repeated excesses (à potu nimio),
-abstinence (à potu intermisso), insufficient nourishment,
-violent emotions, pneumonia and other acute diseases,
-loss of sleep, injuries such as fractures, etc. By hallucination
-of the inebriate (sensuum fallacia ebriosa) he refers
-to the transitory hallucinations of the constant drinker.
-Meyer<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> has described an alcoholic constitution "as
-shown by the lachrymose, prevaricating, jealous deterioration
-of the drinker."
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Stöcker,<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> after an extended study of a considerable
-number of cases, came to the conclusion that alcoholism
-is the result of a constitutional condition but not
-the cause of characteristic psychoses. Often, as was also
-shown by Bonhöffer, it is to be attributed to a psychopathic
-personality either acquired or congenital. The
-psychoses represented by the group of patients he examined
-included manic-depressive insanity, dementia
-praecox, hysteria, epilepsy and other miscellaneous conditions.
-He refers to dipsomania as an epileptic equivalent.
-His conclusions in brief were as follows:&mdash;"Chronic
-alcoholism in the first place is a symptom of a mental disease.
-It may, however, so exaggerate stationary epilepsy,
-chronic mania, dementia praecox, etc., which hitherto
-were latent, and perhaps would remain still latent
-without alcoholic abuses, that it may lead to a sudden
-outbreak of a turbulent disease manifestation. It may
-also give these diseases peculiar traits or a peculiar
-coloring for some time, which above all, may appear as
-the most striking phenomena, and thus cover up the symptoms
-of the fundamental disorder. Furthermore, it may,
-also, on the basis of this constitutional disease give rise
-to independent clinical pictures." Karpas<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> in commenting
-on this says: "One must remember that cravings
-play important rôles in our mental life. Some of
-our cravings are gratified; others find realization in our
-dreams; still others are repressed and compensated. In
-fact, our mental life is nothing but a readjustment, of
-complex reactions. The poet finds recourse in his phantasies;
-the philosopher gives vent to his theoretical speculations;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
-the scientist resorts to his inventions and hypothetical
-theories; the well balanced, normal individual
-seeks readjustment in healthy activities,&mdash;art, literature,
-science, occupations, sport, etc., etc. But the individual
-with a poorly endowed constitution finds refuge in neurosis,
-psychosis, alcoholism, drugs, and other vicious habits.
-We must recognize that alcoholism is nothing but a compensation
-for a complex, the fulfillment of which was
-denied by reality."</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> described acute and chronic alcoholism,
-pathological intoxication, alcoholic jealousy, delirium
-tremens, Korsakow's psychosis, alcoholic hallucinoses,
-paralysis and pseudo-paresis. In acute intoxication
-Kraepelin finds an inhibition of apprehension, mental
-grasp and the elaboration of outer impressions with a
-stimulation of the release of volitional impulses. A clouding
-of consciousness develops, associated with emotional
-excitement and a weakness of will power. Perception
-and mental reactions are delayed and their accuracy decreased
-on mental tests. The discrimination between
-louder sounds is uncertain, although the sensitiveness
-to lighter sound impressions is increased as in the ether
-narcosis. Busch found a limitation of the field of vision.
-The preservation of memory impressions is imperfect.
-A solution of mathematical problems shows a lowered
-mental capacity for work. The association of ideas and
-composition of sentences is delayed. There is a tendency
-to new word formation, phrasing and rhyming, with a
-certain amount of distractibility. Goal ideas are often
-missed, and consistent, orderly thought is not possible.
-Expression is rapid and impulsive, and is often characterized
-by a loud tone of voice.</p>
-
-<p>After larger amounts of alcohol psychomotor activities
-are interfered with as shown by the writing, and
-ataxia appears. The reflexes show an increased muscular
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>
-tension. Physical strength is markedly lowered, although
-it may be increased for a very short time. Alcohol
-even in small amounts interferes with productive mental
-processes. Ideas lose in clearness and sharpness, fatigue
-occurs earlier and efficiency and judgment are impaired.
-Still larger amounts retard apprehension and comprehension
-and the intoxicated person no longer knows what
-is said to him. All ability to control his conduct is lost.
-There is a tendency to repetition in speech, rhyming and
-jargon. Capacity for mental work is finally entirely gone
-and memory becomes confused. Psychomotor stimulation
-and excitement appear early, terminating finally in
-weakness. Emotional trends, at first happy and cheerful,
-are usually irritable, later with outbursts of anger.
-Sexual excitement often appears. Various physical disturbances
-have been described.</p>
-
-<p>In the pathological or complicated intoxications as
-described by Kraepelin, unusual emotional disturbances
-such as violent excitements occur. Anger or anxiety may
-develop with a clouding of the consciousness, and lead
-to uncontrollable rages with impulses to assault and kill.
-The most marked excitements occur in epileptics. The
-outburst is usually sudden in these cases and is followed
-by the most senseless and unjustifiable acts. Occasionally
-suicide is the result. In hysterical and psychopathic individuals
-alcohol may cause serious emotional disturbances,
-with clouding of consciousness or even delusion formation.
-Chronic drinkers are very likely to have abnormal
-symptoms at times. They often show a marked irritability
-followed by a pathetic and tearful mood. Abusive
-treatment of members of the family, jealousy, threats
-and violence are not uncommon. Delirious or anxious
-states with persecutory ideas and hallucinations are
-sometimes observed. These may exist only during intoxication.
-Alcohol often produces extreme excitements
-in cases of manic-depressive insanity, general paresis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span>
-and dementia praecox. Pathological changes of various
-kinds have been reported. In acute alcoholism Nissl
-found a destruction of cortical cells in some cases and a
-disappearance of the stainable lumps in others. The
-nuclei of the neurones were shrunken and sometimes displaced.</p>
-
-<p>Various tests have demonstrated the limited mental
-capacity of the chronic alcoholic. Will power is greatly
-reduced and fatigability increased. Memory and attention
-are affected and falsification of the past may occur.
-The patient learns nothing new and forgets the important
-things. All productive efficiency is gone and interest is
-lost. Weakness of judgment and loss of memory capacity
-lead to delusion formation. These often take the
-form of ideas of jealousy. Delusions of persecution,
-poisoning or grandeur may appear from time to time.
-Frequently there are genuine hallucinations. Some cases
-terminate finally in mental enfeeblement. Emotional
-changes are common in the chronic drinkers. The alcoholic
-humor is characteristic. The capacity for taking
-things seriously has been lost and there is a tendency to
-undue levity, often with a marked feeling of self-satisfaction.
-Some individuals, however, become moody, irritable
-or dull. Occasionally anxious states appear,
-frequently with suicidal attempts. One of the common
-symptoms of this condition is an extraordinary
-irritability after drinking. This leads to quarrels, assaults
-and violence. Consideration for others is completely
-lost. These attacks are often followed by remorse.
-A prominent and significant feature of the disease is the
-marked moral deterioration. All affection for family and
-children may be lost. Selfishness is pronounced and the
-patient spends all of his money for drink. Sexual excitement
-is sometimes an important symptom. With all
-of this there is a constant craving for alcohol. The patients
-have no insight into their condition and attribute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>
-their headache and tremors to overexertion, etc. They
-always deny using much alcohol and are absolutely untruthful
-on this subject. Overwork necessitates drinking,
-or it only happens after a death in the family, etc. Will
-power deteriorates rapidly. These individuals often
-commit crimes and come into conflict with the law. Gastritis,
-cirrhosis of the liver and numerous other diseases
-complicate the situation. Dizzy spells and headaches are
-common, as well as tremors of the tongue and fingers.
-Neurotic involvements are noted, with anesthesias, hyperesthesias,
-paresthesias, and muscular atrophies as
-well as speech defects. Epileptiform attacks are not
-infrequent in chronic alcoholism, and were found in ten
-per cent of Kraepelin's cases. His investigations showed
-that eleven per cent of the beer drinkers in Munich had
-convulsions. Combinations of epilepsy and hysterical
-manifestations with chronic alcoholism are not at all
-unusual. Rybakoff found a hereditary taint in 66.6 per
-cent of his cases while Moli reported only forty-seven
-per cent. Heredity was found to be a factor in thirty-seven
-per cent of Kraepelin's Heidelberg cases and in
-seventeen per cent of those at Munich. He describes
-various pathological findings in chronic alcoholism. Meningitis
-with hemorrhagic membranes is common. The
-convolutions are atrophied and the ependyma of the
-ventricles thickened. Pigmentary deposits similar to
-those of senility are found in the cells and vessel walls.
-There is an increase of both neuroglia cells and fibres.
-Hemorrhages are occasionally found in the central gray
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>When the suspicions of the chronic alcoholic lead to
-well defined delusions Kraepelin speaks of "alcoholic
-jealousy" as constituting a distinct psychosis. The patient
-sees in almost everything evidences of infidelity
-on the part of his wife and is often inclined to question
-the legitimacy of his own children. Assaults and violence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>
-are frequent occurrences. Occasionally genuine
-hallucinations accompany this condition. Suicidal and
-homicidal attempts are not uncommon.</p>
-
-<p>The onset of delirium tremens, first described by
-Thomas Sutton in 1813, is characterized by states of
-anxiety, fear, insomnia with disturbing dreams, sensory
-excitement, hyperesthesias, flashes of light, etc. The
-development usually is sudden, with a loss of attention,
-disturbance of apprehension, restlessness, distractibility,
-numerous hallucinations of the different senses, illusions,
-clouded states with disorientation, tremors and ataxia.
-Touch, pain and temperature sensations, according to
-Kraepelin, are undisturbed. The field of vision is sometimes
-narrowed. Recognition of colors is uncertain.
-There is a marked disturbance of the equilibrium, suggesting
-some lesion either of the eye muscles or of the
-labyrinth. A decided lengthening of the reaction time
-in associations has been shown by various observers.
-Sensory hallucinations are common. The ability to read
-correctly is entirely lost and what is read is meaningless.
-A paraphasic form of reading has been described by Bonhöffer.
-The attention cannot be held for any length of
-time. A dreamy clouded state is characteristic. Disorientation
-is usually complete in the severe cases. The
-hallucinations and illusions are very marked and sometimes
-even suggest moving pictures to the patient. Hallucinations
-of vision are more common than those of
-hearing. Peculiar skin sensations such as feelings of
-electricity are spoken of. Hallucinations may be induced
-by pressure on the eyeball and sometimes by suggestion.
-There is occasionally a confusional form of speech suggesting
-dementia praecox, with a tendency to coin new
-words and employ entirely meaningless terms. Although
-consciousness is not always entirely clouded, events transpire
-as in a dream, always confused by innumerable hallucinations.
-An occupation delirium is common, the patient
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span>
-imagining himself busy at his customary work.
-Delusional ideas regarding everything in his surroundings
-are frequent. Ideas of grandeur sometimes occur.
-Never, according to Bonhöffer, is there a complete disorientation
-as far as personality is concerned. The patient
-always knows who and what he is. Complete mental
-confusion is not the rule. Distractibility is usually very
-well developed. Bonhöffer found an inability to supply
-omitted words and syllables from well known phrases and
-memory for test words and numbers was impaired. Articles
-read are repeated with many changes and omissions.
-Memory for remote events is usually well preserved.
-Sometimes there is a falsification of the past.
-The mood is anxious, fearful, seldom irritable, at times
-actually humorous. Cheerfulness and fear of death occasionally
-alternate.</p>
-
-<p>The course of the disease is characterized by great
-restlessness often with a tendency to talkativeness.
-There is, however, no flight of ideas or rhyming. Delusions
-of persecution occur in some cases. Anesthesias,
-hyperesthesias, paresthesias, hypalgesias and sensitiveness
-of nerves and muscles are noted. Romberg's sign
-is present in some instances. Speech is often ataxic and
-paraphasic, and in advanced eases entirely meaningless.
-Tremors of the tongue and fingers are very characteristic.
-Writing is very much affected as a result. Epileptiform
-convulsions sometimes occur. Rarely focal symptoms,
-facial paralysis and hemiplegia appear for a short
-time. Reflexes are increased and ankle clonus occasionally
-appears. Defective papillary reaction and unequal
-pupils may be found, with diplopia and muscular
-weakness. Sleep is seriously interfered with. Bodily
-weight is reduced and blood pressure lowered. The temperature
-is usually elevated and the pulse accelerated.
-Albumen and sometimes sugar is present in the urine.
-The delirium often stops as suddenly as it begins, terminating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>
-in sleep, the patient being clear when he wakes.
-The memory of events is not well retained on recovery.
-The delirium may, however, become chronic and last for
-months. Some cases terminate in a hallucinatory feeblemindedness.
-This is likely to occur in psychopathic individuals.
-Hallucinations of hearing are more common in
-such conditions. People read their thoughts and influence
-their minds. They are subjected to hypnotism and
-electricity. The delusional ideas may be of a sexual
-nature or grandiose in character. The mood may be
-anxious or irritable. Suicidal tendencies sometimes appear.
-Later a humorous trend is often noted. Tremors
-and other neurological symptoms sometimes occur. Bonhöffer
-found at autopsy a considerable fibre loss in the
-central convolutions, the cerebellum and the column of
-Goll. In the large pyramidal and motor cells of the anterior
-central convolution the processes were deeply
-stained. Some nuclear changes were noted and occasional
-cells destroyed. Nissl described a granular degeneration
-of the neurones with a prominence of the
-"unstainable" substance, together with a swelling and
-crumbling of the cell bodies. Alzheimer often found free
-nuclei near the apical processes. In the glia cells and
-vessel walls granular detritus was observed. Acute and
-chronic cell alterations are more common in old alcoholics.
-Pachymeningitis hemorrhagica is sometimes
-found. Kraepelin considers it very doubtful whether
-wine or beer drinking ever causes delirium tremens,
-whisky and gin being the etiological factors as a general
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>Korsakow's psychosis was first described in 1887.
-This is characterized by a loss of memory, and falsification,
-with a marked tendency to disorientation, and is
-often due to chronic alcoholism. It is practically always
-accompanied by polyneuritic symptoms. According to
-Bonhöffer, it usually follows delirium tremens. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span>
-occurred in one-fourth of Kraepelin's cases. Occasionally
-it begins suddenly, but as a rule gradually, during
-the course of a chronic alcoholism. The patients frequently
-complain of dizziness, headaches and fainting
-spells. In the foreground of this affection is the impairment
-of memory. This is one of the characteristic features.
-The events of a few hours ago are completely forgotten.
-Disorientation appears next. This affects time
-more than anything else. The power of apprehension or
-perception is very markedly impaired (one-sixth of the
-normal in Kraepelin's cases) and the reaction time is
-greatly increased. He also found memory reduced to
-one-third or one-fourth of the normal on actual tests
-(repetition of words and syllables). Falsification of past
-events is also demonstrable. This often leads to elaborate
-delusion formations. The mood is usually anxious
-at first, later indifferent, dull, suspicious, irritable, in
-some eases cheerful and even humorous. The methods
-of life are completely changed. The patients neglect
-themselves, lie in bed, etc. The physical signs are those
-of neuritis. Muscular pains in the limbs appear, with
-evidences of loss of power. Paraplegias and weakness
-of the grip are found. Romberg's sign is frequently
-present. Anesthesias, hyperesthesias or paresthesias
-are noted. The reflexes are usually decreased, rarely increased.
-Ataxia and other difficulties of gait are common.
-The pulse is usually slower as a result of involvement
-of the vagus. Speech difficulty, writing defects,
-facial paralyses, weakness of the eye muscles, with inequality
-and inactivity of the pupils, are to be expected.
-There are usually tremors of the fingers. Epileptiform
-convulsions are not infrequent. Aphasia, agraphia,
-apraxia, monoplegia, hemiplegic, etc., are observed in
-many cases. Physical disturbances of various kinds due
-to chronic alcoholism are also present.</p>
-
-<p>At autopsy acute and grave alterations are found in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
-the cells of the second and third layers of the cortex.
-A granular degeneration (Körnig Zellerkrankung) of the
-cells is also referred to by Nissl. There is some fibre loss
-in the central convolutions and the internal capsule, as
-well as in the columns of Goll. Hemorrhages and thromboses
-are to be found. Alzheimer found encephalitic
-foci with proliferation of the cells of the vessel walls
-sending out fibroblasts in the neighborhood, and a destruction
-of the nerve fibres. These foci are found in the
-central gray matter of the third ventricle, roof of the
-aqueduct, etc. There is a formation of new vessels and
-an outwandering of cells often accompanied by numerous
-hemorrhages into the gray matter around the aqueduct
-of Sylvius. Wernieke has described this process as an
-"acute hemorrhagic polioencephalitis superior" and finds
-it very commonly associated with Korsakow's psychosis.
-It occurs, however, in other chronic alcoholic conditions.
-The peripheral nerves also show a polyneuritis. Bonhöffer
-found Korsakow's psychosis in three per cent of
-his delirious cases. Thirty-three per cent of Kraepelin's
-cases were women and only 24.5 per cent were under
-forty years of age. Chotzen found Korsakow's psychosis
-in three per cent of his male and in twenty-one per cent
-of his female alcoholics.</p>
-
-<p>The acute alcoholic hallucinoses as described by
-Kraepelin are characterized by well defined delusions of
-persecution and above all by hallucinations of hearing,
-with a clear sensorium. In eighty per cent of the cases
-the symptoms appear suddenly. Sometimes there is
-first an abortive delirious attack. Usually a multiplicity
-of hallucinations of hearing develop early. The patient
-hears threats and abusive language, always directed
-against himself. Visual hallucinations also occur, particularly
-at night. The other sensory fields are often involved.
-At the same time well marked delusions manifest
-themselves. These suggest every possible variety of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>
-persecution. Ideas of grandeur are sometimes observed.
-All of these symptoms are worse at night as a rule. Consciousness
-is usually fairly clear, and there is no disorientation.
-There is often a mixture of anxiety and
-humor. Some cases, however, are irritable and suspicious.
-Occasionally suicidal tendencies appear. Conduct
-is usually not greatly disturbed and the patient
-continues with his regular occupation. There is considerable
-insomnia and a tendency to run around a great
-deal and act foolishly at times. Physically, evidences
-of chronic alcoholism are always to be found. The customary
-duration of these acute conditions is from three
-to eight weeks, although they sometimes last for months.
-In a quarter of Kraepelin's cases the termination was in
-deterioration. There is a strong tendency to recurrence.
-The unrecovered cases are suspicious, surly, quarrelsome
-and have hallucinations of hearing. This condition may
-last for years. There are always occasional persecutory
-ideas. One-fifth of Kraepelin's cases became chronic.
-Bonhöffer described a paranoid type of long duration.
-The hallucinoses appear usually earlier in life than Korsakow's
-psychosis but later than delirium tremens. In
-Kraepelin's experience delirium tremens is three times
-as common as are hallucinoses. He looks upon these
-two conditions, however, as different clinical manifestations
-of "one and the same" disease process.</p>
-
-<p>Alcoholic paralysis, so called, is a mixture of chronic
-alcoholic symptoms with those of general paresis. There
-is a mental deterioration with ideas of grandeur, emotional
-dulness, hallucinations, delusions of jealousy,
-speech defect, tremors and polyneuritis. Epileptiform
-attacks are frequent. Most of these forms according to
-Kraepelin belong to Korsakow's psychosis or polioencephalitis
-hemorrhagica superior. Alcoholic conditions
-may also be complicated by syphilis or arteriosclerosis.</p>
-
-<p>Since the alcoholic psychoses have been generally recognized<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>
-as such, there has been comparatively little
-difference of opinion as to their differentiation. The
-classification of the American Psychiatric Association is
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The diagnosis of alcoholic psychosis should be restricted
-to those mental disorders arising, with few exceptions,
-in connection with <em>chronic</em> drinking and presenting
-fairly well defined symptom-pictures. One must
-guard against making the alcoholic group too inclusive.
-Overindulgence in alcohol is often found to be merely
-a symptom of another psychosis, or at any rate may be
-incidental to another psychosis, such as general paralysis,
-manic-depressive insanity, dementia praecox, epilepsy,
-etc. The cases to be regarded as alcoholic psychoses
-which do not result from chronic drinking are the episodic
-attacks in some psychopathic personalities, the dipsomanias
-(the true periodic drinkers) and pathological
-intoxication, any of which may develop as the result of a
-single imbibition or a relatively short spree.</p>
-
-<p>"The following alcoholic reactions usually present
-symptoms distinctive enough to allow of clinical differentiation:</p>
-
-<p>"(a) Pathological intoxication: An unusual or abnormal
-immediate reaction to taking a large or small
-amount of alcohol. Essentially an acute mental disturbance
-of short duration characterized usually by an excitement
-or furor with confusion and hallucinations, followed
-by amnesia.</p>
-
-<p>"(b) Delirium tremens: An hallucinatory delirium
-with marked general tremor and toxic symptoms.</p>
-
-<p>"(c) Korsakow's psychosis: This occurs with or
-without polyneuritis. The delirious type is not readily
-differentiated in the early stages from severe delirium
-tremens but is more protracted. The non-delirious type
-presents a characteristic retention defect with disorientation,
-fabrication, suggestibility and tendency to misidentify<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span>
-persons. Hallucinations are frequent after the
-acute phase.</p>
-
-<p>"(d) Acute hallucinosis: This is chiefly an auditory
-hallucinosis of rapid development with clearness of the
-sensorium, marked fears, and a more or less systematized
-persecutory trend.</p>
-
-<p>"(e) Chronic hallucinosis: This is an infrequent
-type which may be regarded as the persistence of the
-symptoms of the acute hallucinosis without change in the
-character of the symptoms except perhaps a gradual lessening
-of the emotional reaction accompanying the hallucinations.</p>
-
-<p>"(f) Acute paranoid type: Suspicions, misinterpretations,
-and persecutory ideas, often a jealous trend, hallucinations
-usually subordinate; clearing up on withdrawal
-of alcohol.</p>
-
-<p>"(g) Chronic paranoid type: Persistence of symptoms
-of the acute paranoid type with fixed delusions of
-persecution or jealousy usually not influenced by withdrawal
-of alcohol; difficult to differentiate from non-alcoholic
-paranoid states or dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>"(h) Alcoholic deterioration: A slowly developing
-ethical, volitional and emotional change in the habitual
-drinker; apparently relatively few cases are committed,
-as the mental symptoms are not usually looked upon as
-sufficient to justify the diagnosis of a definite psychosis.
-The chief symptoms are ill humor and irascibility or a
-jovial, careless, flippant, facetious mood; abusiveness to
-family, unreliability and tendency to prevarication; in
-some cases definite suspicions and jealousy; there is a
-general lessening of efficiency and capacity for physical
-and mental work; memory not seriously impaired. To
-be excluded are residual defects due to Korsakow's psychosis,
-or mental deterioration due to arteriosclerosis or
-to traumatic lesions.</p>
-
-<p>"(i) Other types, acute or chronic (to be specified)."
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Shadwell<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> states that in twenty-six Italian asylums
-18.6 per cent of their cases were directly or indirectly the
-result of alcoholism. Twenty-one and one-tenth per cent
-of the males and 4.37 per cent of the females admitted to
-the institutions of Switzerland from 1901 to 1904 were
-alcoholics. Twenty-one and thirty-seven hundredths per
-cent of the admissions to the hospitals in Denmark between
-1899 and 1903 were suffering from alcoholic psychoses.
-He gives the admission rate in Austria as fourteen
-per cent and in France, 12.5 per cent. Clouston some
-years ago estimated the admission rate in Great Britain
-and Ireland to be about twenty per cent.</p>
-
-<p>Pollock<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> has made a most interesting study of
-1,739 cases of alcoholic psychoses, the total number admitted
-to the New York state hospitals between October 1,
-1909, and September 30, 1912. Seventy-six and five-tenths
-per cent of these were men, and 23.5 per cent, women. The
-different conditions represented were as follows: Pathological
-intoxication, .7 per cent; alcoholic deterioration,
-7.7 per cent; delirium tremens, 4.7 per cent; Korsakow's
-psychosis, 18.8 per cent; acute hallucinosis, 36.7 per
-cent; chronic hallucinosis, 2.2 per cent; paranoid states,
-13.7 per cent; and all other forms, 15.5 per cent. Among
-the males, acute hallucinosis predominated, while Korsakow's
-psychosis constituted the largest percentage in
-the female patients. Of the ascertained cases, .4 per cent
-showed a defective make-up, 10.3 per cent were inferior
-and 89.3 per cent were reported as normal. In seventy-four
-per cent of the cases there was no history of insane
-heredity. The father of the patient was insane in 3.7
-per cent of the series and the mother in four per cent;
-25.8 per cent in all had a history of insane heredity.
-Thirty and five-tenths per cent of the male and thirty-seven
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span>
-per cent of the female patients had alcoholic fathers
-and three per cent of the men and 8.8 per cent of the
-women had alcoholic mothers. Pollock found the percentage
-of intemperate fathers twice as high in the
-alcoholic psychoses as in the patients suffering from
-other conditions. In 94.1 per cent of the cases there was
-no family history of nervous diseases. Eighty-one and
-one-tenth per cent of the men and 93.4 per cent of the
-women came from cities. Of the male patients 26.8 per
-cent were unskilled laborers; 16.1 per cent of the women
-were seamstresses, and 11.7 per cent, the wives of laborers.
-The alcoholic cases constituted fifteen per cent
-of the male, five per cent of the female, and ten per cent
-of the total first rate admissions during the three years in
-question. The rate of alcoholic psychoses was over twice in
-as great in the foreign born population as in the native.</p>
-
-<p>Three thousand four hundred and sixty-two cases
-diagnosed as alcoholic psychoses were admitted to the
-New York state hospitals during a period of eight years
-(1912 to 1919 inclusive). Of these, pathological intoxication
-constituted 2.91 per cent, delirium tremens, 5.97 per
-cent, Korsakow's psychosis, 20.94 per cent, acute hallucinosis,
-37.31 per cent, chronic hallucinosis, 3.66 per cent,
-acute paranoid states, 5.01 per cent, chronic paranoid
-states, 3.78 per cent, and alcoholic deterioration, 8.34 per
-cent. The remainder represented miscellaneous types
-variously described. These figures, of course, relate
-largely to a time when there were no restrictions on the
-sale of alcoholic beverages. During 1918 and 1919 the
-admission rate for alcoholic psychoses in New York was
-only 4.58 per cent. In Massachusetts in 1919 it was 7.47
-per cent, and in twenty-one other hospitals in various
-states it was 5.04 per cent. A study of 34,935 first admissions
-to forty-eight hospitals in sixteen different
-states during 1917, 1918 and 1919 showed the alcoholic
-psychoses to represent 5.07 per cent of the total number.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span>
-With the advent of prohibition the alcoholic psychoses as
-far as this country is concerned have become a matter of
-little more than historical interest. The admission rate
-in the New York state hospitals for 1920 was only 1.9 per
-cent.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES DUE TO DRUGS AND OTHER
-EXOGENOUS TOXINS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Opium is a drug which has been in quite common use
-for many centuries. According to E. M. Holmes of London,
-it was known to Theophrastus nearly three hundred
-years before the Christian era and two different forms
-were described by Dioscorides in the neighborhood of
-77 A.D. Nicander (185 to 135 B.C.) discussed at some
-length the effects of a "drink prepared from the tears
-which exude from poppy heads." Pliny in the first century
-A.D. recorded several cases of suicide by means of
-opium, which he spoke of as not being a rare occurrence.
-The drug is said to have been introduced into China by
-the Arabs in the thirteenth century. An edict prohibiting
-opium smoking was issued by the emperor Yung
-Cheng in 1729. It was not until 1909 that the British government
-agreed to completely prohibit the importation
-of morphine into China. The sale and use of narcotics
-has, however, been regulated in India for many years.
-Morphine, the first alkaloid ever discovered, was isolated
-and named by Sertürner, a German apothecary, in 1805.
-Over twenty derivatives of opium have been reported
-since that time. The real history of morphinomania, according
-to Erlenmeyer, began in 1864. As far as can be
-determined, opium was not grown in America until 1865.
-In 1906 it was estimated that over thirteen millions of
-people were addicted to opium smoking in China alone.</p>
-
-<p>The literature of medicine contains numerous references
-to the mental disturbances due to opium and morphine.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span>
-Krafft-Ebing<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> says of the habitual user that
-"Intelligence, it is true, is practically spared, but the
-highest mental functions&mdash;character, ethic feeling, self-control,
-mental energy, and force&mdash;always suffer.... In
-severe cases we find, in addition, weakness of memory,
-especially defect in the power of exact reproduction, difficulty
-of intellectual activity that may reach the degree
-of torpor, occasionally psychic depression reaching even
-marked dysthymia and taedium vitae, great emotionality,
-and, in general, profound deficiency of resistive power to
-affects; and besides, there may be episodically nervous
-restlessness, excitement, even attacks of fear due to vasomotor
-causes, and occasionally visual hallucinations."
-He also describes hallucinatory delirious conditions due
-to abstinence which strongly suggest alcoholism. In addition
-to clouded states of the same kind, Paton<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> speaks
-of the early occurrence, in chronic cases, of marked
-symptoms of hysteria. Apprehension and anxiety develop
-with mild suspicions and a moral deterioration
-very similar to that induced by alcohol. There may be
-considerable irritability and egotism, with a suggestion
-of flight of ideas and motor restlessness. Hallucinations
-and delusions are sometimes present, particularly if alcoholism
-is a complicating factor. Hyperesthesias, paresthesias
-and anesthesias are common. Barker<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> also
-speaks of a degeneration of character evidenced by
-ethical defects, lying, egotism and loss of memory. Under
-abstinence symptoms he includes restlessness, anxiety,
-despair, vomiting and delirium. White<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> regards the
-neuropathic diathesis as the most important cause of the
-morphine or opium habit. In habitual users he has noted
-hallucinated states with a paranoid coloring or a definite
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span>
-delirium. He has also observed delusions of persecution
-and poisoning, but emphasizes the importance of the
-gradual mental deterioration.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most elaborate studies ever made of morphinism
-was that of Erlenmeyer,<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> whose work on this
-subject reached nearly five hundred pages in its third
-edition. The mental disturbances associated with intoxication
-he divides into two groups&mdash;transitory and
-permanent. The former includes anxious states, hallucinations
-of vision and stuporous attacks; the latter, the
-intellectual and emotional deteriorations already described.
-There is a definite character change strongly
-suggesting "moral insanity," an artificial "senium praecox"
-being induced. He also refers to distinct psychoses
-resulting from chronic morphinism, the most common
-one being of the paranoid variety. Abstinence symptoms
-of sudden development include collapse and delirium.
-Restless anxiety and insomnia may usher in a mild delirious
-condition. Of these he described two forms,&mdash;one,
-a quiet, partially clouded dream state and another,
-with excitement, elation and hallucinations. The first
-form is the more common. The second is usually of short
-duration but may last for several weeks or even months,
-often manifesting paranoid ideas.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> calls attention to the important fact
-that morphine stimulates mental activities as well as
-inhibiting psychomotor processes, and is not therefore a
-logical drug for the production of sleep. The habitué
-feels himself capable of much greater exertions but is
-handicapped by an inhibition of will power. This psychological
-mechanism determines the difference between
-the intoxication of morphine and that of alcohol. Nissl
-found the cortical cells of dogs poisoned with morphine
-decreased in size but not destroyed. The stainable substance
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span>
-was rarefied and weakly stained, the achromatic
-substance, on the other hand, being unusually prominent.
-In chronic morphinism Kraepelin found memory uncertain,
-mental capacity diminished and fatigability increased.
-There are alternating periods of comparatively
-good health and dull somnolence with exhaustion or nervous
-restlessness. The mood is variable,&mdash;depressed, discouraged,
-hypochondriacal, irritable, or even confident
-and overbearing. Anxious states occasionally occur at
-night and suicidal attempts may be made. Character
-changes are also described by Kraepelin. The patients
-become complaining, oversensitive to pain and to opposition,
-are indolent, irresolute, irresponsible and neglect
-their work. Their interest is more and more confined
-to the drug. Their untruthfulness and deceitfulness are
-well known. Sleep is much disturbed, often by visual
-hallucinations. Phantastic delusional ideas are also
-manifested. Paresthesias and hyperesthesias are common.
-The reflexes are active and usually increased. The
-gait is unsteady or even ataxic. Speech disturbances,
-paralysis of the muscles of the eye, diplopia and loss of
-accommodation have been noted. A typical Korsakow's
-complex was observed by Heymann. Appetite is lost,
-bodily weakness and loss of weight appear and sugar
-is often present in the urine. Perspiration, dizzy spells,
-confusion and stupor may be caused by circulatory disturbances.
-Sexual power is diminished, and menstrual
-disturbances are frequent. These symptoms may appear
-early or may not develop for years, depending on the individual
-case. Kraepelin also describes forms similar
-to dipsomania in alcoholics. He attributes these to epileptic
-or hysterical constitutions. Many of his cases
-were decidedly psychopathic with tendencies to abuse
-the use of alcohol, tobacco and coffee. Of thirty-eight
-patients observed by him, nineteen used only one drug,
-ten of them were addicted to two, eight others to three,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span>
-and one patient to as many as five. Under abstinence
-symptoms he includes exhaustion, restlessness, yawning,
-sneezing, anxiety, chilliness, oppression, sense deceptions
-and pains in various parts of the body. The patient is
-sleepless and sometimes goes into an excitement with
-suicidal inclinations. In some cases a condition develops
-which markedly resembles delirium tremens. In others,
-hallucinatory symptoms are more marked. These manifestations
-may last for several days or for a few weeks.
-Hysterical dream states with hallucinations and convulsive
-seizures may also occur.</p>
-
-<p>Cocaine was first isolated by Gardeka in 1855, but was
-given the name it now bears by Niemann. It did not come
-into extensive use until many years later and was not
-employed generally in ophthalmological practice until
-about 1884. Freud in 1885 called attention to the fact
-that small doses of cocaine produced a stimulation of the
-mental activities with euphoria and an increased capacity
-for both mental and physical work. Mannheim,<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> who
-reviewed ninety-nine cases of cocaine poisoning in 1891,
-found that the first symptoms were drowsiness and deep
-sleep, occasionally followed by coma and collapse. He
-observed that some patients became restless and excited,
-dizzy, laughing and crying alternately, while others were
-very talkative and uneasy, walking up and down with a
-drunken gait. Usually he found a complete amnesia
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>The first study of psychoses due to cocaine was made
-by Erlenmeyer<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> in 1886. As he afterwards modestly
-observed, "This first report on cocomania, which was
-founded on thirteen cases, completely exhausted the subject,
-and nothing essential has been added to the symptomatology
-then published." He found that it was almost
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>
-always combined with the morphine habit. This
-was probably due to the fact that cocaine, at one time,
-was used extensively in the treatment of morphinism.
-Although the assimilation of food is not affected and gastritis
-was not a symptom, Erlenmeyer usually found a
-great decrease in bodily weight, as much as twenty to
-thirty per cent in some cases within a few weeks. Sleep
-is much disturbed and insomnia the rule. The most common
-form of mental disturbance he found to consist of
-attacks of violent excitement accompanied by delusions
-of persecution. Dangerous, impulsive assaults may
-occur. Very often, however, there were transitory confusional
-states with hallucinations of hearing and vision,
-succeeded by a mental deterioration and loss of memory.
-Visual hallucinations usually appear early. A common
-and peculiar symptom is the appearance of dark spots
-and points on a white background, attributed by Erlenmeyer
-to multiple scotomata. Auditory hallucinations he
-also found to be frequent. Sensory deceptions give rise
-to peculiar ideas such as the presence of the "cocaine
-bug" which the patient often tries to catch. Volubility
-is another characteristic feature of the disease which
-he refers to. As abstinence symptoms he describes forms
-of depression, with weakness of will power. Barker
-refers to psychoses of an acute hallucinatory confusional
-type as a result of cocainism.</p>
-
-<p>Krafft-Ebing speaks of episodic toxic deliria with
-visual and auditory hallucinations resembling those of
-alcohol and accompanied by delusions of persecution or
-jealousy with visions of multitudes of small animals, etc.
-He has not observed delirious conditions due to abstinence.</p>
-
-<p>In acute cocainism Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> finds an increased
-pulse rate, a lowering of blood pressure and the appearance
-of an excitement of the intoxication type with an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span>
-agreeable sensation of warmth and well-being. There
-is an initial motor excitement followed eventually by
-weakness. This is a somewhat similar reaction to that
-caused by alcohol, but it is more marked. Small doses
-cause the habitué to feel elated, talkative and inclined
-to prolific writings. He feels a greatly increased efficiency
-but does not show a corresponding productivity.
-Larger doses cause delirious excitement with a tendency
-to sudden collapse. After a prolonged use of the drug
-a condition of nervous excitement ensues, with an increasing
-susceptibility to intoxication, a mild flight of
-ideas, a diminished capacity for mental exertion, loss of
-will power and failure of memory. The patient is busy
-with entirely useless activities, quite voluble, and writes
-incessantly. He becomes unreliable, forgetful, disorderly
-and careless in his conduct. The mood alternates between
-one of well-being, irritability, suspicious anxiety and emotional
-dulness. Kraepelin speaks of the great loss of
-weight, increased reflexes, dilated pupils, rapid pulse,
-etc. Insomnia is a common symptom. The characteristic
-psychosis of cocaine, however, in his opinion is a paranoid
-condition somewhat resembling the alcoholic forms.
-The onset is usually sudden, with irritability, suspicion
-and anxious restlessness, together with the sudden development
-of hallucinations of various kinds. Auditory
-hallucinations are particularly numerous and are very
-active. The patient's surroundings appear strange and
-unreal. He sees all kinds of pictures of the most realistic
-type. Tactile hallucinations are very common. The patient
-often shoots at his imaginary persecutors or attempts
-suicide to escape them. A typical symptom is
-the appearance of delusions of jealousy. With all of
-this the patient is usually well oriented. Only occasionally
-is there a clouding of consciousness and confusion.
-Insight is, however, always lacking. Even with a clear
-sensorium the delusional ideas are firmly retained. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span>
-mood is excited, irritable, sometimes angry and exasperated,
-but most frequently depressed and suspicious. The
-conduct is characterized by restlessness and uncertainty.
-There is usually a marked volubility suggesting a conscious
-delirium at times. The whole development of these
-conditions is rapid, often within a few weeks. They disappear
-as quickly in many instances.</p>
-
-<p>Chronic cocainism is very similar to the alcoholic conditions.
-From a symptomatic point of view, however, the
-paranoid cocaine psychoses occupy relatively an intermediate
-position between alcoholic delirium and the paranoid
-states.</p>
-
-<p>In experiments on dogs Nissl found a stainability of
-the achromatic substance in the neurones, a beginning
-shrinkage of the cell nuclei and a slight increase of leucocytes
-in the pia and vessels.</p>
-
-<p>Chloral-hydrate, which has been employed medicinally
-since 1869, is much less frequently a cause of mental
-disturbance than morphine or cocaine. Krafft-Ebing
-describes its use combined usually with other drugs as
-causing moroseness, depression and mental dulness. He
-speaks, too, of a delirium due to sudden withdrawal.
-This condition, he says, may also be caused by paraldehyde.
-The craving for chloral, on the part of those who
-have acquired the habit, is much less intense than that
-for morphine or cocaine. Other drugs are very readily
-substituted for that reason. A prolonged use leads to
-digestive disturbances, constipation alternating with
-diarrhea, jaundice, flushing of the face, congestion of
-the conjunctiva, fulness of the head, palpitations, weak
-pulse, dyspnea and general malnutrition with erythematous,
-urticareous or pustular skin eruptions, etc. Hyperesthesias,
-anesthesias, paresthesias, pains in the
-limbs, sensations of heat and cold, tremors, occasional
-loss of muscular power and sometimes ataxia appear.
-The reflexes are usually decreased. Epileptiform convulsions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span>
-have been observed although they are infrequent.
-The mental disturbances of chloral have been
-studied by Wilson.<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> He describes the habitué as "dull,
-apathetic, somnolent, disposed to neglect his ordinary
-duties and affairs. He passes much of his time in a state
-of dreamy lethargy or in deep and prolonged sleep, from
-which he awakes unrefreshed and in pain." Headache is
-an almost constant symptom. It is associated with "confusion
-of thought, inability to converse intelligently or to
-articulate distinctly, and other evidences of cerebral congestion."
-Vertigo is also common. The mental state is
-characterized by dulness, apathy and confusion, alternating
-with periods of irritability and restlessness. The
-depression is not so marked as in morphinism. Inability
-to concentrate the mind, loss of memory, and intellectual
-enfeeblement are terminal conditions. Occasionally in
-the worst cases hallucinations, delusions, clouding and
-states of excitement are observed. Abstinence symptoms
-are headache, insomnia, neuralgia, pains in the limbs,
-nervousness, restlessness and formication. A delirium
-similar to that of alcoholism has been referred to by
-various writers.</p>
-
-<p>Casamajor<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> has described two types of mental
-disturbance due to the use of bromides,&mdash;a condition of
-apathy with dulness and an active delirium. The first is
-characterized by apathy, dulness, somnolence, weakness
-and failing memory, and is often observed in epileptics
-who have been subjected to protracted periods of bromide
-treatment. He has also reported toxic deliria showing
-marked hallucinations with psychomotor unrest, fabrications
-and paraphasia. This may be associated with unequal,
-sluggish pupils, increased or unequal patellar reflexes,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span>
-tremors, ankle clonus and an unsteady gait&mdash;a
-general condition suggesting paresis. Hoch<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> also reported
-cases showing hallucinations, clouding, disorientation,
-amnesia, fabrications and aphasic disturbances, together
-with physical signs simulating general paresis.
-O'Malley and Franz<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> described somewhat similar
-symptoms in a case showing dilated sluggish pupils, exaggerated
-knee-jerks, ankle clonus, tremors and unsteady
-gait, etc. The mental disturbance was characterized by
-a confused dreamlike state, with hallucinations, memory
-defect, a disturbance of attention, and a marked tendency
-to fabrication. The fabrication in their opinion suggested
-a delirious origin rather than the Korsakow complex.</p>
-
-<p>The first references to the psychoses caused by lead
-intoxication were apparently those of Dehäne in 1771.
-Tanquerel des Planches published his "Encephalopathia
-Saturnina" in 1836. He recognized three forms of this
-condition,&mdash;the delirious, the comatose and the convulsive.
-Edsall<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> describes as encephalopathies all of
-the cerebral symptoms due to chronic lead poisoning.
-In addition to transitory hemiplegias, aphasia and
-choreiform movements, he refers to the occurrence of
-hysterical manifestations, such as hemianesthesias associated
-with outbursts of excitement. Coma and clouded
-states often occur. These may be accompanied by convulsions.
-In the delirious form there may be a marked excitement
-with psychomotor activity. Hallucinations are
-common, particularly in alcoholic cases. Delusions of persecution
-are not infrequent. There is usually a rise of
-temperature throughout the attack. The delirium may
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span>
-last from a few days to several weeks. Symptom complexes
-strongly suggesting general paresis have been reported.
-Krafft-Ebing speaks of psychoses characterized
-by mental depression, feelings of oppression, irritability,
-mild delusions of persecution and terrifying hallucinations.
-Epileptiform attacks, paralyses and tremors are
-also mentioned. He refers to deliria which may arise
-spontaneously or follow an initial stupor, and speaks of
-the chronic lead psychoses as toxic hallucinatory confusional
-conditions. Six cases of this nature were reported
-by Bartens in 1887. Oppenheim has occasionally found
-hysterical symptoms associated with chronic lead poisoning.
-Rayner<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> found mental disturbances preceded by
-such premonitory symptoms as headache, restlessness,
-disturbed sleep, terrifying dreams, tinnitus aurium,
-flashes of light, difficulty of thought, and depression.
-This terminated in a few days in a delirium characterized
-by anxiety and visual hallucinations. Other cases showed
-a more marked depression and stupor, sometimes alternating
-with delirium and violent excitement, accompanied
-by hallucinations and speech defects. Amaurosis and convulsions
-are spoken of frequently as common symptoms.
-Conditions similar to general paresis have been noted
-by various observers.</p>
-
-<p>There have been very few contributions to medical
-literature on the subject of psychoses caused by arsenic.
-In discussing forms of poisoning due to that drug Edsall
-expressed the opinion that "marked psychic symptoms
-are unusual." Casamajor makes the statement that
-"in very severe cases memory disturbances have been
-noted, and in some the typical Korsakow polyneuritic
-psychosis." According to Oppenheim a rise of temperature
-associated with a delirium may be observed at the
-onset of arsenical poisoning and may also occur later in
-the disease. Psychoses due to arsenic were not referred
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>
-to by Krafft-Ebing, Arndt, Schüle, Ziehen or Kraepelin.</p>
-
-<p>Edsall<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> mentions as the symptoms of chronic mercurial
-poisoning, headache, restlessness, mental depression
-and weakness. Most striking features are tremors
-and a peculiar emotional disturbance referred to as "erythism."
-Tremors of the lips and facial muscles are
-common and speech disturbance and choreiform movements
-have been noted. Symptoms suggesting neurasthenia
-and hysteria have also been reported. Naunyn
-has described excitements due to mercury characterized
-by anxiety and fears with hallucinations and sleeplessness.
-He also speaks of manic attacks, depressions and
-mental deterioration as associated conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Argyria or chronic silver poisoning is said to be accompanied
-often by a marked sensitiveness and occasional
-episodes of actual depression due to the discoloration
-and pigmentation of the face.</p>
-
-<p>Psychoses due to various gases are occasionally encountered.
-Illuminating gas is a rather common means
-of suicide, as is shown by the newspapers. It has been
-found that the cause of death in these cases is carbon
-monoxide, which is also often reported as responsible for
-the asphyxiation of workmen in garages and other places
-where gasoline motors are used. This occasionally results
-from the improper ventilation of laundries, engine
-rooms, gas plants, iron foundries, etc. These conditions
-have been very fully studied by O'Malley.<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> The
-mental disorders due to carbon monoxide are described as
-being characterized by a sudden attack of confusion and
-clouding associated with a period of complete amnesia.
-There may be disturbances of attention and Korsakow's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span>
-psychosis is sometimes strongly suggested, with memory
-impairment and tendencies towards fabrication. This
-condition may be transitory or last for many months.
-On recovery the patient usually has no recollection of any
-events taking place after the time of the poisoning. Immediately
-following the initial unconsciousness there may
-be excited periods or delirious states with aphasic disturbances.
-In chronic cases delusions of persecution are
-often observed. The psychosis frequently does not develop
-until several weeks or months after the actual poisoning.
-Several observers have referred to a mask-like
-expression of the face, with emotional indifference,
-apathy and outbursts of laughter. The mood has been
-described as characterized by emotional instability.
-O'Malley calls attention to the important fact that the
-mental disturbance may have been the cause of suicidal
-attempts rather than a result of the gas poisoning. Confused
-delirious states due to carbon monoxide poisoning,
-also conditions resembling Korsakow's disease, have been
-described by Kraepelin. Several cases somewhat similar
-to that described by O'Malley have been observed at the
-Boston State Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>An analysis of the statistics of American institutions
-shows that psychoses due to drugs and other exogenous
-poisons are quite rare in this country. They represented
-only .39 per cent of the admissions to the New York state
-hospitals during a period of eight years. The number
-admitted to Massachusetts hospitals is still less. In a
-total of 70,987 first admissions to forty-eight hospitals in
-sixteen different states there were only 324 cases due to
-exogenous poisons. This constituted .65 per cent of the
-total number admitted. It is interesting to note that during
-a period of eight years, when 49,640 cases were admitted
-to the New York state hospitals, 154 cases of psychosis
-due to opium or morphine were reported, five due
-to metallic poisons, eighteen caused by gases, and nine
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span>
-of types unspecified. No case of uncomplicated cocainism
-was reported during that period of time.</p>
-
-<p>The 314 drug habitués in the state hospitals of the
-entire country as shown by the census of January 1, 1920,
-and reported by the National Committee for Mental Hygiene,
-represented .15 per cent of the mental cases under
-treatment in those institutions on the same date. The
-808 drug addicts shown by the same census in all of the
-institutions of the United States, both public and private,
-represented .34 per cent of the mental cases reported by
-them. The fact that the private hospitals showed 4.5
-per cent of drug cases in the same census is significant.
-It indicates that these cases are largely cared for in
-institutions of that type, and furthermore, that their number
-is very small.</p>
-
-<p>The result of the investigations made in 1919 by a
-committee appointed by the Secretary of the United
-States Treasury is of great interest in view of the number
-of drug psychoses treated in our state hospitals. The
-committee's report<a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> shows an estimated annual per
-capita use of opium in Italy of 1.25 grains; Germany, two
-grains; France, three; Holland, 3.5; and the United
-States, thirty-three grains. More opium is consumed
-here than in any other country in the world. The committee
-was of the opinion that ninety per cent of it was
-used for other than medicinal purposes. The estimated
-number of habitués in New York City at that time as
-reported by the City Commissioner of Health was 103,000.
-The questionnaire sent out by the committee to
-physicians registered under the Harrison Act showed that
-the number of cases under treatment for morphinism in
-various parts of the country was as follows:&mdash;California,
-3,338; Connecticut, 11,740; Illinois, 8,218; Indiana,
-8,438; Massachusetts, 14,770; New Jersey, 5,900; New
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span>
-York, 37,095; Pennsylvania, 10,202, etc. The estimated
-number of drug users in the United States was given at
-one million, and the amount of money expended by them
-annually was said to approximate sixty-one million dollars.
-In view of these statements the number of psychoses
-reported in the hospitals is astonishing.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES WITH PELLAGRA</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The origin of pellagra is shrouded in mystery. Although
-first described by Casal, the name now attached to
-the disease was suggested by Frappoli in 1771. He
-referred to it as of ancient origin at that time and probably
-identical with the "pellarella" reported in Milan in
-1578. Niles<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a> is of the opinion that the peculiar malady
-existing among the American Indians and mentioned by
-Baruino in 1600 was almost certainly pellagra. It is
-interesting to note that he attributed it to the use of
-corn. The disease was observed in Spain by Gaspar
-Casal in 1735 and appeared in Italy about twenty-five
-years later. Of the 4,404 admissions to the St. Clement's
-Hospital at Venice between 1873 and 1880 over thirty
-per cent showed symptoms of pellagra. In 1912, according
-to Niles, the number of cases in Italy was estimated
-at approximately one hundred thousand. The disease
-was apparently first reported in France in 1818. It has
-been common in Egypt since 1892 at least and is said
-to have occurred there as early as 1847. Cases were reported
-in this country by John P. Gray at the Utica
-State Hospital and by Tyler at the McLean Hospital, in
-Somerville, Massachusetts, in 1863. It is now thought
-to have been very common in the Andersonville and
-Libby prisons during the civil war, although not diagnosed
-as such at the time.</p>
-
-<p>Few cases were reported in this country prior to
-1907, when it was found to be present at the Columbia,
-South Carolina, State Hospital by Babcock. Pellagra
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span>
-constituted seven per cent of the admissions to that institution
-in 1908, fifteen per cent in 1909, twenty in 1910,
-over twenty-seven in 1911 and twenty-six per cent in
-1915. Sixty-one per cent of the deaths in the hospital
-during the latter year were due to that disease. The
-health officer of the state reported four hundred cases
-in South Carolina in 1909 and six thousand in 1914.
-Babcock is now of the opinion that pellagra undoubtedly
-existed for twenty years or more at Columbia before its
-significance was known. In 1910 the disease was found
-to be present in thirty different states and represented
-about three thousand cases.<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> Of these the largest
-numbers were in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
-Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas,
-and Illinois. The importance of this question had already
-been recognized and a national conference was
-held on the subject at Columbia in 1909. During the
-same year the governor of Illinois appointed a commission
-to make a thorough study of pellagra in that state.
-The disease has been made the subject of elaborate investigation
-and study by the United States Public
-Health Service and several publications have been issued
-by that department.<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a></p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the extended discussion and scientific
-research of the last few years, the question as to
-the definite etiology of pellagra has not as yet been positively
-settled. The maize or Indian corn theory was first
-advocated by Mazari in 1810. He believed the symptoms
-to be due to a deficiency in gluten. Sette in 1826 attributed
-the disease to a fungus (scimelpige) growing on
-corn and producing a poison from the oil in the grain.
-The smut of corn, "Ustilago Maydis," was suggested as
-a possible factor by Pari in 1860. In 1872 Lombroso
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>
-formulated his toxic theory: "In pellagra we are dealing
-with an intoxication produced by poisons developed
-in spoiled corn through the action of certain microorganisms,
-in themselves harmless to man." He also announced
-the discovery of "pellagrosein," a toxic substance
-extracted from spoiled corn. In 1902 Ceni advanced
-the theory that the disease was caused by the
-action of certain moulds such as the aspergillus fumigatus
-and flavescens. The Illinois Pellagra Commission in
-1911 came to the conclusion after an elaborate investigation
-of the subject that the primary etiological factor
-involved was a living microorganism of unknown nature,
-that the probable source of infection was through the
-intestinal tract and that a deficient amount of animal
-protein in the diet probably acted as a predisposing cause.
-Funk in 1914 suggested a vitamin deficiency in the diet
-brought about by the consumption of overmilled corn.
-Voegtlin<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> in the same year expressed the opinion that
-the disease was essentially a chronic intoxication,&mdash;"While
-the agents at work in this intoxication are as yet
-unknown, I am inclined to believe that toxic substances
-exist in certain vegetable foods, not necessarily spoiled,
-which, if consumed by man over a long period of time,
-may produce an injurious effect on certain organs of
-the body.... It is probably more than a mere coincidence
-that the population of that part of the world in
-which pellagra is endemic lives on a mainly vegetable
-diet."</p>
-
-<p>In 1916 a study was made by Koch and Voegtlin<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a>
-of the chemical changes found in the nervous system in
-pellagra which was very significant in its results. They
-found an increase in water with a decrease in proteins and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span>
-lipoids, the latter reaction being attributed to a degeneration
-in the white matter. There was also a relative increase
-in the cholesterol content, looked upon as a compensatory
-protective function tending to replace the
-loss in lipoids. The most marked chemical alterations
-were found in the cord. On feeding monkeys and rats
-with an exclusive vegetable diet, changes in the chemical
-reaction of the brain and cord of almost exactly the same
-type were brought about experimentally.</p>
-
-<p>Goldberger<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> in 1916 made an interesting report of
-a series of investigations carried on by the United States
-Public Health Service at Jackson, Mississippi. A large
-number of cases of pellagra were treated by largely supplementing
-the dietary with fresh meats, milk and leguminous
-vegetables. The carbohydrate content was reduced
-at the same time but corn was not entirely discontinued.
-Of 209 cases studied, 172 remained under continuous observation
-with a recurrence of symptoms in only one
-case. In a similar experiment made at the Georgia
-State Sanitarium seventy-two patients, all of whom had
-shown attacks previously, were treated for a year without
-symptoms. A number of volunteers at the Mississippi
-State Penitentiary were given a test diet consisting
-of wheat flour, corn meal, grits, cornstarch, white polished
-rice, granulated sugar, cane syrup, sweet potatoes,
-pork fat, cabbage, collards, turnip greens and coffee. Of
-the eleven convicts receiving this diet, six developed a
-typical dermatitis with slight nervous and gastrointestinal
-symptoms. The results of these investigations
-were not offered by the United States Public Health
-Service as being conclusive and incontrovertible evidence
-as to the etiology of pellagra, which must still be looked
-upon as being somewhat in doubt. The dietetic factors
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>
-concerned in the production of the disease have been
-under serious consideration for a century or more.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">This information was supplemented by a study of pellagra
-in the general population of the cotton mill communities
-in South Carolina.<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a> In comparing the dietaries
-of pellagrous households with those of the families
-escaping infection it was found that the former consumed
-less meat, milk, butter, cheese and eggs. The
-value of their diet in calories and proteins was lower.
-The proteins contributed, moreover, were more largely
-from cereals, peas, beans, etc. The carbohydrate content
-was also lower. They concluded that the particular
-points involved <span class="no-break">were:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1c">"1. A physiologically defective protein supply,</p>
-
-<p class="p1c">"2. A low or inadequate supply of fat-soluble vitamin,</p>
-
-<p class="p1c">"3. A low or inadequate supply of water-soluble
-vitamin, and</p>
-
-<p>"4. A defective mineral supply."</p>
-
-<p class="p2">They were also of the opinion that the disease could be
-prevented by "including in the diet an adequate supply
-of animal protein foods (particularly milk, including butter,
-and lean meat)."</p>
-
-<p>Roberts<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> in 1920 made a study of twenty-five cases
-of pellagra encountered in private practice. In every
-instance the disease developed in families provided with
-an abundance of food of all kinds. An analysis of the
-actual consumption, however, showed that "not one of
-the patients ate a well rounded, balanced diet of meat,
-milk, eggs or wholesome vegetables." Either they were
-suffering from a lack of nourishment in every case or
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span>
-they were eating practically the same diet that Goldberger
-used experimentally in producing pellagra.</p>
-
-<p>As defined by Barker<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> pellagra "is a disease characterized
-by peculiar cutaneous, digestive, nervous and
-mental disturbances, usually running a chronic course,
-with periodic exacerbation, but sometimes developing
-acutely and proceeding quickly to a fatal termination."
-He speaks of the disease as developing during the winter
-months usually with neurasthenic manifestations&mdash;fatigability,
-insomnia, slight vertigo, and feelings of apprehension,
-followed by digestive disturbances later in
-the spring. The parts of the skin surface exposed to the
-sun develop an erythema followed by a dermatitis. Nervous
-and mental symptoms may appear later. In some
-cases the disease tends to recur every spring. The skin
-lesions have been described as a characteristic "mask"
-shown on the face, the pellagrous collar, a bandlike eruption
-on the neck, Casal's "necklace" extending downwards
-over the sternum, the pellagrous "butterfly,"
-"gauntlets," etc. The more common digestive disorders
-are stomatitis and glossitis, gastric disturbances and
-diarrhea. Neurological symptoms observed include
-hyperesthesia, paresthesia, anesthesia, tremors, paralyses,
-muscular pains, increased reflexes and occasional
-convulsions.</p>
-
-<p>The literature of pellagra and its associated mental
-disturbances has been elaborately reviewed by Babcock.<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a>
-The following references appear in a comprehensive
-study of this subject made by him in 1910. Griesinger<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a>
-described the pellagrous psychoses as characterized
-by a vague, incoherent delirium, accompanied
-by loquacity and loss of memory without any violent
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span>
-excitement or special disorder of the intelligence. The
-depression gradually develops into a torpor of all the
-mental powers together with muscular weakness, a condition
-resembling general paresis. Mongeri<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> states
-that the psychoses usually begin with a period of depression
-accompanied by hypochondriacal ideas. This is followed
-by confusion and hallucinations of hearing.
-Delusions of persecution appear, with a marked tendency
-to suicide by drowning. Crimes of various kinds may be
-caused by the paranoid condition which usually terminates
-in deterioration. In speaking of chronic and acute
-forms Bianchi<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> says: "The former is characterized
-by general depression, melancholia, confusion, slow dementia,
-paresthesias and ataxic gait. Contractures and
-subsulti are absent, although in most instances the reflexes
-are exaggerated. In the acute form we have rapid
-elevation of temperature, 39° to 41° C.; intense neuro-muscular
-excitement, subsulti, contractures, muscular
-rigidity, exaggerated reflexes and confusion with phases
-of exaltation. There are numerous intermediate forms
-in which we observe a great variety of psychical phenomena,
-and also alternations of excitement and depression.
-Phases of remission and of apparent recovery are
-observed, especially at certain seasons." Régis<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> is
-quoted as follows: "It is recognized that the most common
-form of psychosis in pellagra is mental confusion
-with melancholy or dreamy delirium. This occurs more
-or less markedly in most of the cases. It is manifested
-by inertia, a passivity, an indifference, a considerable
-torpor; by insomnia, hallucinations often terrifying,
-both of sight and hearing; by delirious conceptions with
-fixed ideas of hopelessness, of damnation, of fear, anxiety,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span>
-persecution, poisoning; of possession by devils and
-witches, of refusal of food, and so marked a tendency to
-suicide, and to suicide by drowning, that Strombio gave
-it the name hydromania. This melancholy depression,
-which can reach, in certain cases, even to stupor, is always
-based upon a foundation of obtusion, of intellectual hebetude,
-and of considerable general debility, which becomes
-permanent and terminates by degrees in dementia,
-in proportion as the pellagrous cachexia makes new progress.
-It is accompanied sometimes by a polyneuritis.
-The mental confusion of pellagrins can, in place of changing
-directly into dementia, turn to a chronic mental confusion.
-One may observe in pellagra, as in every grave
-intoxication, a morbid state resembling general paresis
-(pellagrous pseudo-general paresis). This occurs especially
-in the cases where instead of habitual melancholy
-ideas, the patients present ideas of satisfaction and of
-wealth." Procopiu<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> found his patients "sad, apathetic,
-silent; in the more advanced stage they are melancholy,
-and fall sometimes into an absolute mutism, or
-respond with difficulty, and have the air of not understanding
-what is said to them. Sometimes this melancholy
-is accompanied with stupor, and leads the poor
-pellagrins into dementia." He also speaks of the occurrence
-of sudden outbursts of manic excitement.
-Tanzi<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> refers to the existence of both pellagrous mania
-and melancholia but speaks of a characteristic amentia
-"which manifests itself acutely in loss of time and
-place, loss of memory, confusion, hallucinations, and
-paresthesias, from which there arise morbid impulses
-and delusions. Pellagrous amentia, often assumes a depressive
-form, which simulates melancholia, and in some
-cases either from time to time, or throughout the whole
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span>
-course of the psychosis, it is accompanied by exaltation,
-which gives it some resemblance to mania."</p>
-
-<p>Gregor<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> in 1907 made a careful analysis of seventy-two
-cases. He classified these in seven groups:
-1. Neurasthenia; 2. Acute stuporous dementia; 3. Amentia
-(acute confusional insanity); 4. Acute delirium; 5.
-Katatonia; 6. Anxiety psychoses; and 7. Manic-depressive
-insanity. The neurasthenic cases (9.72 per cent)
-exhibited headache, pain in the gastric region, vertigo,
-paresthesia and lassitude, with a sense of unrest and
-anxiety as well as ill-defined apprehensions. There was
-a sense of mental incapacity and feeling of illness, together
-with a mild depression and hypochondriacal tendencies.
-The cases diagnosed as acute dementia (13.88
-per cent) were of the same general type but with more
-advanced symptoms. These showed a decided stupor,
-tending to remission, deep mental depression, a sense of
-insufficiency and "peculiar subjective troubles." The
-tendency to suicide was prominent and caused this group
-to be called melancholia by some. Many cases showed
-the gradual development of an affectless stupor. Catatonic
-symptoms and stereotypies occasionally occurred.
-Memory disturbances were well marked in this form.
-The psychoses disappeared invariably with the symptoms
-of the pellagra. The Amentia group (44.44 per
-cent) included long-continued cases with remission and
-intermissions. Terrifying hallucinations and violent
-motor excitement appeared frequently, followed by a
-stupor which was sometimes interrupted by delirium.
-Hallucinations were usually present and some had dream
-states. These cases often terminate unfavorably. Acute
-delirium constituted 2.7 per cent of the seventy-two cases,
-and katatonia occurred in 13.8 per cent. These cases
-passed rapidly into dementia. Anxiety psychoses (4.16
-per cent) were diagnosed in a few instances, but were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span>
-complicated by occasional stupors. Two and seven-tenths
-per cent of the cases were classified as manic-depressive
-insanity. Mobley, according to Babcock,
-found the following types represented at the Georgia
-State Sanitarium:&mdash;1. Acute intoxication psychosis, with
-psychomotor suspension; 2. Infective exhaustive psychosis,
-with psychomotor retardation or excitation; 3.
-Symptomatic melancholia with psychomotor retardation;
-and 4. Manic-depressive psychoses.</p>
-
-<p>Singer<a name="FNanchor_259_259" id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a> in 1915 suggested the following classification
-of the psychoses associated with <span class="no-break">pellagra:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="p7">1. Disorders directly due to the pellagra toxin:</p>
- <p class="p8">(a) Symptomatic depression; (b) Delirious pictures.</p>
-
-<p class="p7">2. Disorders based on peculiarities in personal make-up,
-the attack of "insanity" being precipitated
-by pellagra;</p>
- <p class="p8">(a) Manic-depressive disorders; (b) Hysteria; (c)
-Psychasthenia; (d) Dementia praecox; (e) Paranoic
-developments; and</p>
-
-<p class="p7">3. Disorders due to definite brain changes with pellagra
-merely as a complication:</p>
- <p class="p8">(a) Arteriosclerotic dementia; (b) Senile dementia;
-(c) Presenile psychoses; (d) General paralysis
-of the insane.</p>
-
-<p class="p10a">He found mental disturbances of some kind in about
-forty per cent of the cases examined. As a general rule
-they appeared after the patient had shown evidence of
-several attacks of the disease. The psychoses occurred
-in men between the ages of twenty-one and forty and in
-women between forty-one and sixty. About ninety-five
-per cent of the mental disorders were to be attributed
-directly to the effect of the toxin. The remaining five
-per cent represented individuals with a defective nervous
-organization or were purely incidental complications.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
-Singer found peculiarities in make-up associated frequently
-with a predisposition to pellagra. He also expressed
-the opinion that chronic forms of "insanity" are
-very rarely caused by the diseases.</p>
-
-<p>Sandy<a name="FNanchor_260_260" id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> made a study of 160 cases at the state hospital
-at Columbia, South Carolina, in 1916 based on a
-classification of psychoses quite similar to the one now
-in use. He found that thirty-five per cent of these belonged
-to the infective exhaustive group. As a matter of
-fact, this is the conclusion almost anyone would reach
-from reading the observations of the earlier writers.
-These cases were usually characterized by "more or less
-marked delirium, being accompanied by some confusion
-and disorientation, there frequently being also hallucinations
-accompanied by more or less agitation and restlessness."
-Physically he found, besides well marked symptoms
-of pellagra, evidences of severe exhaustion, loss of
-weight, emaciation, fever, sordes, anorexia, and typhoid
-facies. "In the milder forms of these 'delirious pictures,'
-as Singer calls them in his contribution to the
-report of the Thompson-McFadden Pellagra Commission,
-and as he pointed out, the periods of clouding (of consciousness)
-may be quite brief and episodic. In such
-cases in the intervals when the consciousness is practically
-clear, the general attitude is one of symptomatic
-depression." Sandy found characteristic manic-depressive
-forms in eleven per cent of the series reviewed. The
-depressed types were more common. Here he found retardation
-of speech and action with a dearth of ideas. In
-these cases he looks upon pellagra as being merely an
-exciting etiological factor. The prognosis was not so
-favorable, however, as it usually is in manic-depressive
-psychoses, death often being due to the development of
-central neuritis. In three per cent of the total he found
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span>
-what could only be described as symptomatic depressions,
-the emotional condition not being so marked as one would
-expect in the manic-depressive group. In twelve per
-cent a diagnosis of dementia praecox was made. In these
-the pellagra was merely an incident and not an etiological
-factor.</p>
-
-<p>In several patients Sandy found a symptom complex
-strongly suggestive of general paresis, thus confirming
-the findings of other observers. These showed speech
-and writing defects, absent or sluggish pupillary reaction,
-swaying in the Romberg position, altered deep reflexes,
-disorientation, memory disorders and other evidences
-of deterioration. The Wassermann reactions were
-negative in both the blood and spinal fluid tests and no
-lymphocytosis was shown on cell counts. These cases
-he thinks belong in the infective exhaustive group, and
-usually die of central neuritis, a condition already referred
-to and described originally by Turner and Meyer.
-Sandy also found pellagra associated with various senile
-psychoses. This group constituted ten per cent of those
-studied. Fourteen per cent of the series he left unclassified
-owing to lack of history, etc. Some of these showed
-simple deterioration, others suggested neurasthenia, and
-some, general paresis. Of the remaining cases three were
-epileptic imbeciles, three, constitutional inferiority with
-episodes of some kind, and three were not insane. Cases
-associated with chorea and hysteria were also observed.
-On analyzing these most important findings the assumption
-would seem to be warranted that pellagra is an incident
-in certain psychoses&mdash;(senility and dementia
-praecox), that it is a precipitating factor in certain cases
-(manic-depressive), and that the characteristic conditions
-due to the disease are toxic and assume the infective-exhaustive
-form, occasionally simulating general
-paresis.</p>
-
-<p>The policy of the Association's committee on statistics<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span>
-in the differentiation of these conditions is shown by
-the following quotation on this subject from the last edition
-of the manual:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The relation which various mental disturbances bear
-to the disease pellagra is not yet settled. Cases of pellagra
-occurring during the course of a well established
-mental disease such as dementia praecox, manic-depressive
-insanity, senile dementia, etc., should not be included
-in this group. The mental disturbances which are apparently
-most intimately connected with pellagra are certain
-delirious or confused states (toxic-organ-like reactions)
-arising during the course of a severe pellagra. These are
-the cases which for the present should be placed in the
-group of psychoses with pellagra."</p>
-
-<p>A study of recent statistics would tend to show that
-pellagra is not at this time a factor of importance in our
-institutions. In Massachusetts in 1919 the admission
-rate for this disease was .33 per cent. In New York
-state hospitals during a period of eight years it was only
-.03 per cent. In twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other
-states it amounted to only 1.28 per cent. This includes
-a number of institutions in the south. There were 263
-cases (.37 per cent) in 70,987 first admissions to forty-eight
-hospitals in sixteen different states. The admissions
-reported from the southern institutions indicate
-that pellagrous psychoses are comparatively infrequent
-as a rule. During the year 1918 pellagra constituted
-10.7 per cent of the admissions to the Columbia State
-Hospital. During the biennial period of 1917 and 1918
-the admission rate at the Arkansas State Hospital for
-Nervous Diseases was 8.31 per cent. None were admitted
-to the Spring Grove State Hospital at Catonsville, Maryland.
-In 1919 the admission rate at the Western State
-Hospital at Staunton, Virginia, was 1.14 per cent, at the
-Central State Hospital, Petersburg, Virginia, 1.39 per
-cent, and at the Georgia State Sanitarium at Milledgeville,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span>
-2.49 per cent. One and sixty-one hundredths per
-cent of the admissions to the Louisiana State Hospital
-during 1920 were diagnosed as psychoses due to pellagra.
-Very few cases are reported in the northern institutions.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES WITH OTHER SOMATIC
-DISEASES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mental disturbances of various types associated with
-somatic conditions and not sufficiently characteristic or
-circumscribed in their symptomatology to constitute
-definite and separate psychoses have long been recognized.
-That delirium is a complicating factor in certain
-acute febrile diseases has been known for centuries.
-Aristotle called attention to the occurrence of hallucinations
-and illusions during the course of fevers. Hippocrates
-referred frequently, not only to excitements,
-but to delirium and phrenitis. The word "delirus" appears
-in several places in the works of Horace and many
-of the early authors apparently used this term as synonymous
-with both mania and melancholia. That was
-probably true of Sennert. Flemming in 1844 mentioned
-fever delirium, hallucinatory and delusional clouded
-states and an encephalitic form in addition to the various
-alcoholic types. Sydenham referred to the mental
-symptoms associated with malaria and Bright in his
-original "Reports" described other delirious conditions
-at some length. Sir Thomas Watson showed that the
-brain was uninvolved at autopsy in the acute rheumatic
-affections with apparent cerebral complications. Mental
-symptoms have, of course, been associated for hundreds
-of years with meningitic processes. Diabetic coma was
-also recognized long since. Griesinger is said by some
-to have been the first to call attention to the psychoses
-caused by the acute infections. Post febrile mental disturbances
-were, however, referred to by Sydenham, Baillarger,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span>
-Westphal, Greenfield, Gubler and many others.
-Delasiauve very elaborately described the psychoses associated
-with typhoid fever in 1849. The mental disorders
-accompanying gout were discussed at considerable
-length by Sydenham and were referred to as early as
-1699 by Philander Misaurus.</p>
-
-<p>According to Bucknill and Tuke<a name="FNanchor_261_261" id="FNanchor_261_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a>, Misaurus made
-the following very interesting suggestions in an article
-entitled "The Honour of the Gout": "It would be
-worth inquiry, whether the gout is not as effectual against
-madness; and we may reasonably believe that it is so,
-if upon examination, it should be found that there are
-no gouty people in Bedlam; and then for the recovery
-of these poor creatures to their wits again, it will not
-need much consideration, whether they ought not to be
-excused the hard blows which their barbarous keepers
-deal them, and the Therapeutic method of Purging,
-Bleeding, Cupping, Fluxing, Vomiting, Clystering,
-Juleps, Apozemes, Powders, Confections, Epithemes,
-Cataplasms, with which the more barbarous Doctors torment
-them, and instead of their learned Torture, indulged
-for a time only, a little intemperance as to wine,
-or women, or so; or the scholar's delight of feeding
-worthily, and sleeping heartily, whereby they might get
-the Gout, and then their madness were cured." Clouston
-described a very definite form of phthisical insanity.
-Van der Kolk made the surprising statement that phthisis
-and mania often alternated in regular cycles. Nasse
-classified the mental conditions associated with fevers as
-either resulting directly from the febrile disturbance,
-constituting a prolongation of the delirium after the temperature
-subsided, or developing during convalescence.</p>
-
-<p>The German psychiatrists during the first part of the
-nineteenth century were divided into two quite separate
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span>
-groups. One of these insisted that all mental diseases
-were purely psychic in origin, and the other, that they
-were in all instances directly attributable to somatic disease
-processes. The former school was ably represented
-by Heinroth and Ideler and the latter by Jacobi, Nasse
-and Friedreich. This led to a controversy which lasted
-for many years. Heinroth's views were illustrated by
-his statement<a name="FNanchor_262_262" id="FNanchor_262_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a> that "Insanity is the loss of moral
-liberty. It never depends upon a physical cause; it is
-not a disease of the body but of the mind&mdash;a sin.... The
-man who has during his whole life before his eyes and
-in his heart the image of God, has no reason to fear that
-he will ever lose his reason.... Man possesses a certain
-moral power which cannot be conquered by any physical
-power, and which only falls under the weight of his
-own faults.... From wrong doing springs all misfortune,
-including the disorders of the mind." His principal
-work was a "Lehrbuch der Seelenkunde," published
-in Leipsic in 1818. The teachings of the psychic
-school were summarized by von Feuchtersleben<a name="FNanchor_263_263" id="FNanchor_263_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> as
-follows:&mdash;"The mind is the immediate seat of the disease,
-the bodily suffering is secondary. Mental disorders
-may be clearly traced to their origin, Sin, Error, Passion.
-Diseases of the brain, on the contrary, and of all the
-organs, occur, even in their greatest intensity, without
-mental disturbance, as also the latter without the former.
-The psychical mode of cure is that which is properly
-efficient; the somatic remedies in reality act psychically;
-for instance through pain, diversion of the thoughts,
-stupefaction, terror. Pathological anatomy has not discovered
-any decided relation between disorganization of
-the brain and mental disorders." In 1836 Friedreich<a name="FNanchor_264_264" id="FNanchor_264_264">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_264_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
-in opposing Heinroth's views outlined thirteen reasons
-for believing that all psychic disorders were somatic in
-origin:&mdash;"1. Because the mind cannot become diseased;
-2. because the greater part of the causes producing those
-conditions is somatic; 3. because in all mental disorders
-there are somatic symptoms in addition; 4. because they
-are too permanent for pure conditions of the mind;
-5. because they are subject to cosmical and telluric
-states; 6. because their crises always take place in a
-material way; 7. because they are not infrequently removed
-by strong material influences; 8. because the
-somatic mode of cure alone has a direct sanatory effect,
-the psychical at most an indirect effect on the body; 9.
-because the occurrence of psychical indisposition on one
-side only, must arise from the duality of the brain;
-10. because the return of reason before death occurs
-in cases not only of psychical, but likewise of somatic
-diseases, and may be physically accounted for; 11. because
-mental disorders correspond with the temperaments;
-12. because it may be proved that there are psychical
-conditions which depend on organic causes, and
-are therefore very analogous to psychical disorders; 13.
-because chronic delirium (mania) can be no other than
-febrile." Absurd as such discussions may seem at this
-time, they are no worse than the theological debates of
-that day. As a matter of fact, they were no more futile
-than the efforts still being made to classify the various
-psychoses on some one common ground, for any other
-than purely statistical purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_265_265" id="FNanchor_265_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> divides the psychoses due to infection
-into febrile delirium, infection delirium, acute confusional
-states (amentia) and exhaustions. The result of
-the infectious process, as he says, may be merely to
-precipitate a manic-depressive psychosis, or an attack of
-dementia praecox, general paresis or delirium tremens.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span>
-It may also be manifested in the form of a neuritis, myelitis,
-encephalitis, or a meningitis. Bonhöffer in 1910
-described several forms of "symptomatic psychoses" due
-to infections and divided them into three main groups:
-deliria, confusions and mental enfeeblements. He also
-referred to epileptiform excitements, dream states, hallucinoses,
-manic types and amentias either hallucinatory,
-catatonic or incoherent in character.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin speaks of several definite stages or forms
-of febrile delirium. In the mildest of these there is a
-feeling of discomfort with a sensation of fulness in the
-head and a marked sensitiveness to external impressions.
-In the second stage a suggestion of clouding becomes apparent
-and perception is distorted by hallucinations and
-illusions. There is an increased activity of the mental
-processes and consciousness soon assumes a dreamlike
-form. Hallucinations and illusions are mixed with realities.
-The restlessness increases and excitements or
-depressive moods may precede the appearance of the
-third stage. In this there is a more pronounced disturbance
-of consciousness with disorientation, confusion,
-flight of ideas, and variable emotional reactions, sometimes
-with actual manic manifestations. Evidences of
-stuporous tendencies may appear at times. In the fourth
-stage a state of weakness develops, with picking at the
-bed clothes, tremulous movements and a senseless muttering
-of words and syllables. This terminates in complete
-coma. In smallpox, scarlet fever, erysipelas, articular
-rheumatism and pneumonia there are often sudden
-confused excited states, while in typhoid fever stuporous
-delirium is the rule. Hendriks found the mental symptoms
-in typhoid greater during convalescence and not
-closely related to the febrile reaction. He describes a
-marked disturbance of attention with little involvement
-of apprehension or comprehension, but marked loss of
-mental capacity and sometimes a tendency to confabulation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span>
-Visual hallucinations and loss of sleep are common
-symptoms. Often there is restlessness, talkativeness, indifference,
-carelessness and disturbances of volition. In
-articular rheumatism and scarlet fever, according to
-Kraepelin, delirium sometimes develops with sudden rise
-of temperature. Restlessness, talking in the sleep, volubility
-or dulness precede an unusually violent delirium,
-sometimes terminating in stupor and death. The basis
-of these conditions in all cases is the toxic infection
-causing the fever, changes in metabolism, circulatory
-disturbances and an involvement of various organs, particularly
-the brain. A rapid and considerable rise of
-temperature usually causes delirium in typhoid, smallpox
-and erysipelas while it has no such effect usually in
-tuberculosis. This disturbance is a direct result of the
-influence of the toxins on the cortex. Alcoholism constitutes
-another well-known and common cause. In seventy
-per cent of the cases the duration was less than one week
-and the delirium disappeared with the fall in temperature.
-Some cases terminate in infection delirium or
-they may precipitate genuine attacks of manic-depressive
-insanity, dementia praecox or general paresis.</p>
-
-<p>The so-called acute alteration of Nissl was a very
-common change found in the cortical cells at autopsy.
-This very generally involved the entire cortex. Kraepelin
-describes another characteristic alteration observed
-in cases of typhoid delirium. The Nissl bodies are
-clumped together in the periphery, and are deeply
-stained, the processes also being unusually dark. Some
-cells show a shrunken nucleus with swollen, lightly
-stained bodies. Around these neurones there are usually
-large accumulations of elongated glia cells.</p>
-
-<p>In the infection delirium, so called, the mental disturbance
-develops in a case where there is no hyperpyrexia
-or where at least there is no relation between the
-psychosis and the temperature. A restless excitement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span>
-ushers in the attack. Pressure in the head, mental dulness,
-depressed or sometimes cheerful moods, uneasiness,
-disturbed sleep and anxious dreams are common symptoms.
-Later a disturbance of consciousness appears and
-a special type known as "initial delirium" may develop.
-This is a common occurrence in typhoid fever.</p>
-
-<p>Aschaffenburg described two forms of initial delirium.
-The first is a restless condition of clouding with
-hallucinations and delusions. The second form, which
-may develop from the first, shows active mental excitement.
-Mild in its onset, a confusional delirious state soon
-develops with flight of ideas, hallucinations, delusions, and
-marked anxiety. An initial delirium of this type often
-occurs in smallpox. This assumes a particularly severe
-form with a tendency to suicide and violence, strongly
-resembling epileptic dream states. Seizures and epileptiform
-convulsions may occur. The delirium usually develops
-from the third to the fifth day of the disease and
-mental enfeeblement sometimes follows. The attack
-usually lasts from several days to a week. It may continue
-as a fever delirium. About forty or fifty per cent
-die. Nissl in one case found a marked congestion of the
-vessels of the cortex, with an increase in the number
-of leucocytes, and a widespread destruction of the neurones.
-The cell bodies were swollen and the chromatin
-lumps destroyed. Karyokinetic changes were noted in
-the glia cells.</p>
-
-<p>More or less similar delirious states occur in the
-course of intermittent malarial fevers. These usually
-take the form of a marked anxious excitement, often with
-stupor or a tendency to violence. The attacks begin
-suddenly, last only a few hours and end in sleep. Convulsions
-are frequently observed. These conditions occur
-in the quotidian or tertian types but rarely in the quartan.
-The delirium precedes a febrile disturbance or may
-take its place. It is apparently due to an accumulation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span>
-of plasmodia in the cerebral vessels. In influenza, restlessness,
-confusion, anxious excitement or hallucinatory
-deliria may be associated with a low temperature. Polyneuritic
-manifestations have also been observed. The
-disturbance is undoubtedly caused by the influenza bacillus
-or the action of its toxins on the cortex. Abscesses
-are found in some instances. Deliria with phthisis are
-rare unless there is a tubercular meningitis. In the septic
-infections, conditions with marked clouding are often
-observed, and are to be attributed to embolism, metastases,
-etc. Muscular weakness, aphasia, perseveration
-and convulsions may be present in these cases. Infection
-delirium also occurs in chorea. This takes the form of a
-clouded dreamlike state with confusion of thought at
-times, hallucinations, delusions, and emotional excitement
-accompanied by characteristic choreiform movements.
-Apprehension, as a rule, is unimpaired, but
-attention is disturbed and the patients are forgetful and
-distractible. They do not have a clear grasp on their
-surroundings. Occasional hallucinations appear. The
-mood is anxious, excited, fearful or irritable, sometimes
-with outbursts of anger or threats of suicide. The choreiform
-attacks are aggravated and speech is affected. The
-reflexes are decreased and muscular weakness develops.
-The pupils are dilated and sleep is interfered with to a
-marked degree. This excitement lasts for a short time
-only, but often recurs. In nine per cent of the cases
-(Kleist) death results from heart failure, septic infection
-or other intercurrent diseases. Wassermann and
-Westphal demonstrated streptococci in the brain in several
-cases of chorea. Others have reported staphylococci
-in the blood. Choreic delirium is usually associated with
-endocarditis or rheumatic infections, and occurs in the
-acute type but not in the Huntington variety of the
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>Delirious excitements, according to Kraepelin, also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>
-occur in acute cerebrospinal inflammatory processes and
-may be due to furunculosis or caused by infections from
-the mouth or the intestinal tract. There is nothing particularly
-characteristic in such conditions aside from their
-severity. They have been collectively described under
-the designation of "acute delirium." Their differentiation
-depends entirely on the demonstration of the
-source of infection. The anatomical basis for these disturbances
-is always found in the cerebral cortex. The
-pia is infiltrated with lymphocytes and plasma cells and
-leucocytes are found in the perivascular spaces. There
-is also a proliferation of the glia. The "grave" alteration
-of Nissl is often demonstrable. After the infectious
-process passes its maximum intensity and the delirium
-disappears, "residual" delusions may remain with a
-clear sensorium. These may last for several days or
-even weeks. They frequently follow typhoid fever. Occasionally
-hallucinations of sight and hearing persist in
-the same way.</p>
-
-<p>"Collapse delirium" was first described by Hermann
-Weber in 1866. It takes the form of a stuporous state
-with confusion of thought, dreamy hallucinations, flight
-of ideas, an unstable emotional condition and an active
-motor excitement. The onset is usually sudden, following
-a period of sleeplessness and restlessness. Disorientation
-occurs early and consciousness is markedly
-clouded. Phantastic hallucinations and illusions are frequent.
-Excitement and confusion are also prominent
-symptoms. Flight of ideas is common and the patient
-often sings or expresses himself exclusively in verse or
-rhymes. Senseless and rapidly changing delusions are
-noted. The mood is elated, erotic, anxious or irritable,
-with outbursts of anger. Motor excitement is conspicuous
-and there is no sleep. Usually food is refused and
-nutrition disturbed with a great reduction of bodily
-weight. This condition is of short duration, usually not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span>
-more than a few days, often terminating in sleep in
-favorable cases. Only a confused recollection of events
-remains on recovery. Collapse delirium, according to
-Kraepelin, is purely an infectious process and often occurs
-in pneumonia, erysipelas and influenza, following the
-subsidence of the active symptoms of the disease. It occasionally
-complicates articular rheumatism and scarlet
-fever. The characteristic features in erysipelas are hallucinations
-and delusions of a delirious type, while
-clouded states, confusional excitements and flight of ideas
-are more common after pneumonia. The symptoms usually
-develop after the temperature falls and other evidences
-of weakness are present. Kraepelin, however,
-recognizes infection as the only cause at this time, although
-he previously described these as exhaustive conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Acute confusional states or amentia were described by
-Meynert in 1881. These are characterized by a clouding
-of consciousness with multiform manifestations of excitement
-both sensory and motor. Amentia is one of the
-sequelae of infectious diseases. It takes the form of a
-subacute development of a dreamlike confusion with
-hallucinations, illusions and motor excitement lasting
-usually for several months. It is very closely related to
-collapse delirium and the hallucinatory insanity of Hoche,
-Fürstner and others. The early symptoms are sleeplessness
-and unrest. The patients become anxious, forgetful,
-develop a fear of death, and cannot control their
-thoughts, complaining of dulness and confusion of mind.
-A difficult comprehension of external impressions develops.
-They may be attentive and seriously troubled
-at not being able properly to grasp their surroundings.
-A decided uncertainty and restlessness results. Everything
-seems changed or false. There is at first a feeling
-of inadequacy and a profound disturbance of thought
-which develops into a well defined confusional condition.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span>
-A dreamlike state follows, sometimes with a tendency to
-fabrications. Rhymes, phrases and words may be repeated
-frequently. There is a tendency towards distractibility
-and flight of ideas with vague thoughts of
-persecution. Hallucinations sometimes become apparent,
-and illusions appear. The mood is usually one of
-irritable anxiety, suspicion and mistrust, seldom with
-complete dulness. Occasional outbursts of anger take
-place. A restless behavior is noted as a rule. Sometimes
-suicidal tendencies occur and mild stuporous states
-follow.</p>
-
-<p>In another group of cases depression is an especially
-prominent feature as occasionally happens after typhoid
-fever; or states of excitement may exist with a flight of
-ideas and delusions of grandeur. Before the febrile disturbance
-has disappeared signs of restlessness are noted.
-Orientation is soon lost, apprehension is disturbed, the
-patient becomes distractible and begins to show hallucinations.
-Ideas of grandeur develop and fabrications
-are conspicuous and extravagant. The mood is angry
-and irritable, sometimes cheerful or elated, but very
-changeable. Restlessness, volubility, flight of ideas,
-senseless rhyming, confused writing and tendencies to
-sing, etc., soon appear. The sleep is very much disturbed.
-Very little nourishment is taken or it is refused entirely.
-Bodily weight is greatly reduced. The reflexes are usually
-increased, the pulse slow and the temperature
-subnormal. The duration of the disease is usually not
-more than from two to six months. Amentia usually
-follows typhoid, articular rheumatism, smallpox and
-cholera, and occasionally occurs after pneumonia. Symptoms
-invariably develop after the fever has subsided.
-After typhoid the characteristic features are excitement
-with hallucinations, delusions and variable moods; after
-articular rheumatism, disturbance of apprehension, restlessness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span>
-depression or even stupor; and after phthisis,
-hallucinations with preservation of consciousness and
-slight confusion.</p>
-
-<p>Light forms of the infectious exhaustions, according
-to Kraepelin, may appear after convalescence from the
-more severe illnesses. The patient does not make a good
-recovery, is exhausted, cannot think clearly, tires easily
-and is not able to read or write letters. Mental activity
-is weakened and the patient remains in bed, apathetic and
-indifferent. Consciousness, orientation and perception
-are undisturbed, although hallucinations may appear
-when the eyes are closed or noises in the ears may be
-noticed. The mood is gloomy, hopeless, and sometimes
-irritable, with sudden attacks of anxiety at night. The
-patient becomes suspicious and has fears of death or
-poisoning. Hypochondriacal feelings with self-accusation
-may develop. Food may be refused and suicidal attempts
-occur. Some cases are reserved and quiet, even
-stuporous, expressing only a few delusional ideas at
-times. Sleep and appetite are affected and weight lost
-as a consequence. These lighter forms usually follow
-influenza, articular rheumatism, whooping cough, tuberculosis
-or chorea. The duration is ordinarily brief&mdash;a
-few weeks or months, followed by recovery. In some instances
-the disease may progress to a complete enfeeblement
-of the mental processes.</p>
-
-<p>The exhaustive conditions in a large group of more
-severe cases are ushered in by a delirium or confusional
-state with a depressed mood. There is first a slight
-anxiety. Self-accusation and persecutory ideas appear
-early. Hallucinations of hearing and vision develop.
-The patients soon become clouded, inattentive, show difficulty
-of thought and loss of memory, with mental dulness.
-All grasp upon their surroundings is lost, they fail to
-recognize members of the family, and answer questions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span>
-unintelligently. They have no appreciation of their condition
-and no memory for events. The mood is indifferent,
-apathetic or whining. It may be irritable, quarrelsome
-or violent. Usually they lie in bed and are entirely
-apathetic. Sometimes they show automatic movements
-and have to be fed. The conversation is often
-incoherent and meaningless. They are inclined to be
-emotional. Sleep is usually interfered with and they are
-restless at night. The appetite is lost. Occasionally evidences
-of brain lesions appear with paralyses, speech
-disturbance or epileptiform seizures. The duration is
-usually a matter of a number of months. At autopsy
-grave cell alterations and glia reactions are common.
-Rod cells are also found. Endothelial proliferation is
-frequently observed in the vessel walls. Some cases terminate
-in a chronic condition which may improve somewhat
-in time. There may be a persistent emotional and
-mental enfeeblement with indifference, loss of memory,
-lack of judgment and impairment of will. These "acute
-dementias" represent the terminal stages of cortical infectious
-processes. They have been observed after typhoid,
-rheumatism, erysipelas, cholera, smallpox and
-malaria. Usually after tubercular peritonitis or articular
-rheumatism there is a simple mental enfeeblement, while
-erysipelas is usually accompanied by mild excitements
-and an elated mood. The typhoid cases usually showed
-irritability, with outbursts of anger and confusional
-states with hallucinations and delusions. They occasionally
-terminate in more chronic conditions with permanent
-deterioration.</p>
-
-<p>After typhoid, influenza and septic infections, Korsakow's
-"cerebropathica psychica toxaemica" sometimes
-occurs. This is the polyneuritic psychosis similar to
-that caused by alcohol. There is, however, a delirium or
-stupor at the same time.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">The post-rheumatic psychoses have been studied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span>
-exhaustively by Knauer.<a name="FNanchor_266_266" id="FNanchor_266_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a> Stuporous attacks were found
-in ninety-three per cent of his cases, following acute
-infections. He describes four groups showing psychotic
-<span class="no-break">manifestations:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="p9">
-1. Anxious delirious excitements followed by stupor.<br />
-2. Excitements alternating with stupor.<br />
-3. Stuporous depression throughout.<br />
-4. Amentia-like excitements throughout.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="p10">The essential feature of Knauer's study was an analysis
-of post-rheumatic stupors. He describes these as clouded
-or dream states "not different from physiological sleep
-and the ordinary artificial narcoses." In them he sees
-a disturbance of apprehension, an interference with intellectual
-processes, a retention defect, and a loss of the
-power of attention. Catalepsy was found to be present
-in the majority of his cases. The loss of affect was described
-as being more complete than in manic-depressive
-psychoses. He speaks of the mood as sad, depressed,
-anxious, but above all, changeable.</p>
-
-<p>Generally speaking this group of psychoses due to
-somatic disease is one which requires further study. We
-have comparatively little statistical information on the
-subject as yet. The differentiation of these conditions
-as outlined in the Association's statistical manual is
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Under this heading are brought together those mental
-disorders which appear to depend directly upon some
-physical disturbance or somatic disease not already provided
-for in the foregoing groups.</p>
-
-<p>"In the types designated below under (a) to (e) inclusive,
-we have essentially deliria or states of confusion
-arising during the course of an infectious disease or in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span>
-association with a condition of exhaustion or a toxaemia.
-The mental disturbance is apparently the result of interference
-with brain nutrition or the unfavorable action
-of certain deleterious substances, poisons or toxins, on
-the central nervous system. The clinical pictures met
-with are extremely varied. The delirium may be marked
-by severe motor excitement and incoherence of utterance,
-or by multiform hallucinations with deep confusion
-or a dazed, bewildered condition; epileptiform attacks,
-catatonic-like symptoms, stupor, etc., may occur. In
-classifying these psychoses a difficult problem arises in
-many cases if attempts are made to distinguish between
-infection and exhaustion as etiological factors. For
-statistical reports the following differentiations should
-be made:</p>
-
-<p class="p1d">"Under (a) 'Delirium with infectious diseases'
-place the <em>initial deliria</em> which develop during the prodromal
-or incubation period or before the febrile stage as
-in some cases of typhoid, small-pox, malaria, etc.; the
-<em>febrile deliria</em> which seem to bear a definite relation to
-the rise in temperature; the <em>post-febrile deliria</em> of the
-period of defervescence including the so-called 'collapse
-delirium.'</p>
-
-<p>"Under (b) 'Post-infectious psychoses' are to be
-grouped deliria, the mild forms of mental confusion, or
-the depressive, irritable, suspicious reactions which occur
-during the period of convalescence from infectious
-diseases. Physical asthenia and prostration are undoubtedly
-important factors in these conditions and
-differentiation from 'exhaustion deliria' must depend
-chiefly on the history and obvious close relationship to
-the preceding infectious disease. (Some cases which fail
-to recover show a peculiar mental enfeeblement.) In
-this group should be classed the 'cerebropathica psychica
-toxaemica' or the non-alcoholic polyneuritic psychoses
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span>
-following an infectious disease as typhoid, influenza,
-septicaemia, etc.</p>
-
-<p>"Under (c) 'Exhaustion deliria' are to be classed
-psychoses in which physical exhaustion, not associated
-with or the result of an infectious disease, is the chief
-precipitating cause of the mental disorder, <i>e.g.</i>, hemorrhage,
-severe physical over-exertion, deprivation of food,
-prolonged insomnia, debility from wasting disease, etc.</p>
-
-<p>"Of the psychoses which occur with diseases of the
-ductless glands, the best known are the thyroigenous
-mental disorders. Disturbance of the pituitary or of the
-adrenal function is often associated with mental symptoms.</p>
-
-<p>"According to the etiology and symptoms the following
-types should therefore be specified under 'Psychoses
-with Other Somatic Diseases':</p>
-
-<p class="p9">
-"(a) Delirium with infectious disease (specify)<br />
-"(b) Post-infectious psychosis (specify)<br />
-"(c) Exhaustion delirium<br />
-"(d) Delirium of unknown origin<br />
-"(e) Cardio-renal disease<br />
-"(f) Diseases of the ductless glands (specify)<br />
-"(g) Other diseases or conditions (to be specified)."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="p2">A study of 480 cases of psychoses with other somatic
-diseases reported from the New York state hospitals during
-1918 and 1919 shows the following types <span class="no-break">represented:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="pagebreak">
-<table class="a" width="80%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirium with infectious diseases</td>
- <td class="td04a">68</td>
- <td class="td04a">14.16</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Post-infectious psychoses</td>
- <td class="td04a">102</td>
- <td class="td04a">21.25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Exhaustion delirium</td>
- <td class="td04a">94</td>
- <td class="td04a">19.58</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirium of unknown origin</td>
- <td class="td04a">36</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cardio-renal diseases</td>
- <td class="td04a">69</td>
- <td class="td04a">14.37</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diseases of the ductless glands</td>
- <td class="td04a">20</td>
- <td class="td04a">4.16</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other conditions</td>
- <td class="td04a">91</td>
- <td class="td04a">18.90</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">An analysis of 140 cases from the Massachusetts state
-hospitals in 1919 shows the <span class="no-break">following:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="80%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirium with infectious diseases</td>
- <td class="td04a">48</td>
- <td class="td04a">34.28</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Post-infectious psychoses</td>
- <td class="td04a">25</td>
- <td class="td04a">17.85</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Exhaustion delirium</td>
- <td class="td04a">26</td>
- <td class="td04a">18.57</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirium of unknown origin</td>
- <td class="td04a">6</td>
- <td class="td04a">4.28</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cardio-renal diseases</td>
- <td class="td04a">16</td>
- <td class="td04a">11.42</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diseases of the ductless glands</td>
- <td class="td04a">1</td>
- <td class="td04a">.71</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other conditions</td>
- <td class="td04a">18</td>
- <td class="td04a">12.85</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">Three hundred and sixteen cases from hospitals in nineteen
-other states were reported as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="80%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirium with infectious diseases</td>
- <td class="td04a">69</td>
- <td class="td04a">21.83</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Post-infectious psychoses</td>
- <td class="td04a">30</td>
- <td class="td04a">9.49</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Exhaustion delirium</td>
- <td class="td04a">75</td>
- <td class="td04a">23.73</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Delirium of unknown origin</td>
- <td class="td04a">33</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.44</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Cardio-renal diseases</td>
- <td class="td04a">45</td>
- <td class="td04a">14.24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Diseases of the ductless glands</td>
- <td class="td04a">15</td>
- <td class="td04a">4.74</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Other conditions</td>
- <td class="td04a">49</td>
- <td class="td04a">15.50</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2">We have, thus, a total of 936 cases distributed as follows:&mdash;Delirium
-with infectious diseases, 19.76 per cent;
-post-infectious psychoses, 16.77; exhaustion delirium,
-20.83; delirium of unknown origin, 8.01; cardio-renal diseases,
-13.88; diseases of the ductless glands, 3.84; and
-other conditions, 16.88 per cent. Four and one hundredth
-per cent of the first admissions in Massachusetts, 3.45
-per cent of the New York admissions, and 2.07 per cent
-of admissions to twenty-one other institutions during the
-same period of time were cases of psychoses due to other
-somatic diseases. They constituted 2.81 per cent of
-34,935 admissions to all of the institutions above noted.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE MANIC-DEPRESSIVE PSYCHOSES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The manic-depressive psychoses as first described by
-Kraepelin are of comparatively recent origin. The history
-of the clinical entities included in this new grouping,
-however, may be easily traced back to the earliest days
-of psychiatry. Although these terms were not used perhaps
-as they came to be later, mania and melancholia
-were, as has already been shown, known in the Hippocratic
-era, over four hundred years before the time of
-Christ. They were referred to again in the works of
-Aretaeus in the first century A. D. and were recognized by
-Celsus, Caelius Aurelianus and Galen. Daniel Sennert<a name="FNanchor_267_267" id="FNanchor_267_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a>
-of Wittenberg (1572-1637) defined melancholia as a
-"delirium or deprival of imagination and reason, without
-fever, with fear and sadness, arising from dark and
-melancholy animal spirits, and occasioning corresponding
-phantoms." Mania he described as a "delirium or
-deprival of imagination and reason without fear, but, on
-the contrary, with audacity, temerity, anger, and ferocity,
-without fever, arising from a fervent and fiery disposition."</p>
-
-<p>Sydenham<a name="FNanchor_268_268" id="FNanchor_268_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> recommended bleeding, followed by
-purgation, as the treatment indicated for mania:&mdash;"Thus
-the humours, which in mania would invade the citadel
-of the brain, are gradually drawn off towards the lower
-parts, a fresh bias being given to them."</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Willis<a name="FNanchor_269_269" id="FNanchor_269_269"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_269_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a> made some very significant references
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[410]</a></span>
-to the relation existing between mania and melancholia,
-in the seventeenth century:&mdash;"After melancholia
-we have to treat of mania, which has so many relations
-to the former, that the two disorders often follow each
-other, the former changing into the latter, and inversely.
-The melancholic diathesis, indeed, carried to its highest
-degree, causes frenzy, and frenzy subsiding changes frequently
-into melancholia (atrabiliar diathesis). These
-two disorders, like fire and smoke, often mask and replace
-each other, and if we may say that in melancholia
-the brain and the animal spirit are obscured by smoke
-and black darkness, mania may be compared to a great
-fire destined to disperse and to illuminate it." Morgagni,<a name="FNanchor_270_270" id="FNanchor_270_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a>
-"the father of pathology," also saw a close
-relation between these two conditions as is shown by the
-following quotation from his "De Sedibus et Causis Morborum;"
-etc., in 1761. "Melancholia," he says, "is so
-nearly allied to mania, that the diseases frequently alternate,
-and pass into one another; so that you frequently
-see physicians in doubt whether they should call a patient
-a melancholiac or a maniac, taciturnity and fear alternating
-with audacity in the same patient; on which account,
-when I have asked under what kind of delirium the insane
-persons have laboured whose heads I was about
-to dissect, I have had the more patience in receiving answers
-which were frequently ambiguous and sometimes
-antagonistic to each other, yet, which were, perhaps, true
-in the long course of the insanity." Flemming<a name="FNanchor_271_271" id="FNanchor_271_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> in
-1844 described a "dysthymia atra" (melancholia), a
-"dysthymia candida" (cheerful dysthymia) or "melancholia
-hilaris" characterized by elation with playfulness
-and a "tendency to see everything in the most pleasant
-and cheerful light" as well as a "dysthymia mutabilis,"
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[411]</a></span>
-an alternating variety involving both of the above forms.
-He also spoke of a "dysthymia sparsa" (apathica) or
-"melancholia attonita," and a "vesania maniaca" or
-mania which he divided into the acute, delirious, alcoholic,
-affective, and puerperal types, together with an
-"occult amentia" embracing all of these forms. Griesinger<a name="FNanchor_272_272" id="FNanchor_272_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a>
-in 1845 called attention to the fact that "the
-transition of melancholia into mania, and the alternation
-of these two forms, are very common." In 1851
-Falret, senior, first described circular insanity in his lectures
-at the Salpêtrière, quoted by Tuke<a name="FNanchor_273_273" id="FNanchor_273_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> as follows:&mdash;"We
-have also to mention another case of intermittence
-observed between the periods of remission and excitement
-in the forme circulaire des maladies mentales." "It
-is a special form which we call 'circular' and which
-consists, not as has been frequently said, in a change of
-mania into melancholia separated by a more or less prolonged
-lucid interval, but in the change from maniacal
-excitement&mdash;simple overactivity of all the faculties&mdash;into
-mental torpor."</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">In 1854 at the Academy of Medicine in Paris Falret
-presented his "Mémoire sur la folie circulaire, forme de
-maladie mentale caractérisée par la reproduction successive
-et régulière de l'état maniaque, de l'état mélancolique,
-et d'un intervalle lucide plus ou moins prolongé."
-In the same year Baillarger described his "Folie à double
-forme," summarized by him in a Bulletin of the Academy
-of Medicine as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="p8a">"(1) Besides monomania, melancholia, and mania,
-there exists a special form of insanity characterized
-by two regular periods, one of depression, the other
-of excitement.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[412]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p8a">(2) This form of insanity: (1) presents itself in isolated
-attacks; (2) reproduces itself in intermissions;
-(3) the attacks may follow each other without interruption.</p>
-
-<p class="p8a">(3) The duration of the attacks varies from two days
-to one year.</p>
-
-<p class="p8a">(4) When the attacks are short, the transition from
-the first to the second period takes place suddenly,
-and generally during sleep. It takes place slowly
-and gradually when the attacks are prolonged.</p>
-
-<p class="p8a">(5) In the latter case, the patients seem to enter into
-a state of convalescence at the end of the first period,
-but this return to health is incomplete; after a fortnight,
-a month, six weeks or more, the second period
-breaks out."</p>
-
-<p class="p10">This was described as "Folie à double phase" by Bellod,
-"Folie à formes alternés" by Delaye, "Délire à formes
-alternés" by Legrand du Saulle, "Die cyclische Psychose"
-by Ludwig Kirn and "Das circuläre Irresein"
-by Krafft-Ebing.</p>
-
-<p>At a meeting of the American Association in 1886 the
-classification of the British Medico-Psychological Association
-was adopted with the omission of moral insanity
-and the addition of toxic insanity. This included the
-following types of mania:&mdash;Recent, chronic, recurrent,
-à potu, puerperal and senile, and classified melancholia
-as recent, chronic, recurrent, puerperal and senile. In
-his "Clinical Lectures on Mental Disease" Clouston in
-1898 described eight varieties of melancholia and six of
-mania, not including alternating forms. Kahlbaum in
-1882, reverting apparently to the phraseology of Flemming,
-spoke of dysthymia, hyperthymia and mixed or circular
-forms&mdash;cyclothymia. Many of the conditions afterwards
-classified under dementia praecox he described as
-"vesania typica."
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It will be observed that, based somewhat on the conceptions
-of Griesinger, states of mental excitement were
-generally characterized as mania and all depressions as
-melancholia. As has been shown, the view that there
-was some definite relation between these two conditions
-had been gaining ground for many years and culminated
-in the "circular insanity" concept. In the meanwhile
-over fifty varieties of mania and thirty forms of melancholia
-were described by various authors. Aside from
-an emotional exaltation and increased psychomotor activity,
-few definite characteristics were insisted upon
-in a consideration of mania. There was almost invariably
-a disturbance of sleep but always with a sense of
-well-being and no feeling of exhaustion. The milder type
-of the disease was often referred to as "hypomania."
-In the more severe forms varying grades of violence developed.
-There was at times a clouding of the sensorium,
-a temporary appearance of hallucinations of sight and
-hearing, delusions of a persecutory or grandiose nature
-and incoherence of speech. Impulsive acts occasionally
-were noted during the height of the excitement. These
-attacks were frequently preceded by brief periods of depression.
-Many cases made rather early recoveries&mdash;others,
-however, were spoken of as having reached a
-chronic stage. Many terminated in dementia. These
-very often showed stereotypies, verbigeration, impulsive
-excitements, mannerisms and other symptoms now held
-to be characteristic of dementia praecox. Melancholia
-was looked upon as including all emotional depressions
-with hallucinations and delusions as the prominent symptoms.
-The mental state was essentially one of sadness
-but with fear, agitation and anxiety appearing at times.
-There was, however, no attempt at any differentiation
-between psychomotor retardation with genuine depression
-and apathetic states or actual mental dulness. Mutism
-and resistiveness were common. A refusal of food<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span>
-was rather to be expected. Stuporous states with muscular
-rigidity frequently occurred. Various physical
-changes were described. Cyanosis of the extremities was
-emphasized, with loss of weight and a lowered temperature.
-Many of the cases were untidy in their habits.
-Brief initial attacks of excitement were mentioned as usually
-ushering in the disease. These depressions recovered,
-became chronic, lasting for years, or terminated in
-a partial or complete dementia. These were in substance
-the views of practically all of the earlier writers on insanity.</p>
-
-<p>Sankey<a name="FNanchor_274_274" id="FNanchor_274_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a> in 1884 included in his idiopathic psychoses
-due to pathological conditions, general paresis
-and "ordinary insanity." "This is the disease which
-in its course presents such varying phenomena, and has
-thus given occasion for multiplying the names." Prominent
-in this group were the various forms of mania and
-melancholia and it undoubtedly included dementia praecox.
-"Like other diseases it may be artificially divided
-into separate stages, and this is useful for facilitating
-description, but such artificial divisions must not be
-looked upon as different species of disease." ... "Thus,
-a case in the primary attack commences by symptoms of
-melancholy; these may, when successfully treated, pass
-off, and the patient recover, or the melancholic stage may
-be aggravated, and the patient die in this stage;&mdash;the
-disease may exhibit symptoms of violence and become
-acutely maniacal. There is no ground on this account
-to say, that the patient has a new disease, any more
-than the appearance of an eruption in an eruptive disease
-would be the inauguration of a different kind of
-malady." Although obviously he had no idea as to
-the fundamental differences between manic-depressive
-insanity and dementia praecox, he unquestionably was
-one of the first to emphasize the fact that mania and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>
-melancholia were often definite stages of one disease
-process.</p>
-
-<p>In 1896 Kraepelin described melancholia as essentially
-an involutional condition. Under the heading of
-periodic constitutional disorders he included mania, circular
-and depressive forms, the mania, melancholia, and
-circular insanity of other writers. Schüle<a name="FNanchor_275_275" id="FNanchor_275_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a> in 1886
-described circular, periodical and alternating psychoses.
-In 1894 Ziehen<a name="FNanchor_276_276" id="FNanchor_276_276"></a><a href="#Footnote_276_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> included in his classification under
-the heading of combined psychoses a "melancholisch-maniakalisches"
-form in addition to mania and melancholia,
-which he spoke of as affective psychoses.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until 1899 that these conditions were clearly
-differentiated by Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_277_277" id="FNanchor_277_277"></a><a href="#Footnote_277_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a> and the purely emotional
-and recoverable forms separated clinically from the deteriorative
-processes which he has associated with dementia
-praecox. The former he described as manic-depressive
-psychoses, which included mania, melancholia
-and a majority of the circular and alternating types previously
-described. This delimitation had a prognostic
-as well as an important symptomatic significance. The
-emotional excitements were characterized by an increased
-psychomotor activity, with a flight of ideas and distractibility,
-usually associated with a clear sensorium. Graver
-forms were, however, recognized, with a clouding of consciousness,
-and disorientation, occasionally terminating
-in stupor. Hallucinations and delusions when present
-were not prominent symptoms. The depressions were
-characterized by an emotional disturbance in the form of
-sadness with difficulty in thinking, associated with marked
-retardation in speech and a motor inhibition. More advanced
-stages showed clouding, disorientation, stuporous
-phases and hallucinations. He also recognized alternating
-or circular as well as mixed types. The prognostic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>
-importance of this clinical grouping was the tendency
-towards a complete recovery from the individual attack,
-with, however, an extreme probability later of a recurrence,
-the subsequent attacks assuming either form of
-the disease. As a rule Kraepelin found that the unfavorable
-types formerly included in the manias and melancholiac,
-together with the hebephrenia and katatonia of
-his fifth edition, presented the definite characteristics
-of the disease which he described as dementia praecox.
-His views have been modified from time to time. For
-instance, he at one time excluded the involutional and
-anxiety psychoses from his manic-depressive group.
-Later these were included. In his last edition he has described
-depressed and agitated forms of dementia praecox,
-which would strongly suggest that his lines of demarcation
-were not so clear as he believed them to be in 1899.
-Of the manic-depressive psychoses he says, "Manic depressive
-insanity as described in this chapter includes on
-the one hand the entire domain of the so-called periodic
-and circular insanities, on the other, simple mania, the
-larger part of the disease process described as melancholia
-and also a not inconsiderable number of cases of
-Amentia. Finally we include certain mild morbid emotional
-states, some periodical, some continuous, which
-heretofore have been looked upon either as introductory
-to more severe disturbances or as belonging, without being
-sharply circumscribed, to the domain of individual
-makeup. As years go by I have become more and more
-convinced that these all represent manifestations of one
-disease process." The following classification of manic-depressive
-psychoses was shown in Kraepelin's last edition
-<span class="no-break">(1913):&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="p10">Manic types:</p>
-
-<p>Hypomania, Acute mania, Delusional and Delirious
-forms.
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p10">Depressive types:</p>
-
-<p>Melancholia simplex, Melancholia gravis, Stupor, Paranoid,
-Phantastic and Delirious forms.</p>
-
-<p class="p10">Mixed types:</p>
-
-<p class="p9">
-Depressive mania.<br />
-Excited depressions.<br />
-Mania with poverty of thought.<br />
-Manic stupor.<br />
-Depression with flight of ideas.<br />
-Retarded mania.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="p10">The mixed and atypical forms are of special importance,
-as they occupy the middle ground between the classical
-types of manic-depressive insanity and dementia praecox.
-It is here that difficulties arise and errors in diagnosis
-are made. They have never received sufficient attention
-until recently. In practice many of these have undoubtedly
-been classed with the dementia praecox group. The
-first of these as described by Kraepelin is depressive or
-anxious mania&mdash;characterized by a depressive mood with
-anxiety and excitement and, at the same time, a flight of
-ideas. The patients are distractible, observant of everything
-in their surroundings, and complain that thoughts
-obtrude themselves upon them. Some have a mania for
-scribbling. Often there are delusions of persecution, sin,
-and hypochondriacal ideas. The mood is one of anxiety
-or despair. Impulsive acts are occasionally observed.
-They are inclined to weep, wring their hands, pull out
-their hair and throw themselves on the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of a flight of ideas there may be poverty of
-thought and retardation with excitement&mdash;an "excited depression."
-The patients may be very wordy and monotonous
-in expression but are entirely clear as to their
-surroundings. The mood is anxious and tearful, often
-with delusions. There is a considerable excitement, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>
-not of such a stormy character as in the depressive or
-anxious mania.</p>
-
-<p>Mania with poverty of thought, an "unproductive"
-form, shows a more cheerful mood but without a flight
-of ideas. This form Kraepelin speaks of as a common
-one. Speech is monotonous and expressionless. The
-patients present almost an appearance of feeblemindedness,
-although exceedingly variable and changeable. The
-mood is cheerful and sometimes irritable. The excitement
-is shown by jumping around, making faces, etc., but
-without any occupational activity. This alternates with
-periods of quiet when but little is said. They show no
-desire to occupy themselves in anything useful. Sudden
-outbursts of violence often occur.</p>
-
-<p>Stuporous, almost cataleptic forms with occasional delusions
-of a hypochondriacal type, fairly well oriented
-and with a clear sensorium, are spoken of as "manic
-stupor." This is interrupted by excitement and violence,
-with laughter, witty remarks and even eroticism.
-They often have a clear memory of all occurrences. This
-stuporous type may appear suddenly in an ordinary
-manic attack, or take place between excitements and depressions.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of an ordinary depression a flight of
-ideas may also replace the usual retardation&mdash;"depression
-with flight of ideas." The delusions are interspersed
-with cheerful thoughts and the patients show certain
-activities and an interest in their surroundings, although
-still depressed and hopeless. When they begin to talk
-they complain of an inability to control their thoughts.
-There is an inhibition of speech but not of thought. They
-may be quite prolific in writing, and may show a characteristic
-flight of ideas. This condition often merges
-into genuine excitement.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin also speaks of an inhibited or "retarded
-mania," showing a cheerful mood with flight of ideas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span>
-and psychomotor retardation. These eases are excited,
-distractible, inclined to witticisms with "klang associations,"
-but lie quietly in bed. He believes that there
-is an inner tension manifesting itself at times in acts of
-violence. Kraepelin also speaks of various other mixtures
-of depression, anxiety and excitement. Specht
-has described an "irascible mania" (Zorntobsucht) and
-Stransky a bashful mania (verschämte Manie). Dreyfus
-has described a partial inhibition or retardation (partiellen
-Hemmung). Hecker is responsible for a "grumbling"
-or faultfinding variety of mania (nörgelnden Formen
-der Manie). In any event, Kraepelin's conceptions
-constitute a distinct advance and have materially clarified
-a much involved confusion of entities which seem to
-warrant complete differentiation. His views have, of
-course, not been universally accepted. The English
-school of psychiatrists has been slow in expressing its
-approval of his theories. No textbook of late years has
-appeared, however, in this country that has failed to
-recognize the manic-depressive psychoses practically as
-Kraepelin originally described them.</p>
-
-<p>The psychological mechanisms of manic-depressive
-insanity have been studied exhaustively by Karl Abraham
-and other psychoanalysts. He looks upon retardation
-as a symbol of death and interprets it as a defensive
-reaction, the patient taking refuge in a retarded state
-to avoid contact with the outer world. The ideas of poverty
-associated with depressions he considered as symbolic
-of an inability to love and occurring in individuals
-who have not obtained sexual gratification in a normal
-way. When repression is no longer possible mania ensues
-and the patient enters upon a new existence, all
-instinctive inhibition being lost. The flight of ideas he
-looks upon as a reestablishment of infantilism. He suggests
-these views, however, as tentative. The delusions
-of the manic-depressive psychoses have been interpreted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span>
-as an expression of repressed complexes. White<a name="FNanchor_278_278" id="FNanchor_278_278"></a><a href="#Footnote_278_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a>
-would explain these mechanisms as follows:&mdash;"Manic-depressive
-psychosis is the type of extroversion reaction.
-That is, the patients instead of turning within
-themselves (introversion) try to escape their difficulties
-(conflict) by a 'flight into reality.' This flight into reality
-is the manic phase of the psychosis with its flight of
-ideas, distractibility and increased psychomotor activity
-during which the patient seems to be at the mercy almost
-of his environment having his attention diverted by every
-passing stimulus. The great activity can be understood
-as a defense mechanism. The patient appears, by his
-constant activity to be covering every possible avenue of
-approach which might by any possibility touch his sore
-point (complex) and so he rushes wildly from this possible
-source of danger to that meanwhile keeping up a
-stream of diverting activities. He is at once running
-away from his conflict&mdash;into reality&mdash;and trying to adequately
-defend every possible approach.... This
-method I have described as a 'flight into reality' which
-is the characteristic of the manic phase, while the failure
-to deal adequately with the difficulty is manifested by the
-depression of the depressive phase. In the depression
-the defenses have broken down and the patient is overwhelmed
-by a sense of his moral turpitude (self-accusatory
-delusions). This sense of being sinful is the conscious
-appreciation of tendencies which should have been
-left behind to become a part of the historical past (the
-unconscious) in the course of the development of the
-psyche but which still demand expression.... The benign
-character of the manic-depressive group of psychoses
-is explained because of their extroverted mechanism.
-Reality is the normal direction for the libido and
-because the direction is normal they more readily result
-in recovery."
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span></p>
-<p>The American Psychiatric Association, in its manual
-designed for the assistance of hospitals for mental diseases
-in the compilation of statistical data, makes the following
-suggestions as to the delimitation of the manic-depressive
-<span class="no-break">psychoses:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"This group comprises the essentially benign affective
-psychoses, mental disorders which fundamentally are
-marked by emotional oscillations and a tendency to recurrence.
-Various psychotic trends, delusions, illusions
-and hallucinations, clouded states, stupor, etc., may be
-added. To be distinguished are:</p>
-
-<p>"The <em>manic</em> reaction with its feeling of well-being (or
-irascibility), flight of ideas and over-activity.</p>
-
-<p>"The <em>depressive</em> reaction with its feeling of mental
-and physical insufficiency, a despondent, sad or hopeless
-mood and in severe depressions, retardation and inhibition;
-in some cases the mood is one of uneasiness and
-anxiety, accompanied by restlessness.</p>
-
-<p>"The <em>mixed</em> reaction, a combination of manic and depressive
-symptoms.</p>
-
-<p>"The <em>stupor</em> reaction with its marked reduction in
-activity, depression, ideas of death, and often dream-like
-hallucinations; sometimes mutism, drooling and muscular
-symptoms suggestive of the catatonic manifestations of
-dementia praecox, from which, however, these manic-depressive
-stupors are to be differentiated.</p>
-
-<p>"An attack is called <em>circular</em> when, as is often the case,
-one phase is followed immediately by another phase, e.g.,
-a manic reaction passes over into a depressive reaction or
-vice versa.</p>
-
-<p>"Cases formerly classed as allied to manic-depressive
-should be placed here rather than in the undiagnosed
-group.</p>
-
-<p>"In the statistical reports the following should be
-specified:&mdash;(a) Manic type; (b) Depressive type; (c)
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span>
-Stuporous type; (d) Mixed type; (e) Circular type; (f)
-Other types."</p>
-
-<p>Diefendorf<a name="FNanchor_279_279" id="FNanchor_279_279"></a><a href="#Footnote_279_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a> states that manic-depressive insanity
-comprises from twelve to twenty per cent of the admissions
-to hospitals for mental diseases. He reports defective
-heredity as being shown in from seventy to eighty
-per cent of the cases. He also found about seventy-five
-per cent of the patients suffering from this disease to
-be of the female sex. Buckley<a name="FNanchor_280_280" id="FNanchor_280_280"></a><a href="#Footnote_280_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a> states that sixty per
-cent of the cases give positive histories of "familial neuropathy
-and psychopathy." Paton<a name="FNanchor_281_281" id="FNanchor_281_281"></a><a href="#Footnote_281_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> is of the opinion
-that heredity is a factor in from eighty to ninety per
-cent of all cases. Hoch has called attention to the constitutional
-makeup of individuals subject to manic-depressive
-attacks and suggests that they are usually of
-a moody, morose type, unduly optimistic or temperamentally
-unstable. Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_282_282" id="FNanchor_282_282"></a><a href="#Footnote_282_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a> found suicidal tendencies
-in 14.7 per cent of the female patients, and in 20.4 per
-cent of the men. Nine per cent of his cases showed a
-manic makeup; 12.1 per cent, a depressive temperament;
-12.4 per cent were irascible or nervous; and from three
-to four per cent exhibited cyclothymic tendencies. Of
-the cases admitted to his clinic 48.9 per cent were depressive
-forms; 16.6 per cent, manic; and 34.5 per cent
-represented both types in various combinations. Melancholia
-simplex and gravis constituted 23.5 per cent of the
-simple forms, 13.5 per cent showed phantastic delusions
-and 6.1 per cent anxieties. Hypomanias made up four
-per cent, and acute mania, 9.8 per cent of the cases. Confused
-and stuporous states constituted 8.2 per cent and
-compulsions, one per cent. Lighter forms constituted
-ten per cent, and more severe types, nine per cent of the
-admissions. Stupors and clouding were found in 4.9
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span>
-per cent and delusional states in 4.9 per cent of the total.
-He quotes Walker as reporting, in a study of 674 cases,
-that excitements contributed eleven per cent; depressions,
-55.7 per cent; and circular forms 33.3 per cent of the male
-cases; and excitements, 6.2 per cent; depressions, 70.2
-per cent; and circular types, 23.6 per cent of the female
-admissions. In from sixty to seventy per cent of Kraepelin's
-cases the first attack was a depression. In two-thirds
-of them, after the first mild attack there was a
-remission. In one-third of the cases, the depression terminated
-in an excitement followed by recovery. When
-the disease begins with a manic attack, two-thirds of the
-cases are followed by a remission. He reports excitements
-with a duration of ten years and depressions of
-fourteen years standing. In a study of 703 remissions
-he found ninety-six lasting from ten to nineteen years;
-thirty-four, from twenty to twenty-nine years; eight,
-from thirty to thirty-nine years; and one of forty-four
-years. He is of the opinion that the length of remission
-bears no relation to the duration of the attack. Of
-the depressions, 167 had a remission of six years; forty-six
-of 2.8 years; and twenty-seven of two years or more.
-Of the manic forms, fifty-three had remissions of 3.3
-years; twenty-four of 4.5 years; and twenty of two years
-or more. Manic-depressive psychoses constitute from
-ten to fifteen per cent of the admissions at Kraepelin's
-clinic. He found hereditary taint in eighty per cent of
-his Heidelberg cases and quotes Walker as reporting
-73.4 per cent; Saiz 84.7 per cent; Weygandt, ninety per
-cent; and Albrecht, 80.6 per cent. A history of alcoholism
-was found in twenty-five per cent and syphilis in eight
-per cent of the male patients.</p>
-
-<p>Rehm made an interesting study of the offspring of
-manic-depressives. Of forty-four children in nineteen
-families, fifty-two per cent showed evidences of psychic
-degenerations, twenty-nine per cent of which consisted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span>
-in an abnormal emotional makeup usually of the depressive
-types. In 157 cases from fifty-nine families, Bergamasco
-found that 109 showed manic-depressive psychoses.
-Kraepelin noted that the highest percentage of
-the first attacks occurred between the ages of fifteen and
-twenty. Reiss made a very significant analysis of the
-various forms of the disease manifested by individuals
-possessing definite predisposition. Thus, of the cases
-with a depressive makeup 64.2 per cent had depressive
-attacks, 8.3 per cent, manic, and 27.5 per cent, combined
-forms. Of those with manic temperaments, 35.6 per cent
-had depressive attacks, 23.3 per cent, manic, and 41.1
-per cent, combined forms. Of the irritable individuals,
-45.5 per cent had depressive attacks, 24.4 per cent, manic,
-and 30.1 per cent, combined forms. Of the cyclothymic
-persons, 35.3 per cent had depressions, 11.7 per cent, excitements,
-and fifty-three per cent, combined forms.</p>
-
-<p>An analysis of the number of cases of manic-depressive
-insanity admitted to American institutions is exceedingly
-interesting in view of the opinions expressed
-by Kraepelin. From 1912 to 1919 there were 49,640 first
-admissions to the thirteen New York state hospitals. Of
-these, 7,499, or 15.1 per cent, were diagnosed as having
-manic-depressive psychoses or allied conditions. During
-the years 1918 and 1919, when the Association's classification
-was officially used throughout, the percentage
-of manic-depressive psychoses was 14.57. In the fourteen
-state hospitals of Massachusetts in 1919 there were
-3,011 first admissions. Two hundred and eighty-three,
-or 9.39 per cent, of these were manic-depressive psychoses.
-In twenty-one state hospitals in fourteen other
-states, practically all in 1917, 1918 and 1919, there were
-18,336 first admissions. Of these 3,409, or 18.59 per cent,
-were cases of manic-depressive insanity. Thus, of the
-70,987 first admissions reported from forty-eight hospitals
-in sixteen different states there were 11,191 cases<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span>
-of manic-depressive insanity, a percentage of 15.76. This
-may probably be looked upon as fairly representative of
-the incidence of manic-depressive psychoses in American
-institutions.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">When it comes to an analysis of the various forms of
-manic-depressive psychoses reported, the indications are
-not so clear. In New York during 1918 and 1919 there
-were 1,980 cases distributed as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="b" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Manic</td>
- <td class="td04a">905</td>
- <td class="td04a">45.71</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Depressive</td>
- <td class="td04a">729</td>
- <td class="td04a">36.82</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Stuporous</td>
- <td class="td04a">53</td>
- <td class="td04a">2.68</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mixed</td>
- <td class="td04a">245</td>
- <td class="td04a">12.37</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Circular</td>
- <td class="td04a">48</td>
- <td class="td04a">2.42</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">During the eight-year period referred to above in the
-New York hospitals there were 6,091 cases of manic-depressive
-and allied conditions, classified as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="b" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Manic</td>
- <td class="td04a">2952</td>
- <td class="td04a">48.46</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Depressive</td>
- <td class="td04a">2014</td>
- <td class="td04a">33.06</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Stuporous</td>
- <td class="td04a">76</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mixed</td>
- <td class="td04a">773</td>
- <td class="td04a">12.69</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Circular</td>
- <td class="td04a">199</td>
- <td class="td04a">3.26</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">The fourteen Massachusetts hospitals reported 672 cases
-in 1917 and 1918, classified as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="b" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Manic</td>
- <td class="td04a">222</td>
- <td class="td04a">33.03</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Depressive</td>
- <td class="td04a">373</td>
- <td class="td04a">55.50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Stuporous</td>
- <td class="td04a">4</td>
- <td class="td04a">.59</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mixed</td>
- <td class="td04a">66</td>
- <td class="td04a">9.82</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Circular</td>
- <td class="td04a">7</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.04</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2ab">In the twenty-one hospitals in fourteen other states there
-were 3,409 cases of manic-depressive psychoses as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="b" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Manic</td>
- <td class="td04a">1401</td>
- <td class="td04a">41.09</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Depressive</td>
- <td class="td04a">1365</td>
- <td class="td04a">46.04</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Stuporous</td>
- <td class="td04a">62</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.82</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mixed</td>
- <td class="td04a">228</td>
- <td class="td04a">6.69</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Circular</td>
- <td class="td04a">94</td>
- <td class="td04a">2.76</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2ab">The total from all of these institutions, of 12,152 cases,
-was classified as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="b" width="60%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Manic</td>
- <td class="td04a">5480</td>
- <td class="td04a">45.09</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Depressive</td>
- <td class="td04a">4481</td>
- <td class="td04a">36.87</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Stuporous</td>
- <td class="td04a">195</td>
- <td class="td04a">1.60</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Mixed</td>
- <td class="td04a">1312</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.79</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Circular</td>
- <td class="td04a">348</td>
- <td class="td04a">2.87</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p10">It will be noted that manic cases are more common than
-the depressive in New York, the number of the former
-being fifteen per cent greater than the latter. In Massachusetts
-the number of depressive forms is twenty-two
-per cent higher than the manic. In the other states the
-depressive types are less than five per cent higher than
-the manic. In all institutions the mixed forms are more
-common than the circular or stuporous. The stuporous
-forms constitute the smallest percentage reported in all
-hospitals, except in 1918 and 1919 in New York. We
-would be warranted, apparently, in the conclusion that
-in this country manic forms are the more common, the
-depressive being second in frequency, followed by the
-circular and stuporous types in the order mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>The statement is, I think, also warranted that there
-is a considerable difference of opinion as to the classification
-of the different forms of manic-depressive insanity
-and that diagnostic procedure is far from being standardized.
-Many of these discrepancies are doubtless due to
-difficulties in differentiating between certain cases of
-manic-depressive psychoses and dementia praecox. The
-hospitals reporting lower percentages of the former usually
-show a much higher rate of the latter. Certainly
-there is room for an honest difference of opinion in many
-instances. It must be admitted, moreover, that our fundamental
-conceptions of these two great groups do not
-permit of a hard and fast line of demarcation between
-them in all cases.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">INVOLUTION MELANCHOLIA</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>In 1896 Kraepelin first definitely outlined his views
-on dementia praecox, to which he assigned hebephrenia,
-although he did not at the time include katatonia in his
-delimitation of that disease. He also described melancholia
-in his fifth edition, classifying it as an involutional
-or retrograde presenile process (Das Irresein des Rückbildungsalters).
-He had not as yet formulated his theory
-of the manic-depressive psychoses although he described
-manic and depressive forms of periodical constitutional
-disorders. In 1899 he discarded the mania and melancholia
-of other writers altogether or rather included them
-in his new manic-depressive group, but still retained
-melancholia as a distinct entity occurring in the involutional
-period of life only. As has already been shown,
-melancholia is a term which had been used for centuries
-and in a general way applied to depressions of any and
-all types. Kraepelin's manic-depressive psychoses and
-dementia praecox very largely destroyed the integrity
-of this old-time conception. It has been shown, furthermore,
-that depressive states often constitute an integral
-part of the picture of general paresis. Symptomatic depressions
-more or less distinct in character have been
-associated with a number of somatic diseases. Senile
-psychoses, epilepsy, various organic conditions, the psychoneuroses
-and the psychopathic personalities have depressive
-manifestations well recognized and readily
-classifiable.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin, however, pointed out the fact that there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span>
-was another group still unaccounted for&mdash;the anxious
-depressions of later life, which he included under the designation
-of involution melancholia and which did not
-belong to the manic-depressive group. This he described
-as being preeminently a depression associated almost
-always with anxiety and fear as prominent symptoms.
-Accompanying this condition there are usually ideas
-of poverty, sin, or impending danger of some kind. Delusions
-of self-accusation are quite common. Anxious
-restlessness or agitated excitement is to be expected in
-a majority of the cases. There is usually no clouding
-of the consciousness, although, as Hoch expresses it,
-"the mental horizon may be more or less narrowed to
-the depressive ideas." The memory as a rule is not
-impaired. Hallucinations of sight and hearing are often
-present. Somatic delusions of a hypochondriacal nature
-occur. Insomnia is usually marked. The tendency of the
-disease is towards deterioration. Retardation and psychomotor
-inactivity are not to be expected. Melancholia
-is to be differentiated from manic-depressive insanity by
-the prominence of anxiety and apprehension, the absence
-of any retardation or psychomotor inhibition, the unusual
-frequency of self-accusation with ideas of sinfulness, the
-clearness of the sensorium, the comparatively unfavorable
-prognosis and the great frequency of suicidal impulses.
-The age, and the absence of previous attacks, is,
-of course, exceedingly important in arriving at a diagnosis.
-The onset of the disease is usually between the
-ages of forty and sixty, but not infrequently it begins
-with the menopause in women, and Kraepelin states that
-sixty per cent of the cases occur in the female sex. He
-found a history of defective heredity very common. The
-precipitating factor is often some mental shock, the illness
-or death of friends, or disasters of various kinds.
-No distinctive pathology of the disease has been described
-by Kraepelin. He was uncertain as to the rôle played<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span>
-by arteriosclerosis in its etiology. Diefendorf<a name="FNanchor_283_283" id="FNanchor_283_283"></a><a href="#Footnote_283_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a> reported
-that about one-third of the cases made complete
-recoveries; twenty-three per cent were able to return to
-their previous surroundings; twenty-six per cent terminated
-in an advanced state of deterioration and nineteen
-per cent died within a period of two or three years.</p>
-
-<p>In 1907 Dreyfus,<a name="FNanchor_284_284" id="FNanchor_284_284"></a><a href="#Footnote_284_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a> at that time an assistant of
-Kraepelin's, made an elaborate study of the cases previously
-diagnosed as involution melancholia in the Heidelberg
-clinic. During a period of fourteen years, a total
-of seventy-nine were reported. A thorough investigation
-by Dreyfus showed that two-thirds of these had made
-complete recoveries or improved to such an extent as
-to be able to go home. Only eight per cent showed a
-marked mental deterioration. He also found that over
-half of the series had more than one attack, usually depressions.
-One-third of the patients died and were thus
-eliminated from further consideration. The duration of
-the attack was over three years in one-third of the cases
-reviewed. Fifteen per cent recovered in from three to
-five years, nine per cent in from six to eight years, and
-eight per cent in from ten to fourteen years. He was of
-the opinion that after a careful study of the hospital
-records the symptoms found could all be explained on the
-basis of manic-depressive insanity, usually of a mixed
-form. Kraepelin had reported that forty-nine per cent
-of his cases deteriorated mentally. Dreyfus reduced this
-on further observation to only eight per cent. On analysis
-he found, in many instances, brief periods of manic
-elation, sometimes only a matter of hours or a few days,
-evidences of excitability, manic suggestion in the eagerness
-of the patient to communicate his troubles to others,
-and inhibitory processes indicated by a lack of interest,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>
-loss of affection or even difficulty of thinking. Dreyfus
-concluded that the depressions of late years were not so
-common as had been supposed and that a sufficient knowledge
-of their history showed that they had usually exhibited
-previous attacks. He thought that the long duration
-of the disease probably led to erroneous ideas as
-to its termination in deterioration.</p>
-
-<p>Kirby<a name="FNanchor_285_285" id="FNanchor_285_285"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_285_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a> is of the opinion that Dreyfus based some
-of his findings on insufficient evidence, as shown by his
-published case records:&mdash;"In a considerable number of
-other cases the author's conclusion that manic-depressive
-symptoms were present is based on extremely
-meagre data. As an illustration one case may be referred
-to briefly. A man fifty-three years old had an
-agitated depression lasting over two and one-half years
-and terminating in recovery. The case record contains
-no statement of any objective inhibition or feeling of
-subjective insufficiency, neither are there any statements
-regarding flight of ideas, or unusual loquacity. The diagnosis,
-however, is made of manic-depressive insanity, with
-partial psychomotor inhibition and flight of ideas. The
-assumption that these symptoms existed is based entirely
-on the retrospective account from the patient, obtained
-three years after recovery from the psychosis. He then
-declared that during the attack he could not think calmly;
-it seemed that one thought "knocked the other down,"
-one thought "hunted after the other." He also described
-a feeling as if there were a cap on his head, as if he were
-nailed down. These retrospective statements are interpreted
-to mean that there was partial psychomotor inhibition
-and flight of ideas. In many other cases the
-reasoning is just as forced and the deductions based on
-equally insufficient grounds.... The author's aim was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span>
-to see if the symptoms present fitted into certain schematic
-formula and thus the analysis became rather a search
-for diagnostic signs supposed to characterize a definite
-form of disease. Such a method leads away from consideration
-of the mental disorder as a whole; a few minor
-features are emphasized in the picture and because the
-patient recovers these are raised to diagnostic importance&mdash;a
-little feeling of insufficiency or a slight change
-of mood in a disorder which ends in recovery are seized
-upon as evidence that a special kind of disease exists;
-as a matter of fact, we would hardly miss just such symptoms
-in many other psychoses. There is no attempt to
-get below the surface, to understand the evolution of the
-disorder, or to use the facts in the development in formulating
-the prognosis."</p>
-
-<p>In the introduction to the book written by Dreyfus in
-1907, Kraepelin nevertheless expressed the opinion that
-"These results show that for the most of these disorders
-which have been designated as melancholia there now
-exists no sufficient reason to separate them from manic-depressive
-insanity." This at the time was looked upon
-as definitely settling the fate of the melancholia concept
-and it was abandoned by some. As a general rule, however,
-the psychiatrists of this country seem to have accepted
-Kraepelin's original description of the disease
-as being thoroughly justified. To use White's words,
-"Many psychiatrists still believe, although Kraepelin
-himself accepts Dreyfus' conclusions, that there is still
-a place for involution melancholia distinct from the
-manic-depressive group."</p>
-
-<p>In his eighth edition Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_286_286" id="FNanchor_286_286"></a><a href="#Footnote_286_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a> discusses melancholia
-as a presenile condition and reviews the whole
-situation in considerable detail. He shows that symptomatic
-considerations alone did not guide him in his
-original conception of the disease. A great deal of weight
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span>
-was attached to prognosis and certain forms were separated
-out and differentiated from manic-depressive because
-they tended towards mental enfeeblement. He calls
-attention to the fact that Thalbitzer disputed the integrity
-of melancholia in 1905, classifying it as a manic-depressive
-reaction. After reviewing the findings of Dreyfus
-he admits that the conclusions of the latter are in
-the main correct and that involution melancholia as
-originally described cannot be retained as a definite entity.
-"The significant fact still remains," he says, "that
-single attacks of depression are disproportionately common
-in the involution period." Hübner, for instance,
-found twenty-one single attacks of melancholia after the
-fiftieth year of age to only two single attacks of mania.
-"The appearance of depressions, therefore, through the
-revolutions of this period of life seems to be favored
-to a special degree." He again states that he is unable
-to determine what rôle is played in the involutional
-depressions by beginning arteriosclerosis or the onset of
-senile conditions. He concludes, however, that a form
-of depression, earlier described as melancholia, is still
-to be separated from the manic-depressive psychoses
-although not entirely clear as to its significance or exact
-delimitation.<a name="FNanchor_287_287" id="FNanchor_287_287"></a><a href="#Footnote_287_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a></p>
-
-<p>These are the most severe and rapidly fatal forms of
-anxious excitements, as a rule developing suddenly and
-included now in his presenile group. "These cases are
-anxious, restless, sleepless, self-accusatory and show delusions
-of persecution." The delusional ideas are depressive,
-extravagant and hypochondriacal. "They have
-offended everybody; are eternally damned; Satan is
-coming and will take them; he is out there. Nature has
-changed, everything is different, no mercy can come from
-heaven; there are ghosts in the house; the patients find
-themselves in the infernal regions, are surrounded by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[433]</a></span>
-hostile powers, are in a bewitched castle. They will be
-carried away, thrown into a fiery furnace, their arms
-and legs cut off, have their throats cut in the presence
-of a thousand students, and be buried alive. They have
-a cancer in the stomach, the husband is insane or has had
-a stroke." Suicidal attempts are frequent. Sometimes
-grandiose ideas are expressed, accompanied by hallucinations.
-Apprehension and orientation are usually not
-disturbed. This is ordinarily followed by a period of
-violent excitement with agitated wringing of the hands,
-striking the breast, tearing the hair, etc. Confusional
-conditions with clouding may appear, often terminating
-shortly in a pneumonia, erysipelas or heart failure. According
-to Nissl, widespread and well marked changes are
-to be found in the brain at autopsy. There is an extensive
-destruction of ganglion cells, although that cannot
-be definitely associated with the symptoms of the disease.
-Kraepelin leaves the question open as to whether
-this should be looked upon as some form of "acute delirium"
-such as manifests itself in the course of various
-psychoses. The disease is usually one of the sixth decade
-of life, much more common in the female sex, and cannot
-without further information be definitely excluded
-from the involutional processes. He concludes his discussion
-by saying that these conditions probably "have
-some relation to the similar delirious senile forms to be
-discussed later." This is, of course, a decided modification
-of his original views, although it is quite clear that he
-still feels that there is an involutional depression, now
-included, however, in the presenile group.</p>
-
-<p>In his chapter on manic-depressive insanity three
-years later Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_288_288" id="FNanchor_288_288"></a><a href="#Footnote_288_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a> referred to this question again
-as follows:&mdash;"Under these circumstances I thought at
-first that the involutional depressions described as special
-clinical forms, melancholia in the narrower sense,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</a></span>
-which seemed to show essential differences in its general
-characteristics, course, and to a certain extent in the
-history of its development, should be separated from
-manic-depressive insanity. At the same time I was aware
-of the fact that in a considerable number of the involutional
-depressions, both on account of their clinical form
-and their association sooner or later with manic states,
-their connection with manic-depressive insanity could not
-be questioned. I therefore made an effort to establish a
-practical differentiation, entirely without satisfactory results.
-Further experience has demonstrated, as was
-shown in the discussion of the presenile psychoses, that
-they do not constitute grounds for the separation of
-melancholia. Deterioration is explained by the development
-of senile or arteriosclerotic changes. Some cases
-were of long duration, showing manic symptoms before
-recovery. The frequency of depressions in advanced
-years we have learned to be a legitimate development of
-the involutional period of life. The substitution of anxious
-excitement for volitional inhibition has proved to
-be an occurrence which is found in advancing years in
-those cases which had an attack of the ordinary form in
-the decade before (as shown in our cases 1 and 2). Hübner
-has, moreover, made the observation that melancholia
-may show retardation in one attack and not in the next.
-There remains, therefore, no adequate reason for differentiating
-the involutional depressions heretofore described
-as melancholia from manic-depressive insanity."</p>
-
-<p>Kehrer<a name="FNanchor_289_289" id="FNanchor_289_289"></a><a href="#Footnote_289_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a> has made a careful analysis of the facts
-brought out by Kraepelin's statistical diagram showing
-the various age groups represented by his manic-depressive
-cases. "From the fifteenth year of life, at
-which age manic and melancholic attacks are most frequent
-(about twenty-five per cent), the curve of the manic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</a></span>
-attacks falls steadily (with only two important rises at
-the thirty-fifth and the forty-fifth years) until it becomes
-less than five per cent at the seventieth year, while the
-curve of the melancholic conditions with equal constancy
-increases (with the exception of the fifty-fifth year only),
-especially between the forty-fifth and fiftieth years, from
-fifty-two to seventy-four per cent and finally to eighty
-per cent. On the other hand, the curve of the manic first
-attacks falls steadily from 28.5 per cent at the twentieth
-year to 3.5 per cent at the sixtieth, with a slight increase
-at fifty from 12.7 per cent to 13.4 per cent, while in the
-male sex the same curve shows no further increase after
-the thirtieth year, when it reaches its maximum (33.8 per
-cent) and even shows a particularly sharp fall, from
-22.2 per cent to 5.9 per cent, between the fiftieth and sixtieth
-year.... Based on this diagram Kraepelin concluded
-that the depressions of the involutional period,
-which did not show special symptoms of some other disease
-entity, could not be differentiated from those of the
-earlier periods of life."</p>
-
-<p>Specht,<a name="FNanchor_290_290" id="FNanchor_290_290"></a><a href="#Footnote_290_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a> Hübner and Stransky have subscribed to
-these views. Stransky expressed the opinion that "there
-is nothing in the form of these depressions, either with or
-without anxiety, by which they can be distinguished from
-those recognized as manic-depressive insanity and that
-neither the course nor the age of onset offer any convincing
-argument for their clinical independence." Rehm, on
-the other hand, held that there were depressions of the
-involutional period of life corresponding to Kraepelin's
-melancholia and not belonging to manic-depressive insanity.
-He described these as lacking the constitutional
-taint and characterized by a slow onset, without previous
-attacks, fatigability, outspoken egocentric conduct, hypochondriacal
-delusions of the deteriorative type and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</a></span>
-appearance of hallucinations. Bleuler,<a name="FNanchor_291_291" id="FNanchor_291_291"></a><a href="#Footnote_291_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> Bumke, Seelert,
-Albrecht and others still hold to the integrity of involution
-melancholia as a distinct entity. "These forms,"
-as Bleuler expresses it, "have as a rule a much more
-protracted course. They progress slowly for one or two
-years, continue to be mild, reaching their height in several
-years, and decline slowly to their final conclusion.
-The inhibition is obscured by great restlessness, genuine
-agitated forms are common, they tend to recidivism much
-less than the others and show also much less heredity."
-Albrecht, in 138 cases of functional psychoses of the
-involutional period, only thirty-two of which were in
-men, diagnosed eighty-two as genuine involution melancholia.
-In none of his cases did he find an isolated attack
-of mania in that period of life. He differentiates this
-condition from agitated melancholia, leaving the question
-open as to whether this constitutes a pernicious form
-or is a presenile disease. According to Bumke, psychic
-causes are more prominent in involution melancholia than
-in the manic-depressive psychoses, the duration is longer
-and they do not make such complete recoveries, the most
-common termination being a depressive mental enfeeblement,
-with despondency and an anxious hypochondriacal
-mood. For the genetic interpretation of climacteric
-melancholia as well as the other involutional forms the
-intimate association, according to Bumke, of endogenous
-with exogenous factors is the point of greatest importance.
-"Involution only brings the barrel to an overflow; it
-only adds exogenous to the individual endogenous momentum
-so that the sum total leads to the outbreak of a
-manifest psychosis." Seelert goes still further with the
-endogenous exogenous theory of Bumke. "It depends
-on the type of the association whether the organic anxiety
-psychosis, a melancholia or the depression of a manic-depressive
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</a></span>
-insanity develops in the later period of life.
-In one the endogenous factors predominate, in the other
-the exogenous and in melancholia (in its narrower sense)
-the two maintain a balance."</p>
-
-<p>Although, as has been noted, no characteristic pathological
-changes have been associated with involutional
-melancholia, a condition to which attention was called
-by Adolf Meyer should be referred to here. In 1901,
-in an article in "Brain" on "The Parenchymatous Systemic
-Degenerations mainly in the Central Nervous System"
-he proposed the name "Central Neuritis" for a
-terminal affection previously described by Turner in 1899
-and occurring more frequently perhaps in involutional
-melancholia than in any other psychosis:&mdash;"This alteration
-has been found to occur in peculiar forms of end
-stages of depressive disorders, near or after the climacteric
-period, alcoholic-senile and alcoholico-phthisical
-cachectic states, idiocy, and perhaps also general paralysis
-(Turner's case). Ordinary infectious and cachectic
-states do not, however, appear to form an important link
-in the causes."<a name="FNanchor_292_292" id="FNanchor_292_292"></a><a href="#Footnote_292_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a> The mental condition is usually
-anxious, agitated and apprehensive, often terminating in
-a delirium followed by a stupor. The disease may last
-for a few days ending in death or may recover after
-several weeks. It is accompanied by progressive
-weakness, loss of weight and wasting, a slight rise of
-temperature, and in many cases attacks of diarrhea.
-Characteristic are muscular tension with rigidity, twitching
-movements, incoordination and jactitation of the
-limbs. The reflexes are usually increased. The onset
-is often quite sudden, usually in the fourth, fifth or sixth
-decade of life. At autopsy a striking condition, described
-as axonal alteration, is found in the "Betz" and other
-large ganglion cells generally. The cell body is somewhat
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</a></span>
-swollen, the stainable substance is reduced to a
-structureless powder and the nucleus is dislocated and
-appears conspicuously in the periphery. There is also
-some "Marchi" degeneration of the fibre tracts in the
-motor areas. The regions involved, according to Meyer,<a name="FNanchor_293_293" id="FNanchor_293_293"></a><a href="#Footnote_293_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a>
-are "the cortico-thalmic connections of the motor areas,
-the auditory radiation, the forceps, the pyramids, the
-fillet, the restiform body, and to a lesser degree, the
-posterior column of the cord, the intersegmental elements,
-and the segmental efferent motor elements."</p>
-
-<p>In view of the attitude of the psychiatrists of this
-country as shown by numerous expressions of opinion,
-the statistical committee of the Association felt justified
-in retaining involution melancholia in its classification of
-psychoses for the present and collecting data for further
-consideration. The following suggestions were offered
-as to its delimitation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"These depressions are probably related to the manic-depressive
-group; nevertheless the symptoms and the
-course of the involution cases are sufficiently characteristic
-to justify us in keeping them apart as special forms
-of emotional reaction.</p>
-
-<p>"To be included here are the slowly developing depressions
-of <em>middle life and later years</em> which come on
-with worry, insomnia, uneasiness, anxiety and agitation,
-showing usually the unreality and sensory complex, but
-little or no evidence of any difficulty in thinking. The
-tendency is for the course to be a prolonged one. Arteriosclerotic
-depressions should be excluded.</p>
-
-<p>"When agitated depressions of the involution period
-are clearly superimposed on a manic-depressive foundation
-with previous attacks (depression or excitement)
-they should for statistical purposes be classed in the
-manic-depressive group."
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</a></span></p>
-<p>In view of the history of the development of the conception
-of this psychosis an analysis of the hospital statistics
-on this subject is of unusual interest. We now have
-reports of over seventy thousand first admissions based
-almost entirely on the classification at present used by
-the Association. In 49,640 first admissions to the New
-York hospitals during a period of eight years there were
-1,351 cases diagnosed as involution melancholia&mdash;2.72 per
-cent of the total. During 1918 and 1919, when the Association's
-classification was followed in detail, these hospitals
-showed 480 cases, or 3.45 per cent of 13,588 first
-admissions. Twenty-one public institutions in fourteen
-other states reported 378 cases, or 2.06 per cent of 18,336
-admissions. Two and twenty-five hundredths per cent of
-the admissions to the Massachusetts state hospitals in
-1919 were cases of involution melancholia. Reports from
-forty-eight different state hospitals show that involution
-melancholia constituted 2.53 per cent of over seventy
-thousand admissions. This shows a remarkable similarity
-in standards of diagnosis as far as this psychosis is
-concerned.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">DEMENTIA PRAECOX</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The dementia praecox of today, notwithstanding the
-numerous theories which have been advanced as to its
-etiology and pathology and the various fundamental conceptions
-which have been evolved in the interpretation of
-its mental mechanisms, is essentially the disease described
-by Kraepelin in 1899. The designation which he
-applied to this psychosis or group of psychoses was not
-new, having been used by Morel as early as 1860 and
-again by Pick in 1891. His views as to the delimitation
-of the disease were, however, altogether different from
-those of earlier writers and were destined to inaugurate
-a new era in psychiatry. The grouping which he proposed
-would include certain types of mania and melancholia
-and the psychoses of puberty and adolescence
-described by Hecker and Kahlbaum together with various
-paranoid states previously associated with paranoia,
-chronic delusional insanity, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin thus at one blow destroyed the integrity of
-mania, melancholia, terminal dementia and paranoia, entities
-which had been practically unquestioned for centuries.
-This radical departure from established psychiatric
-procedure was based on his observation that
-various definite characteristics were common to certain
-cases in all of these clinical groups and that they were of
-vital significance from a symptomatic as well as a prognostic
-point of view. He called attention to the fact that
-excitements and depressions often recurred or alternated
-in the same individual without any tendency towards
-mental enfeeblement. An analysis of the mental mechanisms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</a></span>
-and symptomatology of these cases led to his well-known
-conception of the manic-depressive psychoses.
-Other clinical groups equally well-defined, although not
-so sharply circumscribed, showed consistent and progressive
-tendencies towards mental deterioration. These
-were brought together and described as dementia praecox.
-This may be looked upon as a logical development
-of the progress made by the German school of psychiatrists.
-The first step in this direction perhaps was the
-recognition of hebephrenia by Hecker in 1871. He particularly
-emphasized the occurrence of this condition at
-the time of puberty or during the adolescent period.
-This has often been referred to as "silly dementia." The
-preliminary stage or onset in many instances was characterized
-by a gradual change in personality. This was evidenced
-by foolish behavior, silly actions and a failure of
-adjustment to the patient's surroundings often resulting
-in an abandonment of his usual occupation, with an evident
-gradual intellectual deterioration. Initial attacks
-of depression were frequent, usually with hypochondriacal
-ideas and only occasional hallucinations or delusions.
-Transitory periods of excitement were common sequelae.
-The emotional reactions were characterized by their shallowness,
-the train of thought by incoherence, the conduct
-by foolish and senseless acts and the intellectual reactions
-by an advancing deterioration. "The weakminded silliness
-of the disease picture," in the words of Krafft-Ebing,
-"is partly to be explained by the original weakmindedness
-of the patient, which Hecker emphasizes in
-the etiology of his cases."</p>
-
-<p>A more decided step in the development of the dementia
-praecox concept was the description by Kahlbaum
-of katatonia in 1874. This may be ushered in by an
-early stage strongly suggesting hebephrenia but terminating
-usually in a depression followed by states of
-excitement, stupor and dementia. The characteristic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</a></span>
-features of the disease are the peculiar catatonic stupor
-so-called, and forms of excitement differing materially
-from those exhibited in the manic-depressive psychoses.
-Hallucinations and delusions are almost invariably present.
-The delusions are likely to be of a most absurd and
-extravagant type, accompanied by self-accusation in some
-instances but oftener by feelings of influence referred to
-others or somatic ideas. States of muscular tension appear
-early, with constrained attitudes and peculiar mannerisms.
-The stupor which is such a prominent feature
-in the picture is characterized by negativism shown by a
-resistance to all external influences, mutism and a refusal
-to accept food. This may be associated with rigidity
-due to extreme muscular tension which is often so marked
-as to be described as cataleptic. Automatism may manifest
-itself in the form of echolalia or echopraxia. The
-excitements are characterized by impulsive acts of violence.
-Verbigeration and stereotypy are frequent symptoms.
-Remissions are rather to be expected but the
-tendency of the disease is towards a marked mental
-deterioration in the great majority of cases.</p>
-
-<p>Schüle in 1886 suggested the term dementia praecox
-as one applicable to the psychoses of adolescence. It remained
-for Kraepelin, however, to establish the entity of
-these disease processes by including still another type,
-the paranoid forms, which were left entirely unaccounted
-for in the conceptions of Hecker, Kahlbaum, Schüle,
-Morel, Pick, or any of the earlier writers. In this group
-he included cases with persistent hallucinations, more
-or less loosely systematized delusions of persecution and
-gradually increasing deterioration but with little or no
-clouding of consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>In the last edition of his book Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_294_294" id="FNanchor_294_294"></a><a href="#Footnote_294_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a> defines
-dementia praecox as including "a group of clinical pictures
-having the common symptom of a characteristic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</a></span>
-destruction of the internal associations of the psychic
-personality affecting particularly the emotional and volitional
-spheres".... "Although wide differences of
-opinion still exist on many points, the conviction seems
-to be gaining ground more and more that dementia praecox
-on the whole represents a well-defined disease entity,
-and that we are justified in regarding the majority at
-least of the apparently dissimilar clinical types here described
-as the manifestations of a single disease process."
-Many objections have been raised to the name applied to
-this psychosis by Kraepelin. It has been pointed out
-that complete deterioration is not always the termination
-to be expected in this group and that it is not always a
-disease of adolescence. All of this was conceded by
-Kraepelin. He employed the term as one answering the
-purpose "until a more thorough understanding would
-suggest an appropriate designation." His conception of
-the psychosis as described in the sixth edition of his
-book may, I think, be said to have received the rather
-general approval of the psychiatric world. While there
-has been no serious attack on his delimitation of the disease
-entity itself, there has been a decided controversy
-as to the psychological mechanisms involved and the
-fundamental principles upon which his conceptions were
-based. Certainly no textbook of recent years has failed
-to give a very serious consideration to the question of
-dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>Stransky (1909) looked upon dementia praecox as the
-result of a lack of coordination of the intellect, the emotions
-and volition, which he expresses as an intrapsychic
-ataxia. This is illustrated by the displacement of the
-affect so common in dementia praecox and its association
-with an entirely incongruous idea. Thus, the patient
-laughs while expressing an exceedingly depressing delusional
-belief or cries while telling a joke. No emotion
-is displayed at the statement that he is being buried alive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[444]</a></span>
-or torn apart by some outside agency. This would possibly
-explain the unprovoked rages of the catatonic and the
-discrepancy between the catalepsy and mutism of a patient
-who is found to be perfectly oriented as to his surroundings
-and the curious fact that he is often thoroughly
-clear as to the exact day and date.</p>
-
-<p>Wernicke's theories regarding the elaboration of mental
-mechanisms have already been referred to. He saw
-in dementia praecox and other deteriorative processes
-the possibility of a dissociation of psychical reflexes due
-to an interruption or disturbance located in the psychomotor
-projection field, preventing its proper coordination
-with the intrapsychic elaboration mechanisms.</p>
-
-<p>The psychological processes involved in schizophrenia
-as outlined by Bleuler<a name="FNanchor_295_295" id="FNanchor_295_295"></a><a href="#Footnote_295_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a> (1911) have a very important
-bearing on the interpretation of the symptoms of dementia
-praecox. The group which he described under this
-designation is a very broad one, including "many atypical
-melancholias and manias of other schools (as well as
-hysterical melancholias and manias), the most of the
-hallucinatory confusions, many of the amentias described
-by others (our conception of amentia is much narrower),
-some of the forms belonging to acute delirium,
-Wernicke's motility psychoses, primary and secondary
-dementias without special designations, the most of the
-paranoias of other schools, especially the hysterical
-paranoias and almost all of the incurable hypochondrias,
-nervousness, compulsions and impulsions." To these he
-adds the various "juvenile and masturbation forms," a
-large part of the degenerative psychoses of Magnan,
-many prison psychoses and the Ganser symptom complex.
-In view of the fact, as Bleuler<a name="FNanchor_296_296" id="FNanchor_296_296"></a><a href="#Footnote_296_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> expresses it, that
-"The name dementia praecox, which neither leads to
-dementia nor is precocious in its origin, necessarily, gave
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[445]</a></span>
-rise to many misunderstandings," he suggested the designation
-schizophrenia as more appropriate. "Even if we
-cannot make a natural grouping, it would appear that
-schizophrenia is not a disease in the narrower sense but
-a group of diseases somewhat analogous to the organic
-group, which includes paralysis, the senile forms, etc.
-Schizophrenia should therefore be spoken of really in
-the plural. The disease pursues a chronic course or
-progresses in attacks and may come to a standstill at any
-stage or may even regress but never to a complete restitutio
-ad integrum. It is characterized by a specific type
-of alteration in thinking, feeling and relation to the outer
-world encountered nowhere else. Accessory symptoms
-of a characteristic type are particularly common....
-Dementia praecox in any stage may come to a stop, and
-many of its symptoms partially or entirely disappear
-but when it progresses further it leads to dementia and
-dementia of a definite type." A fundamental symptom,
-according to Bleuler, is the disturbance of association of
-ideas. "The normal association of ideas loses its stability;
-others enter at will and take their place. Thus the
-ideas lose their relation to each other and thought becomes
-incoherent." As Hoch<a name="FNanchor_297_297" id="FNanchor_297_297"></a><a href="#Footnote_297_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a> says of this disturbance,
-"Bleuler described it very extensively, and yet
-somehow it is not so very easy to grasp the nature of
-this disorder; it is evidently not so very different from
-Wernicke's sejunction, though free from all localizing
-anatomical bywork. It is conceived of as a more or less
-widespread primary interruption of the associative connection
-of ideas. Actual or latent associations, which,
-in the normal, determine the train of thought or
-combinations of such ideas may remain without influence
-upon it in an apparently aimless fashion, whereas other
-ideas which have no connection may intrude themselves.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[446]</a></span>
-Hence the train of thought is scattered, bizarre, illogical,
-abrupt. This may be so slight that it is difficult to discover,
-and in his description of mild conditions he says
-it may not be found, or only after a thorough search; it
-accounts for much of the scattering of ideas in chronic
-states, and, as we have said, it is supposed to be the explanatory
-principle in acute incoherence. On the other
-hand, similar phenomena may be due to the action of
-complexes, and have to be explained psychogenically.
-But the psychogenic explanation does not appear to him
-sufficient. It is somewhat difficult to see, especially when
-we consider the extensive symbolization and substitution,
-the indifference, the negativism, etc., why something beyond
-these psychogenically explicable disorders is required."
-An essential feature of Bleuler's<a name="FNanchor_298_298" id="FNanchor_298_298"></a><a href="#Footnote_298_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a> concept
-is "autismus." "The schizophrenics lose their contact
-with reality, the mild cases inconspicuously here and
-there, the severe cases, completely".... "When we
-allow our fancies free reign in mythology, in dreams and
-in many of the morbid states, thought will not or cannot
-concern itself with realities; it follows the dictates of
-instincts and emotions. This disregarding of the inconsistency
-with reality is characteristic of autistic thinking."</p>
-
-<p>In his excellent review of Bleuler's schizophrenia already
-referred to, Hoch<a name="FNanchor_299_299" id="FNanchor_299_299"></a><a href="#Footnote_299_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a> makes the following comments
-on this subject:&mdash;"A difficult subject is autism. By
-autism Bleuler means that which we have called the shut
-in tendency, the more or less complete shutting out of the
-environment, or at any rate, all that which does not correspond
-to the wishes. It may be so marked that the
-patients even shut out all sensory impressions, close their
-eyes and ears, make their body as small as possible by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[447]</a></span>
-crouching. Bleuler regards this autism as a secondary
-phenomenon, and looks upon it as one of the results of
-his association disorder, whereas the autistic thinking is
-the day-dreaming, the thinking without reference to
-reality. This autistic thinking flourishes in schizophrenia&mdash;Bleuler
-thinks that the schizophrenic defect in logic
-makes the exclusion of a great many external and internal
-facts possible, and thus gives sway to a tendency which
-we all have, namely, to live in fancies which suit us,
-something which we indulge in but do not allow to influence
-our conduct, but which in the schizophrenic assumes
-the value of reality." An outline of Bleuler's views
-would not be complete without his definition of blocking,<a name="FNanchor_300_300" id="FNanchor_300_300"></a><a href="#Footnote_300_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a>
-an important symptom. "Blocking is a sudden
-emotional inhibition of the psychic processes and in itself
-not pathological." He found it in normal individuals
-in nervousness and in hysteria. "Where it is
-not based on adequate psychological grounds, is generalized
-or of long duration, its presence warrants the diagnosis
-of schizophrenia."</p>
-
-<p>A study of the psychogenic factors concerned in
-dementia praecox led Meyer<a name="FNanchor_301_301" id="FNanchor_301_301"></a><a href="#Footnote_301_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> to the conclusion that the
-psychological processes of the disease were due to abnormal
-mental mechanisms developing in individuals
-unable to adjust themselves to their surroundings. "The
-general principle is that many individuals cannot afford
-to count on unlimited elasticity in the habitual use of
-certain habits of adjustment, that instincts will be
-undermined by persistent misapplication, and the delicate
-balance of mental adjustment and of its material
-substratum must largely depend on a maintenance of
-sound instinct and reaction type." This theory is supported
-somewhat by the "shut in personality" found by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[448]</a></span>
-Hoch<a name="FNanchor_302_302" id="FNanchor_302_302"></a><a href="#Footnote_302_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> in his studies of the history of a large number
-of cases developing dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>Elaborate analyses of the psychological mechanisms
-involved in dementia praecox have been made by Jung
-and others. Freud believed hysteria to be the result of
-a psychic trauma. The unpleasant idea associated with
-this trauma is repressed into the subconscious because the
-individual is unable to react to it in a normal way and it
-is forgotten, but not until it is compensated for by a
-hysterical symbol or symptom which takes its place. By
-means of psychoanalysis, the association test and the
-study of dreams the nature of the psychic trauma can
-often be determined. Jung<a name="FNanchor_303_303" id="FNanchor_303_303"></a><a href="#Footnote_303_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a> adapted these methods
-of study to a consideration of dementia praecox. His
-investigations showed that many of the seemingly meaningless
-manifestations of that disease are symbols or
-substitutes for buried complexes. In some instances
-these remain in their original form without transformation.
-Complexes associated with a feeling of deficiency
-and injured pride may lead to suspicion and delusions of
-persecution. Unfulfilled longings may be actualized in a
-delirium or delusion of grandeur. Symbols and substitutes
-generally are said to represent complexes which
-are antagonistic to the ego and are therefore transformed
-and become unrecognizable. The peculiar symptoms of
-dementia praecox as a rule are a result of the individual's
-inability to make compensatory readjustments. In
-the paranoid forms the patient entirely reconstructs his
-psychical life. White<a name="FNanchor_304_304" id="FNanchor_304_304"></a><a href="#Footnote_304_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a> attempts to explain the meaning
-of some of these delusional formations in his "Outlines
-of Psychiatry":&mdash;"The relation of the delusion to the
-complex is often obvious if one is familiar with the more
-important of the infantile material. A man believes himself
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[449]</a></span>
-pregnant, that a child is in his stomach. This is
-obviously a regression to the period when as an infant
-he had not understood that gestation was a particular
-function of the female. Another patient enucleated his
-eye (castration symbol); a colored man of about forty
-years of age invented a perpetual motion machine (compensation
-for impotence); a man tries to invent the
-greatest cannon on earth (compensation for small penis
-complex); a homosexual man of the "sissy" type made
-wild claims of physical prowess, fighting ability, and incessantly
-swore and used vulgar language to demonstrate
-his toughness (over-compensation of homosexuality); a
-woman complains that her sister's husband follows her
-through underground passageways and shoots electricity
-into her genitalia and anus (anal erotism); an oral erotic
-woman starves herself in order to be tube fed; oral
-erotic patients often cut their throats while under the
-erotic pressure; patients frequently say that God talks
-with them or go to Washington to see the President
-(father complex); in severe grades of introversion they
-sit in a dark corner, head on breast, arms folded and legs
-and thighs flexed (intra-uterine position); a young
-woman says her real parents are the King and Queen of
-Norway (Œdipus phantasy); etc. Of course much of
-the delusional material is not so obviously related to
-infantile material and must be worked out at length with
-the individual to determine its meaning. It must not be
-forgotten that a praecox may have, however, complex
-reactions exactly like that of hysteria and the psychoneuroses.
-To that extent such a patient is hysterical or
-psychoneurotic."</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of the last edition of his textbook
-showed that Kraepelin has somewhat revised his views
-on the subject of dementia praecox. He now speaks of a
-series of morbid pictures "brought together under the
-designation endogenous dementias for the purpose of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[450]</a></span>
-preliminary understanding." This embraces not only dementia
-praecox but a new entity described as "paraphrenia."<a name="FNanchor_305_305" id="FNanchor_305_305"></a><a href="#Footnote_305_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a>
-This includes forms "which, contrary to
-the usual manifestations of dementia praecox, are characterized
-throughout their entire course by the marked
-prominence of a characteristic intellectual disturbance
-while an independent impairment of volition and particularly
-an emotional alteration are lacking or only present
-in a mild form. For this differentiation it seems to me
-that no more suitable expression than "paraphrenia"
-could be employed for the designation of the disease
-processes experimentally brought together here." He
-speaks of the following types:&mdash;systematica, expansiva,
-confabulans and phantastica.</p>
-
-<p>The clinical forms of dementia praecox shown in his
-last edition are as follows:&mdash;dementia simplex, hebephrenia,
-simple depressive or stuporous dementia, depressive
-delusional dementia, circular, agitated and
-periodic forms, katatonia, paranoid types (dementia
-paranoides gravis and mitis, hallucinatory and paranoid
-feeblemindedness) and confusional speech or schizophasia.</p>
-
-<p>His views as to the delimitation of these different
-types should be expressed perhaps in his own words:<a name="FNanchor_306_306" id="FNanchor_306_306">
-</a><a href="#Footnote_306_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a></p>
-
-<p>"Simple progressive deterioration as described by
-Diem under the designation of 'Dementia Simplex,' consists
-in an imperceptible and complete impoverishment
-and breaking down of the entire mental life."</p>
-
-<p>Of hebephrenia or silly dementia he says, "In this
-disease picture there stands out particularly with the
-progressive deterioration of the mental life, an incoherence
-of thought, feeling, and conduct."</p>
-
-<p>"As the third group of dementia praecox I should like
-to group together, under the designation of simple depressive
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[451]</a></span>
-or stuporous dementia, those cases in which,
-after an initial depression, with or without the appearance
-of stupor, a terminal mental deterioration gradually
-develops."</p>
-
-<p>"Those cases which progress to the marked development
-of phantastic delusions we group together in the
-fourth form of dementia praecox&mdash;depressive delusional
-dementia."</p>
-
-<p>"The next large group includes those cases in which
-severe and protracted excitements develop."</p>
-
-<p>"The first sub group which on account of its course
-we may designate as the circular form shows the nearest
-relationship to the disease picture just described in that
-it also begins with a depression and usually manifests
-active delusions."</p>
-
-<p>"As a second sub group, the agitated form, we bring
-together those cases in which the disease begins with an
-excitement and then immediately or after more or less
-frequent remissions and relapse passes into the terminal
-stage."</p>
-
-<p>"In close relation to the cases brought together here
-we have to consider a small group which either in the
-initial stages of the disease or throughout its entire
-duration follows an outspoken periodic course; these
-amount to less than 2 per cent of all cases."</p>
-
-<p>"The excitements of dementia praecox constitute an
-important part of the clinical form&mdash;Katatonia&mdash;which
-we must now consider. Under this designation Kahlbaum
-described a disease picture which in turn presents
-the symptoms of melancholia, mania and stupor, the unfavorable
-cases being accompanied by confusion and
-deterioration and is furthermore characterized by the
-appearance of certain motor seizures and inhibitions&mdash;in
-other words, the catatonic disorders."</p>
-
-<p>"In many respects a dissimilar picture is shown by
-those cases in which the essential symptoms are delusions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[452]</a></span>
-and hallucinations; these we characterize as paranoid
-forms. The justification for including them with dementia
-praecox I get from the fact that in them sooner or
-later the delusion formation is invariably associated
-with a series of disturbances which we find everywhere
-in the other forms of dementia praecox."</p>
-
-<p>Cases "which do begin with a simple delusion formation
-but which in the further course exhibit still more
-clearly the peculiar destruction of the mental life and
-particularly the emotional and volitional disturbances
-which characterize dementia praecox may be grouped together
-under the name 'dementia paranoides gravis'."</p>
-
-<p>"As a fourth form of paranoid dementia praecox, I
-believe still another group should be added, those which
-on the one hand show a similar development and the same
-delusion formation as the paranoid disorders just described
-but which on the other hand terminate in a characteristic
-mental enfeeblement." These he would call
-'dementia paranoides mitis'."</p>
-
-<p>"A last very characteristic group of cases the discussion
-of which must be included here, is formed by the
-patients with confusional speech." These are the Schizophasias
-of Bleuler.</p>
-
-<p>It must be admitted that in view of Kraepelin's former
-contributions on this subject this classification must be
-looked upon as somewhat involved and confusing. It
-suggests an unnecessary complication of an already difficult
-subject to no great advantage. These varying conceptions
-are difficult to understand. Perhaps, as
-Meyer<a name="FNanchor_307_307" id="FNanchor_307_307"></a><a href="#Footnote_307_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> expresses it, "the symptomatology in its first
-formulation in 1895, and later, emphasized too many
-things which prevail also in other conditions, so that
-altogether too many errors occurred. In four hundred
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[453]</a></span>
-and sixty-eight of Kraepelin's Munich diagnoses even
-between 1904 and 1906, 28.8 per cent were cases subsequently
-considered to be manic-depressive (Zendig)&mdash;altogether
-too broad a margin of uncertainty."</p>
-
-<p>In summarizing the whole situation the conclusion
-reached by Buckley<a name="FNanchor_308_308" id="FNanchor_308_308"></a><a href="#Footnote_308_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> would appear to be thoroughly
-established:&mdash;"Most authorities agree, however, that
-the term dementia praecox includes the psychoses which
-appear prior to mental maturity (early in some and much
-later in others), with a tendency to permanent mental
-defect in the long run, but which may follow a chronic
-course, may be divided into attacks, or may improve or
-stop at any stage, but never with restoration to absolute
-normal health."</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the elaborate investigations of Alzheimer,
-Sioli, Klippel, Lhermitte, Moriyasu, Goldstein,
-Nissl and many others, no definite pathological basis
-for dementia praecox has ever been established.</p>
-
-<p>For purposes of statistical study in the collection of
-data relative to this disease entity, as in all other cases,
-the American Psychiatric Association has endeavored to
-adhere to fundamental conceptions generally accepted by
-the profession and has avoided as far as possible adherence
-to the tenets of any one school. For purposes of
-uniformity the following suggestions were made in the
-"statistical manual" as to the classification of psychoses
-to be reported under the designation of dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>"This group cannot be satisfactorily defined at the
-present time as there are still too many points at issue as
-to what constitute the essential clinical features of dementia
-praecox. A large majority of the cases which
-should go into this group may, however, be recognized
-without special difficulty, although there is an important
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[454]</a></span>
-smaller group of doubtful, atypical, allied or transitional
-cases which from the standpoint of symptoms or
-prognosis occupy an uncertain clinical position.</p>
-
-<p>"Cases formerly classed as allied to dementia praecox
-should be placed here rather than in the undiagnosed
-group. The term "schizophrenia" is now used by many
-writers instead of dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>"The following mentioned features are sufficiently
-well established to be considered most characteristic of
-the dementia praecox type of reaction:</p>
-
-<p>"A seclusive type of personality or one showing
-other evidences of abnormality in the development of the
-instincts and feelings.</p>
-
-<p>"Appearance of defects of interest and discrepancies
-between thought on the one hand and the behavior-emotional
-reactions on the other.</p>
-
-<p>"A gradual blunting of the emotions, indifference or
-silliness with serious defects of judgment and often
-hypochondriacal complaints, suspicions or ideas of reference.</p>
-
-<p>"Development of peculiar trends, often fantastic
-ideas, with odd, impulsive or negativistic conduct not accounted
-for by any acute emotional disturbance or impairment
-of the sensorium.</p>
-
-<p>"Appearance of autistic thinking and dream-like
-ideas, peculiar feelings of being forced, of interference
-with the mind, of physical or mystical influences, but with
-retention of clearness in other fields (orientation, memory,
-etc.).</p>
-
-<p>"According to the prominence of certain symptoms
-in individual cases the following four clinical forms of
-dementia praecox may be specified, but it should be
-borne in mind that these are only relative distinctions
-and that transitions from one clinical form to another
-are common:</p>
-
-<p>"(a) Paranoid type: Cases characterized by a prominence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[455]</a></span>
-of delusions, particularly ideas of persecution or
-grandeur, often connectedly elaborated, and hallucinations
-in various fields.</p>
-
-<p>"(b) Catatonic type: Cases in which there is a
-prominence of negativistic reactions or various peculiarities
-of conduct with phases of stupor or excitement, the
-latter characterized by impulsive, queer or stereotyped
-behavior and usually hallucinations.</p>
-
-<p>"(c) Hebephrenic type: Cases showing prominently
-a tendency to silliness, smiling, laughter, grimacing, mannerisms
-in speech and action, and numerous peculiar
-ideas usually absurd, grotesque and changeable in form.</p>
-
-<p>"(d) Simple type: Cases characterized by defects of
-interest, gradual development of an apathetic state, often
-with peculiar behavior, but without expression of delusions
-or hallucinations.</p>
-
-<p>"(e) Other types."</p>
-
-<p>A sufficient number of reports has been received from
-hospitals using this classification to warrant a preliminary
-survey of the information available at this time on
-the subject of dementia praecox. Perhaps it would be
-well to summarize first such information as is to be obtained
-from other sources. Diefendorf<a name="FNanchor_309_309" id="FNanchor_309_309"></a><a href="#Footnote_309_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a> states that
-dementia praecox constitutes from fourteen to thirty per
-cent of all admissions to institutions, fifty-eight per cent
-of the total number being of the hebephrenic, eighteen per
-cent, of the catatonic, and twenty-two per cent, of the
-paranoid variety. Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_310_310" id="FNanchor_310_310"></a><a href="#Footnote_310_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a> (1913) found that dementia
-praecox constituted ten per cent of all admissions,
-classified as to types as follows:&mdash;Silly dementia, thirteen
-per cent; simple depressive dementia, ten per cent;
-delusional depressive dementia, thirteen per cent; circular
-dementia, nine per cent; agitated dementia, fourteen
-per cent; periodic dementia, two per cent; and katatonia,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[456]</a></span>
-19.5 per cent. He reported a history of hereditary
-taint in seventy per cent of his cases. Diefendorf found
-the onset of the disease in sixty per cent of all cases before
-the twenty-fifth year, Kraepelin, in fifty-seven per
-cent. Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_311_311" id="FNanchor_311_311"></a><a href="#Footnote_311_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> states that seizures occurred in
-twenty-one per cent of his cases of silly dementia and
-in the other types as follows:&mdash;simple depressive dementia,
-seventeen per cent; delusional depressive dementia,
-twenty-seven per cent; circular dementia,
-twenty per cent; agitated dementia, twenty per cent; katatonia,
-seventeen per cent; paranoid dementia gravis,
-three per cent and paranoid dementia mitis, five per cent.
-Unfortunately a survey of the other literature of the
-day throws little additional light on these subjects.</p>
-
-<p>A study of the statistical reports made by Pollock for
-the State Hospital Commission shows that during the five
-years ending on June 30, 1919, dementia praecox constituted
-14.42 per cent of the 2,024 voluntary cases admitted
-to the thirteen New York state hospitals. During a period
-of eight years ending on June 30, 1919, there were
-49,640 first admissions to the New York state hospitals;
-12,199, or 24.57 per cent, of these were diagnosed as
-dementia praecox or conditions allied thereto. The
-"allied" conditions have not been shown in the New
-York reports since 1917. In 1918 and 1919 there were
-13,588 first admissions, 3,753, or 27.61 per cent, of which
-were cases of dementia praecox. This would indicate an
-increase in the incidence of that disease in New York
-during recent years. The Massachusetts first admissions
-for 1918 and 1919 show a total of 7,582 cases, 1900, or
-25.05 per cent, of which were dementia praecox. It will
-be noted that the percentage is practically the same as
-that of New York for the same years. In a group of
-twenty-one other state hospitals, representing fourteen
-different states using the Association's classification,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[457]</a></span>
-18,336 first admissions have been reported, 3,856, or
-21.03 per cent, of which were cases of dementia praecox.
-This represents a variation from the New York and
-Massachusetts findings which can be explained on various
-grounds, largely by the fact that these institutions represent
-a rural population. We have thus in all 70,987 first
-admissions to state hospitals, with 16,920 cases of dementia
-praecox, representing 23.84 per cent of the total
-number.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">A consideration of the different types of this disease
-as represented by the various state institutions shows
-somewhat different results. In New York during the
-years 1916-17-18-19 there were 6,135 cases of dementia
-praecox shown in the first admissions, classified as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="pagebreak">
-<table class="a" width="70%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Type</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Number of Cases</i></th>
- <th class="td08a"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paranoid</td>
- <td class="td04a">3579</td>
- <td class="td04a">58.34</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Catatonic</td>
- <td class="td04a">468</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.63</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hebephrenic</td>
- <td class="td04a">1463</td>
- <td class="td04a">23.84</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Simple</td>
- <td class="td04a">625</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.19</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2abn">In Massachusetts in 1917-18-19 there were 2,921 cases,
-distributed as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="70%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paranoid</td>
- <td class="td04a">1248</td>
- <td class="td04a">42.72</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Catatonic</td>
- <td class="td04a">678</td>
- <td class="td04a">23.21</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hebephrenic</td>
- <td class="td04a">828</td>
- <td class="td04a">28.34</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Simple</td>
- <td class="td04a">165</td>
- <td class="td04a">5.64</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2abn">In a group of nineteen other institutions there were 3,184
-cases, as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="70%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paranoid</td>
- <td class="td04a">800</td>
- <td class="td04a">25.12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Catatonic</td>
- <td class="td04a">438</td>
- <td class="td04a">10.61</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hebephrenic</td>
- <td class="td04a">1666</td>
- <td class="td04a">52.32</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Simple</td>
- <td class="td04a">230</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.22</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p class="p2abn">We have thus a total of 12,240 cases, a composite group
-classified according to types as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="a" width="70%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Paranoid</td>
- <td class="td04a">5627</td>
- <td class="td04a">45.97</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Catatonic</td>
- <td class="td04a">1584</td>
- <td class="td04a">12.12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Hebephrenic</td>
- <td class="td04a">3957</td>
- <td class="td04a">32.32</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Simple</td>
- <td class="td04a">1020</td>
- <td class="td04a">8.33</td>
- </tr>
- </table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[458]</a></span></p>
-<p class="p10">Although this is probably the largest group of cases of
-dementia praecox recorded we are, unfortunately, not
-warranted as yet in attempting any final conclusions.
-The Massachusetts and New York statistics of late years
-would, I think, justify the tentative statement, at least,
-that dementia praecox admissions represent approximately
-twenty-eight per cent of all cases coming into our
-hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>When we attempt to analyze the types of the disease
-as reported, it at once becomes evident that there are
-very divergent standards of diagnosis. There is a radical
-difference shown in the consideration of the so-called
-simple dementia praecox with a general average of 8.33
-per cent. In Massachusetts there is a much higher percentage
-of the catatonic forms, with a predominance in
-New York of the paranoid variety. The proportion of
-hebephrenic types in the other nineteen institutions is at
-wide variance with the reports of Massachusetts and
-New York. In all probability the percentage shown in
-the analysis of the total number from forty-six state
-hospitals is not far from representing conditions existing
-in American institutions. A careful study of more complete
-reports extending over a number of years should
-settle this question to what may be spoken of as almost
-a mathematical certainty.</p>
-
-<p class="p2b">Pollock and Nolan<a name="FNanchor_312_312" id="FNanchor_312_312"></a><a href="#Footnote_312_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a> have made a study of 9,124
-admissions of dementia praecox to the New York hospitals
-during a period of six and three-quarters years.
-Of these cases 52.2 per cent were men and 47.8 per cent,
-women. The distribution shown by age groups is interesting
-and significant, as is shown by the following
-<span class="no-break">table:&mdash;</span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[459]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="pagebreak">
-<table class="e" width="50%" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
- <tr>
- <th class="td07a"><i>Age Group</i></th>
- <th class="td08a" style="width:20%"><i>Percentage</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">Under 15 years</td>
- <td class="td04a">.2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">15 &nbsp;to &nbsp;19 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="td04a">7.8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">20 &nbsp;&nbsp;" &nbsp;&nbsp;24 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="td04a">20.1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">25 &nbsp;&nbsp;" &nbsp;&nbsp;29 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="td04a">22.0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">30 &nbsp;&nbsp;" &nbsp;&nbsp;34 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="td04a">16.6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">35 &nbsp;&nbsp;" &nbsp;&nbsp;39 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="td04a">13.5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">40 &nbsp;&nbsp;" &nbsp;&nbsp;44 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="td04a">8.4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="td07">45 &nbsp;&nbsp;" &nbsp;&nbsp;49 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td>
- <td class="td04a">5.3</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p10">This would not appear to suggest an adolescent origin
-for this disease to the extent advocated in our textbooks.
-The highest rate shown by males was in the age group
-from twenty-five to twenty-nine years and in the female
-cases, from thirty-five to thirty-nine years. Forty-nine
-per cent were thirty years or over at the time of admission,
-forty-three per cent were between twenty and thirty
-years of age and thirty per cent, between thirty and forty.
-Nineteen per cent were forty years or over at the time
-of admission. Pollock's<a name="FNanchor_313_313" id="FNanchor_313_313"></a><a href="#Footnote_313_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a> investigation, the most exhaustive
-statistical study yet made of dementia praecox,
-shows that fifty per cent of the cases have a family history
-of insanity, nervous diseases, alcoholism or neuropathic
-or psychopathic traits, with a full fifty per cent
-showing no evidence of unfavorable heredity. This again
-is at variance with opinions usually expressed on this
-subject. Forty-six per cent were of normal mental
-makeup and seventy-eight per cent intellectually normal
-before the onset of the psychosis. Alcohol was an assigned
-etiological factor in four per cent of these cases
-and there was a history of intemperance in eight per
-cent of the others. The incidence of dementia praecox is
-more than three times as great in cities as it is in the
-rural districts. The average length of hospital residence
-was sixteen years. The foreign born dementia praecox
-first admissions were found to be principally from Austria,
-Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy and Russia.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[460]</a></span>
-Fifty-one and four-tenths per cent of the cases were
-natives of this country and 48.3 per cent, of foreign birth.
-It is interesting to note that in 1919, 39.9 per cent of the
-first admissions to the New York institutions for the
-criminal insane were cases of dementia praecox. The
-rate of admission was 37.1 per cent in 1918, 20.5 per
-cent in 1917, 30.8 per cent in 1916 and 32.8 per cent in
-1915. Of the 37,607 patients in the New York state hospitals
-on June 30, 1919, 22,036, or 58.8 per cent, were
-cases of dementia praecox. One hundred and thirty-eight
-were discharged as recovered during a period of
-three years. This number represented 5.2 per cent of
-the cases of dementia praecox discharged during that
-time, 2.01 per cent of those admitted, 1.1 per cent of all
-discharges, and .6 per cent of all first admissions. A
-review of the cause of death in 2,988 cases shows that
-the rate for tuberculosis was thirty-three per cent during
-four years when there was no influenza epidemic. This
-constituted over fifty-nine per cent of all of the deaths
-due to tuberculosis during that period of time.</p>
-
-<p>Dementia praecox with the highest admission rate of
-any of the psychoses, its exceedingly unfavorable recovery
-rate, its extreme susceptibility to tuberculosis,
-and representing as it does over one-half of the population
-of our hospitals, must unquestionably be looked
-upon as the most important form of mental disease with
-which we have to deal today. The number of cases of
-dementia praecox in the Massachusetts and New York
-hospitals justifies the statement that there are approximately
-120,000 persons suffering from this disease in the
-institutions of the United States, their maintenance alone
-costing the country twenty-five million dollars annually.
-Their permanent removal would make it possible to close
-at least sixty institutions larger than any state hospital
-in Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[461]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">PARANOIA AND THE PARANOID CONDITIONS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>A discussion of the part played by paranoia, or the
-paranoid conditions however characterized, in the psychiatry
-of the present day, is essentially a review of the
-final chapter in the history of a psychiatric conception
-which is several centuries old. The word paranoia, like
-many other terms still in use, is of Greek origin and was
-apparently applied by Hippocrates in a very general way
-to "madness" of any or all forms. It almost certainly
-had no more definite significance than that, in the works
-of Plato and Aristotle, nor can it be said to have been
-used in its modern sense by Celsus or Aretaeus. It seems
-to have meant something more in the vocabulary of
-Vogel, an eighteenth century writer. Under the heading
-of paranoia, according to Jelliffe,<a name="FNanchor_314_314" id="FNanchor_314_314"></a><a href="#Footnote_314_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a> Plocquet in 1772 included
-Paracope or delirium with six <span class="no-break">subdivisions:&mdash;</span>(a)
-pathetica, (b) phronestica, (c) entomica, (d) encephalica,
-(e) hyperesthetica, and (f) sympathica. It was not
-recognized to any great extent by the earlier writers of
-the French school, but occupied a very prominent place
-in the development of German psychiatry. Heinroth in
-1818 included the paranoias in his disorders of the intellect
-under the name of verrücktheit, a word that was
-destined to become one of great importance later, and
-spoke of an exaltation of the feelings which he called
-"paranoia ecstasia."</p>
-
-<p>Flemming<a name="FNanchor_315_315" id="FNanchor_315_315"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_315_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a>
-in his elaborate classification of psychoses
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[462]</a></span>
-in 1844 described paranoid forms of "mania adstricta"
-or partial mania (monomania). Stark, a contemporary
-of Flemming's, made what seems to be a very
-direct reference to paranoia in his discussion of "Wahnsinn,"
-as did Weiss in 1842. Von Feuchtersleben in
-1845 wrote a very exhaustive description of "fixed delusions"
-which he classified as either involving the personality
-(mania metamorphosis) or as being ambitious,
-religious or relating to love (erotomania). He also spoke
-of a monomania or mania sine delirio which he attributed
-to Pinel. The exact significance of these conceptions
-cannot be determined.</p>
-
-<p>In 1845 Griesinger used the word verrücktheit as applying
-to a secondary incurable condition, exhibiting delusions
-of persecution and grandeur and usually developing
-after an attack of mania or melancholia. He also
-defined Wahnsinn, which he compared to Heinroth's
-"paranoia ecstasia," as including "states of exaltation
-characterized by assertive, expansive emotions, associated
-with persistent excessive self-estimation and extravagant
-fixed delusions which arise therefrom."
-Magnan spoke of "folie systematisée progressive" and
-a "folie systematisée des dégénérés." In his "Le Délire
-Chronique à Évolution Systematique" he divided paranoia
-into a stage of subjective analysis, one of persecution
-and a third of transformation of the personality.
-Lasègue described this same condition under the name of
-persecution mania in 1852. Falret and Ritti divided the
-course of this disease into four periods, one of insane
-interpretations, one of visual hallucinations, one of general
-sensory derangement and a stereotyped state or
-mania of ambition. Morel was of the opinion that these
-psychoses were always preceded by an initial period of
-hypochondriasis.</p>
-
-<p>Pritchard described as monomania a form of insanity
-"characterized by some particular illusion or erroneous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[463]</a></span>
-conviction impressed upon the understanding, and giving
-rise to a partial aberration of judgment." Esquirol
-devoted as many as one hundred and thirty pages to a
-study of monomania, which he subdivided into seven
-<span class="no-break">forms:&mdash;the</span> erotic, "raisonnante" or moral insanity, the
-alcoholic, the incendiary, the homicidal, the suicidal and
-the hypochondriacal.</p>
-
-<p>It was probably the work of Mendel in 1881 which was
-responsible for the use of the word paranoia in its modern
-sense. He spoke of primary and secondary paranoias.<a name="FNanchor_316_316" id="FNanchor_316_316"></a><a href="#Footnote_316_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a>
-The former was described as a "functional psychosis
-characterized by the primary appearance of delusional
-ideas. The delusions of primary paranoia, without being
-interfered with by any opposing ideas, control the entire
-mental life of the patient. The remaining ideas not affected
-by morbid processes stand in close relation, but
-not in conflict, with the dominating delusions. The feelings
-are determined by the content of the delusions and
-vary with them. In the same way the abnormalities of
-conduct are due to the content of the delusional ideas,
-with or without hallucinations." Régis in 1892 described
-his systematized progressive insanity as involving three
-distinct stages,&mdash;one of subjective analysis, a stage either
-of persecution, religious exaltation or eroticism and jealousy,
-and finally a megalomanic state ending occasionally
-in dementia. Cramer, in an elaborate review of the
-literature of paranoia in 1894, refers to twenty-eight different
-designations used by various writers in the discussion
-of this subject up to that time. Serieux and
-Copgras (1909) include deliria of interpretation and of
-vindication in their grouping of these conditions.</p>
-
-<p>In the words of Meyer, paranoia eventually reached
-its high water mark in the work of Krafft-Ebing.<a name="FNanchor_317_317" id="FNanchor_317_317"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_317_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> He
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[464]</a></span>
-defined it as "a chronic mental disease occurring exclusively
-in tainted individuals, frequently developing out
-of the constitutional neuroses, the principal symptoms of
-which are delusions." These are devoid of all emotional
-foundation and from the beginning are systematized,
-methodic and "combined by the processes of judgment,
-constituting a formal delusional structure. Consciousness
-is not disturbed and judgment as a rule is not impaired
-but is entirely based on delusional premises." The
-conduct of the individual is determined by his hallucinations
-and delusions. The process of development is slow
-and the disease remains stationary for many years, but
-never ends in dementia. In a study of over one thousand
-cases Krafft-Ebing<a name="FNanchor_318_318" id="FNanchor_318_318"></a><a href="#Footnote_318_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a> never observed a definite recovery,
-although lucid intervals occurred, generally in the
-beginning of the disease. The taint of paranoia he describes
-as heredity, in the form of abnormal character,
-psychoses, constitutional neuroses and alcoholism. In a
-few instances he reported developmental defects in the
-brain. He found in all cases an anomaly of personality
-which determined the later form of the paranoia. Suspicious,
-retiring, solitary persons were usually persecuted.
-Rough, irritable, egotistical individuals developed
-the querulent forms and the over-conscientious eccentrics
-became the victims of religious paranoia. He attaches
-a considerable importance to the influence of the unconscious
-or subconscious mind. "Its predominance is
-shown in the dreamy, romantic, enthusiastic life of such
-individuals, and in the fact that accidental delusions occurring
-in sickness, dream pictures, and reminiscences
-from reading or plays, are elaborated in the depths of the
-soul, and early burst forth in the form of imperative
-ideas and desultory primordial delusions, which become
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[465]</a></span>
-latent, but later find their ultimate evaluation in the delusional
-ideas of the disease."</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to note that Krafft-Ebing speaks of
-precipitating factors as puberty, the climacteric, uterine
-disease and onanism. There is a definite period of incubation
-followed by one of full development in which judgment
-and reason are lost. Hallucinations of hearing were
-found to be the more common form, followed in the order
-of their numerical occurrence by disturbances of sensibility,
-vision, taste and smell. Persecutory ideas, moreover,
-were said to be much more frequent than delusions
-of grandeur. The terminal states he speaks of as mental
-enfeeblements with a prominence of emotional dulness,
-rather than intellectual defects. He divides the disease
-into original paranoia and the later or acquired forms.
-Original paranoia begins before or at latest during
-puberty. Hereditary taint is always to be found. Conspicuous
-features are sentimental tendencies inclining to
-hypochondria, eroticism with sensitiveness and emotional
-instability. Delusions as to parentage are common,
-suggested often by the fancied or real resemblance of the
-patient to pictures of distinguished personages. Transitory
-ideas of persecution or grandeur are nearly always
-present. The erotic element is more frequent in females.
-Intermissions sometimes last for years. The termination
-is often found in confusional states. The classic or acquired
-form of the disease develops later in life, often
-during the involution period. Two varieties are described,&mdash;the
-persecutory and the expansive. Subsidiary
-types of the former are sexual paranoia, often with
-delusions of jealousy, and querulous insanity with mania
-for lawsuits. The sexual complex he attributes largely
-to masturbation or enforced abstinence. The expansive
-group is divided into inventive or reformatory paranoia,
-the religious and the erotic varieties (erotomania). The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[466]</a></span>
-acquired form as described by Krafft-Ebing is quite
-similar to the "folie systematisée" of Magnan. It conforms,
-moreover, in a general way to the views expressed
-in the English textbooks on delusional insanity and is
-the paranoia of Spitzka, Chapin, Berkley, Peterson and
-many other American psychiatrists. This conception of
-the psychosis was the generally accepted one for many
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The institutional reports of that day showed large
-numbers of paranoics in some of the hospitals. It was a
-disease that played an important part in many murder
-trials and has received more attention from the courts
-and newspapers than any other form of insanity, so-called,
-ever described in the textbooks. There was a
-time, according to Kraepelin, when from seventy to eighty
-per cent of the patients in the German hospitals were
-diagnosed as cases of genuine paranoia. Certainly that
-cannot be said of the institutions of this country. In the
-New York state hospitals, for instance, during a period of
-sixteen years, from October 1, 1888, to September 30,
-1904, when the classical form of paranoia was officially
-recognized in statistics, 84,152 admissions were reported.
-Of this number 1,655, or 1.9 per cent, were diagnosed as
-cases of paranoia. At the Matteawan State Hospital for
-the criminal insane during this time 1,728 admissions
-were shown, with no cases of paranoia. At the Dannemora
-State Hospital for insane convicts during the same
-period there were 354 admissions, sixteen, or 4.51 per
-cent, of which were paranoiacs. This is exceedingly interesting
-but extremely difficult to explain. It is very
-hard to understand why no cases of paranoia reached
-Matteawan during a period of sixteen years. The percentage
-shown in the other institutions can be looked
-upon as being fairly representative of the incidence of
-paranoia as the disease was then understood.</p>
-
-<p>The decline and fall of the paranoia concept is to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[467]</a></span>
-attributed to Kraepelin. In 1893 his classification included
-hallucinatory and depressive forms of "Wahnsinn," both
-accompanied by persecutory ideas to a rather prominent
-degree, and paranoia proper, which he described as
-"Verrücktheit." This was defined as the "chronic development
-of a permanent delusional system with complete
-preservation of consciousness". In the sixth
-edition of his well-known textbook, which appeared in
-1899, he enlarged the dementia praecox group previously
-described by him and added hebephrenia and katatonia
-to it as well as describing a new and important "paranoid"
-form of that disease. His own reasons for this
-were stated as follows<a name="FNanchor_319_319" id="FNanchor_319_319"></a><a href="#Footnote_319_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a>:&mdash;"The second clinical group"
-(dementia praecox, paranoid form) "which I am
-inclined, provisionally, to include under this head, is
-characterized by the fact that extravagant delusions,
-usually accompanied by numerous hallucinations, develop
-in a more coherent manner, and are maintained during a
-series of years, either then entirely to disappear, or to
-become entirely confused. Hitherto I have reckoned
-these forms, as 'phantastische Verrücktheit' to paranoia,
-as is the general practice. It has, however, gradually
-become clearer to me that they are at all events, more
-nearly allied to dementia praecox than to paranoia.
-Whether we really have to do in this case only with a
-clinical variety of the former disease or a distinct malady,
-the future must decide." He did, however, at that time
-still recognize a small but well defined group of cases as
-genuine paranoia. "On the other hand, there is, without
-doubt, a group of cases, in which it is clearly recognizable
-from the outset that a permanent, immovable
-system of delusions slowly develops, with entire preservation
-of mental clearness, and of the regulation of the
-course of thought. It is these forms for which I would
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[468]</a></span>
-reserve the appellation of paranoia. It is they which necessarily
-lead to a profound transformation of the entire
-view of life; to a dislocation of the point of view which
-the patient assumes toward the persons and events of his
-environment." In the eighth edition of his book (1913)
-he separates out a considerable number of cases and
-places them in an entirely new group designated as
-"paraphrenias."<a name="FNanchor_320_320" id="FNanchor_320_320"></a><a href="#Footnote_320_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a> This is "a comparatively small group
-in which, in spite of many similarities to the manifestations
-of dementia praecox nevertheless on account of
-the much less marked development of emotional and
-volitional disturbances the inner structure of the mental
-life is considerably less affected, or in which at least the
-loss of inner unity is essentially limited to certain intellectual
-functions. Common to all of these clinical forms
-which cannot be sharply differentiated is the marked
-prominence of delusion formation and the paranoid
-colouring of the disease process. At the same time there
-are also alterations in the disposition, but not until the
-last stages of the disease that dulness and indifference
-which so often are the first indications of dementia
-praecox." In other words, we are dealing with a group
-which shows the paranoid features of dementia praecox
-but largely lacks its deteriorative processes. This is a
-very decided change of views and may be looked upon
-either as establishing a definite status for a large number
-of cases not properly accounted for in the past or as an
-indication of a tendency to return to former conceptions
-of paranoia.</p>
-
-<p>Of the paraphrenias as described by Kraepelin "approximately
-one-half show that slow but progressively
-developing mixture of delusions of persecution and
-grandeur which Magnan has described under the designation
-of 'délire chronique à évolution systematique.'
-Certainly this disease of Magnan's, as far as can be determined
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[469]</a></span>
-from the descriptions available, is not a clinical
-entity in the sense of the views expressed here; we
-would unhesitatingly include with the paranoid forms of
-dementia praecox many of the cases, with well developed
-mannerisms and the coinage of new words, which progress
-rapidly to mental enfeeblement. At the same time,
-however, 'délire chronique' with its slowly progressing
-forms lasting for decades includes a number of cases
-which form the nucleus of the first paraphrenic disease
-group to be described." Whether or not the paraphrenia
-of Kraepelin is accepted as having been established,
-it must be conceded that the question as to whether anything
-remains of the original paranoia group is one
-worthy of serious consideration. Many have discarded
-the term entirely.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin's paraphrenia is divided into the following
-forms:&mdash;systematica, expansiva, confabulans and phantastica.
-The systematic type is characterized by "the
-extremely insidious development of continuously progressing
-delusions of persecution, with the later appearance
-of delusions of grandeur without deterioration of
-the personality." The expansive form shows "the
-prominent development of delusions of grandeur with a
-predominant exalted mood and mild excitement." The
-confabulans variety is a small group "distinguished by
-the prominent rôle played by falsifications of memory."
-The phantastic form shows "a marked development of
-phantastic, unsystematized, changeable delusions." This
-was the paranoid dementia praecox of his sixth edition.
-Of the cases heretofore assigned to the paranoia group
-Kraepelin has expressed the opinion that about forty per
-cent belong to dementia praecox. "A further somewhat
-larger part falls to the paraphrenic forms to be described
-here." The practically negligible remainder he
-apparently concedes to genuine paranoia. In his eighth
-edition Kraepelin states that the latter constitute less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[470]</a></span>
-than one per cent of all admissions. He now limits the
-term paranoia to cases arising from purely internal
-causes and showing a slowly developing permanent system
-of delusions without any disturbance of thought,
-volition or conduct. The delusional formations may be
-of various types,&mdash;persecution, jealousy, self-importance
-(great inventions, ideas of noble birth, etc.) or they may
-be of a religious or erotic nature. The "querulents" he
-now classifies with the psychogenic disorders. His present
-conception does not admit of the association of paranoia
-with hallucinations.</p>
-
-<p>The most interesting and important feature, perhaps,
-of Kraepelin's presentation is his insistence upon internal
-causes only as etiological factors. He assumes
-a psychopathic foundation for the development of the
-disease. In more than one half of his cases he found well
-marked personal peculiarities. These were manifested
-in some instances in the form of irritability, excitability
-and abnormalities of conduct. Other individuals were suspicious,
-unreliable, lacking in will power and over-ambitious.
-Homosexual tendencies were not infrequent. External
-factors, such as unpleasant experiences, may
-influence the form of the delusional expressions but
-should not be looked upon as explaining their origin.
-They develop in an emotional soil definitely related to
-the hopes and fears of the healthy individual and are
-to be looked upon as a morbid transformation of perfectly
-normal mechanisms. In addition to this he speaks
-of an increased self-consciousness, a natural tendency
-to resistiveness, an undeveloped type of thinking, psychological
-compensations for the disappointments of life,
-evidences of developmental inhibitions, improper habits
-of thought leading to morbid conceptions, etc. He refers
-to exaggerated self-consciousness as the fundamental
-basis of paranoia. In this soil delusions develop as a
-result of inadequate intellectual processes due to developmental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[471]</a></span>
-inhibitions. All of these views have been
-elaborated more fully in his recent discussions of the
-subject of "comparative psychiatry."<a name="FNanchor_321_321" id="FNanchor_321_321"></a><a href="#Footnote_321_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a> These mechanisms,
-he says, have not escaped the notice of the
-Freudian school. Kraepelin feels, however, that their
-arguments "are not based either on a clear conception
-of paranoia or on any evidence at all acceptable."</p>
-
-<p>Bleuler's theory of the disease is summed up in the
-following quotation from his "Affectivität, Suggestibilität,
-Paranoia"<a name="FNanchor_322_322" id="FNanchor_322_322"></a><a href="#Footnote_322_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a>:&mdash;"The exact observation of the objective
-and subjective relations at the time of the origin
-of the disease shows us therefore nothing more than the
-appearance of errors, such as occur to normal persons
-under analogous affects and a connection of accidental
-occurrences to a thought complex which is kept continually
-awake by defects and his own trends of thought, just
-as it is in a corresponding normal mental process. The
-pathological feature is only the fixation of the error so
-that it becomes a delusion, and then the further extension
-of the delusions so that it finally becomes paranoia." In
-1906 when this was written he suggested no explanation
-for the extension of such errors and their fixation in an
-actual psychosis. This might readily be interpreted as
-a logical result of the paranoic "constitution."</p>
-
-<p>The development of paranoic states was summarized
-by Meyer<a name="FNanchor_323_323" id="FNanchor_323_323"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_323_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span>"
-<span class="smcap">a.</span> Feeling of uneasiness,
-tendency to brooding, rumination and sensitiveness, with
-inability to correct the notions and to make concessions&mdash;paranoic
-constitution and paranoic moods. <span class="smcap">b.</span> Appearance
-of dominant notions, suspicious or ill balanced
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[472]</a></span>
-aims. <span class="smcap">c.</span> False interpretations with self-reference and
-tendency to systematization, without or with <span class="smcap">d.</span> Retrospective
-or hallucinatory falsifications, etc. <span class="smcap">e.</span> Megalomanic
-developments or deterioration or intercurrent
-acute episodes. <span class="smcap">f.</span> At any period antisocial and dangerous
-reactions may result from the lack of adaptability
-and excessive assertion of the sidetracked personality."</p>
-
-<p>Freud sees in paranoia a reversion to the homosexuality
-of the developmental period of the individual with
-a projection of symptoms resulting from mental conflicts
-due to a repression of complexes. He described the sexuality
-of the infantile period as being purely autoerotic
-in character, the sexual interests of the child being centered
-in its own body. From this stage the object of interest
-is gradually transferred to other individuals of the
-same sex, the normal attraction to the opposite sex being
-a final development of later years. Freud believes that
-in paranoia there is a fixation in one of these early transitional
-stages. "Persons who cannot rise completely out
-of the stage of narcissism and are thus prematurely fixed
-or arrested in the evolution of their dispositions, are
-exposed to the danger that a flood of libido which finds
-no outlet, sexualizes their social tendencies and reverts
-the sublimations achieved in the course of the development."<a name="FNanchor_324_324" id="FNanchor_324_324"></a><a href="#Footnote_324_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a>
-The resulting mechanisms may be looked
-upon as defense reactions. The subconscious homosexual
-longings of the individual are repressed but finally admitted
-to full consciousness in the form of a projection,
-the sexual object usually being accused of persecution,
-thus justifying the attitude of the paranoic towards the
-cause of his troubles. In erotomania the antagonism is
-directed not against the homosexual object but upon some
-person of the opposite sex. Freud interprets the delusions
-of jealousy of the alcoholic as an evidence of homosexual
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[473]</a></span>
-attraction, the individual justifying himself by
-the charge that it is his wife and not himself who is the
-guilty one. The delusions of grandeur he looks upon as
-a sweeping denial of all extraneous influences, the individual
-building a defense for himself by assuming a self-aggrandizement
-that leaves no room for homosexual objects.
-Perhaps these mechanisms are, as Meyer suggests,
-only another expression of the well recognized and
-more or less normal tendency to accuse others of being at
-fault in some way when what we do ourselves goes wrong.
-Certainly, if nothing more, they are exceedingly ingenious
-and interesting theories. One cannot but be impressed
-by the extraordinary skill of Freud in discovering the
-sexual origin of almost any mental process with which
-we are familiar. The ready facility with which his study
-of sexual conflicts and repressions can be shown to serve
-as a complement to the anatomical, symptomatic, and
-prognostic hypotheses of Kraepelin is also worthy of
-note.</p>
-
-<p>As has already been said, there is considerable question
-as to how much, if anything, remains of the old-time
-paranoia concept. The uncertainties attending diagnosis
-have given rise to the modifying term "paranoid" which
-has been very generally used for many years. It should
-be remembered that paranoia when at its best only constituted
-approximately two per cent of all psychoses reported
-from institutions. These various considerations
-have resulted in its not having a distinctive place in the
-classification adopted by the American Psychiatric Association
-and it has been given official recognition as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"From this group should be excluded the deteriorating
-paranoid states and paranoid states symptomatic of
-other mental disorders or of some damaging factor such
-as alcohol, organic brain disease, etc.</p>
-
-<p>"The group comprises cases which show clinically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[474]</a></span>
-fixed suspicions, persecutory delusions, dominant ideas
-or grandiose trends logically elaborated and with due regard
-for reality after once a false interpretation or premise
-has been accepted. Further characteristics are formally
-correct conduct, adequate emotional reactions,
-clearness and coherence of the train of thought."</p>
-
-<p>A study of the statistics of American hospitals shows
-quite clearly the importance which should be attached
-to the paranoid conditions. During 1918 and 1919 there
-were 13,588 admissions to the thirteen New York state
-hospitals. Two hundred and fifty-six, or 1.88 per cent, of
-these were cases of paranoia or paranoid conditions.
-During a period of eight years there were 49,640 admissions
-of which 1,240, or 2.5 per cent, were paranoid conditions.
-In Massachusetts sixty-four, or 2.12 per cent,
-of the 3,011 admissions during 1919 were reported as
-paranoid conditions. In twenty-one hospitals in other
-states there were 18,336 admissions. Of these, 789, or
-4.3 per cent, were paranoid conditions. These statistics
-show quite a small admission rate for these psychoses
-in New York and Massachusetts. The rate in other state
-hospitals is noticeably higher. As the percentage for dementia
-praecox is considerably lower in the reports from
-these institutions than it is in Massachusetts and New
-York, it is fairly reasonable to assume that many cases
-shown as paranoid forms of dementia praecox in Massachusetts
-and New York are classified with the paranoid
-conditions in the other states. If we consider the total
-admissions from all of the hospitals in question, we find
-2,093 paranoid conditions in all, constituting 2.94 per cent
-of a total of 70,987 cases. It has already been shown that
-paranoia, at a time when it was a well recognized entity,
-constituted only 1.9 per cent of over eighty-four thousand
-consecutive admissions. This clinical grouping has,
-therefore, obviously been enlarged by adding paranoid
-conditions which could not probably be classified as well
-recognized types of other psychoses.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[475]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE EPILEPTIC PSYCHOSES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>Ancient history contains numerous references to epilepsy.
-The "Morbus sacer" of the Romans was apparently
-a subject of great interest to Hippocrates,<a name="FNanchor_325_325" id="FNanchor_325_325"></a><a href="#Footnote_325_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a> who
-wrote, over two thousand years ago, "The sacred disease
-appears to me to be no wise more divine nor more sacred
-than other diseases; but has a natural cause, from which
-it originates like other affections. Men regard its nature
-and cause as divine from ignorance and wonder,
-because it is not at all like other diseases." Presumably
-for a somewhat similar reason the disease was also referred
-to as the "Morbus Sideratus," it being thought
-that those affected were "star struck" or smitten in some
-mysterious and supernatural manner. By others it has
-been suggested that the theory regarding the divine origin
-of the disease was attributable to the seizures which
-always preceded the prophesies of the priests of Apollo.
-Herodotus is responsible for the statement that Cambyses,
-the king of the Persians, was subject to the "sacred
-disease" from birth. Such historians as Hippocrates
-and Euripides have definitely established the status of
-Hercules as a confirmed epileptic. "Morbus Herculeus"
-was one of the earliest designations of the disease. It
-was referred to by Plutarch in his writings. Suetonius
-describes the emperor Caligula as unquestionably afflicted
-with epilepsy. No less an authority than Lombroso
-speaks of Napoleon, Molière, Julius Caesar, Petrarch,
-Peter the Great, Mohammed, Händel, Swift,
-Richelieu, Charles V. Flaubert, Dostoieffsky and St. Paul
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[476]</a></span>
-as all being victims of the same affection. Truly this is
-a noble assemblage,&mdash;one which might readily make the
-disease fashionable!</p>
-
-<p>Maudsley ("Body and Mind") was convinced that
-Swedenborg suffered from a form of epileptic insanity.
-The following quotation from his diary would lend some
-color to that <span class="no-break">theory:&mdash;</span>"There happened to me something
-very curious. I came into violent shudderings, as when
-Christ showed me His Divine Mercy. The one fit followed
-the other ten or fifteen times." After his fifty-fifth
-year, according to Maudsley, Swedenborg was permanently
-insane. The historian Sloan in his "Life of Napoleon"
-accepts as an established fact the statement that
-this great military strategist was an epileptic. Appian's
-"Roman History" certainly justifies Lombroso's reference
-to Julius Caesar: "At length, whether he lost all
-hope, or else for the better preservation of his health,
-never more afflicted with the falling sickness and sudden
-convulsions than when he lay idle, he resolved upon a far
-distant expedition against the Gatae and the Parthians."
-Washington Irving in speaking of some of the peculiar
-experiences of Mohammed suggests that, "Some of his
-adversaries attributed them to epilepsy." Even a very
-brief review of the historical aspects of this disease
-should perhaps not omit the contribution made by Shakespeare:
-"My Lord is fallen into an Epilepsie. This is
-his second Fit." (<i>Othello</i>)</p>
-
-<p>Epilepsy and the mental disturbances associated with
-it are so intimately related that they can hardly be considered
-separately. Notwithstanding that fact it must
-be admitted that there is no sharply circumscribed clinical
-entity properly definable as epilepsy. Nor is there
-anything distinctive about the psychotic manifestations
-occurring during the course of that disease, although
-Tuke's Dictionary mentions over thirty different varieties.
-In the most exhaustive study of epilepsy ever made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[477]</a></span>
-in this country Spratling<a name="FNanchor_326_326" id="FNanchor_326_326"></a><a href="#Footnote_326_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> reported that memory defects
-were noted in ninety per cent of the patients examined
-by him. It should be borne in mind that the
-group studied did not include any committed mental
-cases. He found from eight to ten per cent so slightly
-affected as to be legally "sane," "except at the brief moment
-of attack." Fifty per cent were mentally incompetent
-with rational intervals and forty per cent were "continually
-irresponsible." This latter class included from
-twenty to twenty-five per cent of imbeciles and idiots
-and from fifteen to twenty per cent recognizable as insane
-"by law and medicine alike." The prevalence of
-mental disease in a hospital population composed exclusively
-of epileptics is shown by his statement that of 801
-patients examined at Craig Colony forty-one could not
-tell their own names; 166 did not know their age; 267
-could not name the year, 263 the month, and 226 the day
-of the week; 238 did not know where they were; 378 were
-unable to state the year of their birth, 183 the last place
-of residence, 219 the name of the institution, and 248 the
-length of time there; in addition to this, 224 could not
-write well enough to sign their own names. It is interesting
-to note that the disease had its onset in 38.5 per
-cent of his cases before the age of ten years, in 43.5 per
-cent between the ages of ten and twenty, and in 9.5 per
-cent between the ages of nineteen and twenty-nine. Gowers
-found that seventy-six per cent developed symptoms
-before the age of twenty. Spratling classified the mental
-conditions found in epileptics as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span>Psychic epilepsy,
-epileptic automatism, pre- and postparoxysmal
-mental disturbances, paroxysmal states (epileptic mania),
-and interparoxysmal conditions. The latter included
-transitory ill-humor, slight dulling or clouding of the intellect,
-feeblemindedness, imbecility, idiocy, epileptic dementia
-and acute confusional insanity which he says belongs
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[478]</a></span>
-to the manic-depressive group. He warns against
-the danger of classifying as dementia conditions due entirely
-to the use of bromides.</p>
-
-<p>L. Pierce Clark<a name="FNanchor_327_327" id="FNanchor_327_327"></a><a href="#Footnote_327_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a> looks upon epilepsy as the logical
-development of a well defined individual make-up described
-as the "epileptic constitution" and existing from
-the earliest childhood. In support of that theory he has
-reviewed the contributions of other writers on this subject.
-He found that Vogt called attention to the epileptic
-"poverty of ideas, prolonged reaction time, egocentricity,
-many religious reactions and acts of servility."
-Jung referred to a series of superficial associations, influencing
-the ideas of the patient, somewhat similar to
-those occurring in imbecility and sometimes observed in
-normal individuals of the uneducated class. Roemer
-speaks of a disturbance of "secondary identification" involving
-memory pictures with special sense recognition
-unimpaired. Eintinger described an essential poverty
-of affectivity and Wiersma, periodical variations in attentiveness.
-Ritterhaus defined the epileptic mental content
-as one of poverty of ideas, prolonged reaction time, egocentricity,
-emotional reactions and circumstantiality.
-Arndt included in the epileptic character peculiar inward
-fervor, characteristically egotistic in nature, and resembling
-the alcoholic temperament. Bianchi believed that
-the disease developed on a personality basis strongly
-suggesting the criminal type. He spoke of an inadaptability
-to the environment, the preponderance of individualistic
-instinct, cruelty, laziness, evil life, precocious and
-excessive development of the sexual instinct, irascibility
-and impulsiveness. Turner described an epileptic "temperament."
-He found these individuals to be egotistical,
-conceited, pretentious in conversation, emotionally unstable
-and sometimes obstinate or over-religious. Hartmann
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[479]</a></span>
-and di Gaspero noted as prodromal manifestations,
-abnormal changes of temper, excitability, anxious fears,
-sudden depressions, restlessness, irritability, distrust,
-memory falsifications, and violent impulses. Voisin
-found that less than ten per cent of epileptics showed a
-perfect balance in the emotional make-up. Hübner expressed
-the opinion that true dipsomania occurs chiefly
-in epileptics. He found alternations in the character of
-the individual in from ninety to ninety-five per cent of
-his cases.</p>
-
-<p>Clark's<a name="FNanchor_328_328" id="FNanchor_328_328"></a><a href="#Footnote_328_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> conclusions were summarized by him as
-<span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span>"1. There is more or less constant affective
-defect in all epileptics, sane as well as insane; that such
-defect is due to an inherent make-up of the psyche in
-which mainly an egocentricity and a highly sensitized
-feeling are given to the individual; and that from this
-constitutional make-up or alteration the ultimate deterioration
-of the psyche, intellectually as well as emotionally,
-is gradually developed, step by step, and if the
-state is not corrected that this finally and logically ends
-in so-called epileptic dementia. 2. The epileptic alteration
-is seen to proceed from the mental make-up or
-constitution of the individual epileptic long before his
-malady reaches the convulsive stage and that the one
-is but a further and final unfoldment of the former."
-As Clark expresses it, "The nucleus of this personality
-defect is a temperament of extreme hypersensitiveness
-and egotism and all that these two main characteristics
-entail ... a personality defect which makes its possessor
-incapable of social adaptation in its best setting
-and which, if it remains uncorrected, renders the individual
-inadequate to make a normal adult life." He
-looks upon the epileptic reaction as a "more or less
-direct outcome of the epileptic's inability to stand the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[480]</a></span>
-stress and harassments of life from which he seeks automatic
-or unconscious withdrawal." This exhibits itself
-as a loss of spontaneous interest, day-dreaming, lethargy,
-somnolence, etc., terminating finally in epileptiform attacks
-when the strain becomes too great. A rather complete
-description of the "epileptic character" appeared
-in Schüle's "Klinische Psychiatrie" in 1886.</p>
-
-<p>An analysis of these mental mechanisms leads naturally
-to certain therapeutic indications. In view of the
-history of the bromide therapy, since the time of its introduction
-by Laycock as the ideal form of treatment
-in 1851, such suggestions should be given serious consideration.
-Clark advocates the early use of educational
-methods in correcting the defects of the epileptic constitution.
-Thus he would obtain control of the egocentricity
-and hypersensitiveness by reducing environmental
-stresses, teaching adjustment to the surroundings, and
-finding suitable and normal outlets for the spontaneous
-desires of the individual. He is of the opinion that in
-the apparently deteriorated cases mental interests can be
-restored and emotional and mental dilapidation greatly
-improved. He has reported a series of cases showing
-that the frequency and severity of seizure can be greatly
-influenced "with the more or less permanent arrest of
-the disorder in not a few cases."<a name="FNanchor_329_329" id="FNanchor_329_329"></a><a href="#Footnote_329_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a> A subsequent study
-of the mental mechanisms involved was summarized by
-Clark<a name="FNanchor_330_330" id="FNanchor_330_330"></a><a href="#Footnote_330_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a> in these words: "It is fairly obvious that the
-mental content in epilepsy proves that the epileptic regresses
-from the displeasurable difficulties of life, and in
-the first states of the fit the stress alone may be uncovered;
-whenever the patient reaches a deeper unconscious
-state, he gains the level of an easily recognized sexual
-striving."
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[481]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_331_331" id="FNanchor_331_331"></a><a href="#Footnote_331_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> would differentiate between "symptomatic"
-forms of epilepsy due to organic diseases, injuries
-or growths; and the "genuine" variety not associated
-with any coarse brain lesion. He describes as indications
-of impending attacks, occurring several hours or
-even days before, headache, irritable ill-tempered moods,
-general discomfort, weakness, palpitations, oppression,
-anxiety, vertigo, nausea, hot and cold sensations, sense
-deceptions of various kinds, muscular twitching, sexual
-excitement, disturbed sleep, unpleasant dreams, etc.
-Binswanger found these symptoms present usually in
-the severer forms of the disease. Finkh found them in
-twenty-five per cent of his cases. Psychic, sensory, motor
-and vasomotor aura are described. Kraepelin after discussing
-first the paroxysmal attacks occurring in the disease
-speaks of the various forms of psychic epilepsy as
-constituting the second important group of clinical manifestations
-to be considered. These conditions may be
-looked upon as pre- or post-epileptic insanity, depending
-on their relation to convulsions, or may be entirely independent
-of them or considered as equivalents.</p>
-
-<p>The most common form of psychic epilepsy he describes
-as periodical ill-humor. It begins sometimes with
-sexual excitement (Ducosté). The patient becomes
-moody, surly, irritable, quarrelsome, gives up his work,
-refuses to eat and complains of everything around him.
-In some cases uneasiness, gloom or depression are manifested
-and suicidal tendencies may develop. Consciousness
-is clear although the patients complain that they
-cannot think or are confused and forgetful. Some have
-headache, perspire, show dilated pupils, vasomotor disturbances,
-nausea, etc. The picture is often complicated
-by alcoholic indulgence with attacks resembling dipsomania.
-This sometimes results in an epileptic clouded
-or dream state in which the patients become blustering,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[482]</a></span>
-abusive, and violent or make senseless journeys. They
-may manifest a sudden impulse to wander from place
-to place without any apparent reason. Sexual excitement
-frequently occurs, with masturbation and exhibitionism,
-attacks on children or homosexual tendencies. Usually
-there is no recollection of these episodes. Occasionally
-expansive or ecstatic moods appear and rarely a flight of
-ideas is noted. These attacks of ill-humor usually last
-from a few hours to several days, often disappearing suddenly.
-Alcoholism always lengthens the duration. In
-some cases active hallucinations and clouding of consciousness
-occur. Dreams are common. Others show
-anxious states with hallucinations and sometimes well
-marked delusions. An actual delirium may appear, although
-usually only for a very short time. The hallucinations
-and delusions may persist for months, suggesting
-dementia praecox.</p>
-
-<p>A second large group shows a more marked clouding
-of consciousness. These are the characteristic twilight
-or dream states of epilepsy. Thought is confused, desultory,
-retarded or incoherent. Sometimes there is a
-tendency to rhyme and repeat questions, or even a genuine
-flight of ideas. The mood may be depressed, anxious
-or irritable, although ecstatic states occur. The patient
-may become quiet, inaccessible, stuporous or cataleptic.
-Some, however, become excited. Later, defects
-of memory occur and amnesic periods may extend over
-a considerable length of time. The patellar reflexes may
-be increased and the pupils dilated and sluggish. There
-may be a contraction of the field of vision or disturbance
-of color sense, tactile sensation, smell and taste, with
-muscular weakness, Babinski reflexes, speech defects,
-dizziness, uncertain gait, nystagmus, etc. Somnambulism
-is sometimes encountered in epilepsy, although it is
-strongly suggestive of hysteria. The great majority of
-cases present the picture of a simple dreamy stuporous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[483]</a></span>
-condition. Apprehension is clouded, the patients become
-confused, cannot control their thoughts, mistake the
-persons around them, lose themselves on the street, and
-wander away. They destroy their clothes, undress in the
-street, etc. Sexual excitement, exhibitionism and masturbation
-are common. Characteristic dream states may
-appear as equivalents.</p>
-
-<p>A delirious confusion with hallucinations and delusions
-often develops. Some cases have a very strong religious
-coloring and believe themselves to be in heaven
-or hell&mdash;hear the voice of God, angels, etc. Grandiose
-ideas may appear and wonderful adventures are narrated.
-The mood is variable and may be either anxious, cheerful
-or erotic. There is a marked tendency to violence and
-the patients may be very restless and agitated. Delusions
-are common and often lead to suicidal attempts. Some
-exhibit an anxious delirium accompanied by numerous
-hallucinations. The patient is clouded as well as disoriented
-and delusions develop early. Fabrications sometimes
-appear in this condition. These deliria may last
-a few hours or several weeks. Profound and more or less
-long continued epileptic stupors may complicate the situation.</p>
-
-<p>A "conscious delirium" of longer duration is observed
-in some instances. The sensorium is not so much clouded,
-and the patient appears quite clear. Hallucinations and
-illusions usually develop early in the attack. Pleasurable,
-grandiose ideas often appear. The attitude in a general
-way resembles that of a confused disorientation. Anxious
-moods may develop, or rarely cheerful tendencies.
-Consciousness becomes dreamy, with hallucinations of a
-religious coloring. Patients with an apparently clear
-sensorium may commit numerous foolish or even criminal
-acts without any apparent insight into their significance.
-Such conditions as this may last weeks or months. Self-accusation
-may occur between attacks. These individuals<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[484]</a></span>
-are quite likely to start on absolutely aimless journeys
-which may be the outcome of an alcoholic debauch. The
-dream state in such cases may have a decided alcoholic
-coloring with characteristic hallucinations or humorous
-tendencies. This may be mixed with religious ecstatic
-manifestations. Dream states only occur once or twice
-during the lifetime of an epileptic or may be comparatively
-frequent. Many patients never have them.</p>
-
-<p>Aschaffenburg found fainting attacks in seventy-four
-per cent, convulsions in forty-two per cent, stupors in
-forty-four, petit mal in fifty-eight, dream states in thirty-six,
-and ill-humor in from sixty-four to seventy per cent
-of his cases. In his Munich clinic Kraepelin studied 515
-epileptics. Eighty-six and eight-tenths per cent of them
-had attacks of unconsciousness, probably often reported
-as convulsions, 23.3 per cent had dizzy spells, 9.7 per cent
-stupors, 15.1 per cent petit mal, 3.3 per cent attacks of
-various kinds without unconsciousness, 16.5 per cent
-dream states, 1.9 per cent somnambulisms, 36.9 per cent
-ill-humor, 13.8 per cent excitements, mostly alcoholic complications,
-and 2.5 per cent had status epilepticus.</p>
-
-<p>An epileptic weakmindedness develops in many cases.
-The field of thought is contracted and egocentric in character
-with delayed associations as shown by Jung. The
-patient is egotistical, interested in petty details, and
-strongly inclined to religious tendencies. He always
-minimizes the severity of the disease which, in his opinion,
-is improving rapidly. He is likely to develop mild
-paranoid ideas and feels that he has been mistreated or
-that others are prejudiced against him. These individuals
-are usually moody, irritable, dull, emotionally unstable
-and excitable. They are often overactive but not
-industrious. Many show a persistent "wanderlust."
-Werther reported that between seven and eight per cent
-of his cases were tramps or beggars. Quite a few show
-criminal tendencies. They nearly always have a marked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[485]</a></span>
-susceptibility to alcohol which greatly aggravates their
-symptoms. Kraepelin is inclined to look upon the epileptic
-personality as a result of the disease and not the
-soil in which it develops.</p>
-
-<p>In the more advanced deteriorations or epileptic dementias
-there is a marked mental dulness with poverty
-of thought, loss of memory, irascibility and occasional
-violence. Kraepelin refers to a genuine "epileptic physiognomy"
-which is often observed. Strabismus, nystagmus,
-ptosis, tremors and many other neurological
-symptoms are frequently found. Clark and Scripture
-have described a characteristic "voice" in epilepsy.
-Besta found a subnormal temperature in sixty-six per
-cent of his cases. Very elaborate studies of the blood
-have been reported from time to time. The secretions
-and excretions have been made the subject of exhaustive
-research and the changes in metabolism have been gone
-into thoroughly.</p>
-
-<p>The pathology of epilepsy has been given careful consideration
-by Alzheimer. In cases of status epilepticus
-he found extensive acute alterations, more particularly
-in the Betz cells, with swelling of the neurones, crumbling
-of the Nissl bodies, and dislocation of the nucleus to the
-apex. Here and there the ganglion cells were entirely
-destroyed and others showed regressive changes. Karyokinetic
-figures are seen in the glia cells, which are usually
-swollen, show ameboid changes and contain degenerative
-products. Accumulations of broken down cell
-products are found around the vessels. A sclerosis of
-the cornu ammonis, usually unilateral, was reported by
-Bourneville in 14.8 per cent, by Pfleger in fifty-eight per
-cent, and by Alzheimer in from fifty to sixty per cent of
-the cases of epilepsy examined. This consists of an atrophy
-of the cells in a well defined area and their replacement
-by a network of fibres. The cells are shrunken or
-entirely gone, while there is a great increase in the neuroglia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[486]</a></span>
-elements with many free nuclei. The walls of the
-vessels are thickened and "stäbchenzellen" appear. The
-significance of these findings is not known. Nissl looks
-upon them as only a part of a general involvement of the
-cortex. Widespread cell changes were frequently reported
-by both Nissl and Alzheimer. A marked increase
-in the neuroglia has been found particularly in the superficial
-layers of the cortex,&mdash;the so-called "marginal
-gliosis" of Chaslin. The vessels show an intimal proliferation
-and a thickening of the walls, with occasional mast-cells
-in the lymph spaces. Ranke has called attention to
-the presence or persistence of "Cajal" cells in the ordinarily
-cell free layers of the cortex. These are large transversely
-placed ganglion cells, common in the superficial
-layers of the cortex of the newborn but not found in the
-normal adult brain. This condition is looked upon as a
-cortical development defect. These so-called "Cajal"
-cells are also found in some of the mental deficiencies.
-Nevertheless it must be conceded that there are no definitely
-characteristic pathological changes so constant as
-to render certain the differentiation of this disease postmortem.</p>
-
-<p>No forms of insanity perhaps are clinically so difficult
-and unsatisfactory from the standpoint of classification
-as are the epileptic psychoses. The various mental manifestations
-of the disease may very logically be described
-as: 1. Pre-paroxysmal episodes, 2. Paroxysmal states,
-3. Post-paroxysmal episodes, 4. Inter-paroxysmal conditions
-to be specified, as excitements, depressions, anxieties,
-confusion, stupor, dream states, paranoid conditions,
-etc., and 5. Epileptic deterioration. There is some
-question as to whether the various psychic epilepsies, so
-called, are sufficiently clear-cut to constitute clinical
-entities.</p>
-
-<p>The delimitation of these psychoses for statistical purposes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[487]</a></span>
-is described in the Association's manual as
-<span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"In addition to the epileptic deterioration, transitory
-psychoses may occur which are usually characterized by
-a clouded mental state followed by an amnesia for external
-occurrences during the attack. (The hallucinatory
-and dream-like experiences of the patient during the attack
-may be vividly recalled.) Various automatic and
-secondary states of consciousness may occur.</p>
-
-<p>"According to the most prominent clinical features
-the epileptic mental disorders should therefore be specified
-as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"(a) Epileptic deterioration: A gradual development
-of mental dullness, slowness of association and
-thinking, impairment of memory, irritability or apathy.</p>
-
-<p>"(b) Epileptic clouded states: Usually in the form
-of dazed reactions with deep confusion, bewilderment and
-anxiety or excitements with hallucinations, fears and violent
-outbreaks; instead of fear there may be ecstatic
-moods with religious exaltation.</p>
-
-<p>"(c) Other epileptic types (to be specified)."</p>
-
-<p class="p2">During a period of sixteen years in the New York state
-hospitals (ending October 1, 1888) 3,167 of 84,152 admissions
-were cases of "epilepsy with insanity." This meant
-an admission rate of 3.76 per cent. It must be borne
-in mind, however, that the differentiation between epilepsy
-with insanity and psychoses clearly due to epilepsy
-was not attempted at that time. During a subsequent
-period of eight years in the same institutions, when what
-is essentially the present classification was in use, the
-admission rate for epileptic psychoses was 2.42 per cent.
-In 1919 with 3,011 first admissions to the Massachusetts
-state hospitals only fifty cases (1.66 per cent) were reported
-as showing psychoses due to epilepsy. Six hundred
-and twelve cases, constituting 3.33 per cent of 18,336<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[488]</a></span>
-first admissions, were reported by twenty-one hospitals
-in other states. An analysis of a total of 70,987 first admissions
-in forty-eight state hospitals therefore showed
-that 1,865, or 2.62 per cent, were epileptic psychoses.
-After reading the statements contained in various textbooks
-regarding the extraordinary frequency of epileptiform
-seizures in dementia praecox, it is difficult to escape
-the conclusion that the percentage of epileptics has been
-underestimated rather than exaggerated.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[489]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHONEUROSES AND NEUROSES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The words neurosis, psychosis and psychoneurosis are
-of obscure origin and have had a varied significance from
-time to time. Murray<a name="FNanchor_332_332" id="FNanchor_332_332"></a><a href="#Footnote_332_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a> defines psychosis as a psychological
-term indicating "a change in the psychic state;
-an activity or movement of the psychic organism, as distinguished
-from neurosis" which he speaks of as a
-"change in the nerve-cells of the brain prior to, and resulting
-in, psychic activity." Huxley in discussing this
-subject in 1871 made the following differentiation: "In
-all intellectual operations we have to distinguish two sets
-of successive changes&mdash;one in the physical basis of consciousness
-and the other in consciousness itself; one set
-which may, and doubtless will, in course of time, be followed
-through all its complexities by the anatomist and
-the physicist, and one of which only the man can have
-immediate knowledge. As it is very necessary to keep a
-clear distinction between these two processes, let the one
-be called neurosis and the other psychosis."</p>
-
-<p>Von Feuchtersleben used the latter word in its present
-psychiatric significance in his "Lehrbuch der Aertzlichen
-Seelenkunde" in 1845. Its repeated appearance
-in the first volume of the <i>Allgemeine a Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie</i>
-in 1844 would strongly suggest a frequent use of
-the term in the German psychiatry of that day. It was
-unknown in English works until quite recently, although
-the word is found in Maudsley's "Responsibility in Mental
-Diseases" (1874)&mdash;"No wonder that the criminal psychosis
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">[490]</a></span>
-which is the mental side of the neurosis, is for
-the most part an intractable malady, punishment being
-of no avail to produce reformation." Lewes, in "The
-Problems of Life and Mind" published after his death in
-1879, makes a very significant remark: "Pathologists
-call it a psychosis, as if it were a lesion of the unknown
-psyche." Clouston's 1911 edition makes no reference
-to psychoneuroses as such.</p>
-
-<p>The word neurosis has been much more extensively
-employed in medical literature. William Cullen, a well-known
-professor in the University of Edinburgh, in his
-"First Lines of the Practice of Physic" in 1774, said:
-"I propose to comprehend, under the title of neuroses,
-all those preternatural affections of sense or motion
-which are without pyrexia, as a part of the primary disease."
-In his "Synopsis Nosologicae Medicae" in 1785
-he divided diseases into four general classes: Pyrexia
-or febrile diseases; neuroses or nervous diseases, as
-epilepsy; cachexiae or diseases resulting from bad habit
-of the body, as scurvy; and locales, or local disease, as
-cancer. Brachet,<a name="FNanchor_333_333" id="FNanchor_333_333"></a><a href="#Footnote_333_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a> who was one of the earlier writers
-on the subject of hysteria, defined that disease in the
-following words in 1847: "Hysteria is a neurosis of the
-cerebral nervous system, which manifests itself more or
-less brusquely by crises of general chronic convulsions
-and by the sensation of a globe ascending in the course of
-the oesophagus, at the upper extremity of which it becomes
-fixed, causing there a menace of suffocation."
-Briquet, another French writer, expressed somewhat similar
-views in 1859. The word neurosis as now used may
-be said to refer to a functional disturbance of the nervous
-system, which, if directly due to etiological mental
-factors, is spoken of as a psychoneuroses.</p>
-
-<p>Just what diseases are to be included under the grouping
-of neuroses and psychoneuroses is another question.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">[491]</a></span>
-Practically all of the older authorities, at least, have
-agreed on hysteria and neurasthenia. When we get beyond
-this point, however, there are wide differences of
-opinion. Oppenheim, in his second edition, under the
-heading of neuroses, included hysteria, hypnotism and
-hypnosis, neurasthenia, morbid fears, imperative ideas,
-astasia-abasia, traumatic neuroses, hemicrania, headache,
-vertigo, epilepsy, eclampsia, chorea minor, Huntington's
-disease, paralysis agitans and many other conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Krafft-Ebing<a name="FNanchor_334_334" id="FNanchor_334_334"></a><a href="#Footnote_334_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a> was responsible for the following
-delimitation of the psychoneuroses, which he admits to be
-"somewhat dogmatic" and has used for many years
-largely for didactic purposes: "1. Parasitic, accidentally
-acquired diseases in individuals whose cerebral functions
-were previously normal and whose disease could not
-be foreseen. 2. Disease based upon temporary disposition
-(grave physical disease and the simultaneous action
-of powerful exciting causes), hereditary predisposition
-not excluded, but only latently present in the brain of
-one easily affected, but previously normal in its functions.
-3. Tendency to cure of the disease and infrequency
-of relapses. 4. Slight tendency to transmission
-to descendants, and when it occurs, in benign forms (psychoneuroses).
-5. Typic course of the disease picture.
-Mania, as a rule, arises from a melancholic initial stage;
-and so-called secondary conditions are the terminations
-of primary conditions. The disease picture, even when it
-appears, has a certain duration and independence. The
-whole course of the disease is quite narrowly limited in
-time, and goes on either to recovery or dementia. 6. No
-tendency to periodicity of the attacks or the grouping of
-symptoms. 7. Sanity and insanity are sharply defined,
-and in striking contrast." In this group he includes
-mania, melancholia, acute curable dementia and primary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">[492]</a></span>
-hallucinatory delirium. He describes hysteria, neurasthenia,
-etc., under the psychic degenerations with paranoia
-and speaks of them as constitutional neuroses. His
-psychoneuroses certainly do not come within the general
-acceptation of the term at this time but represent the
-views of a certain school of German writers.</p>
-
-<p>More recently the words neurosis and psychoneurosis
-have been used as synonymous terms by many writers.
-Kempf has even gone so far as to suggest discarding the
-word psychosis completely. In any event, the view that
-we should only designate as psychoneuroses such functional
-conditions as are clearly due to psychic causes
-seems to be gaining ground. The term neurosis is generally
-applied at this time to diseases primarily physical
-rather than mental in their symptomatology. The prominence
-of psychogenic factors has been given great weight
-in recent literature. In the second edition of his work
-on Psychiatry, Diefendorf makes the following statement:
-"Neuroses are commonly designated as a group of diseases
-characterized by changing and transitory nervous
-disturbances, to be distinguished from psychoses by the
-fact that the symptoms do not involve the mental field.
-But in practice psychoses without nervous symptoms or
-neuroses without mental symptoms are not encountered."</p>
-
-<p>Since the term was first introduced by Morel in 1860,
-many French writers, such as Régis and Magnan, have
-emphasized the importance of the insanity of degeneracy.
-This included moral insanity, the sexual perversions
-and various other psychopathic conditions as well as the
-obsessions, compulsions, impulsions, phobias, doubts, etc.,
-now recognized as psychogenic in origin and usually assigned
-collectively to the psychoneuroses under the designation
-of psychasthenia. In his sixth edition Kraepelin
-included both hysteria and epilepsy in his group of neuroses,
-while constitutional peculiarities of character, as
-well as compulsive and impulsive insanity with sexual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[493]</a></span>
-perversions, were classified under the psychopathic states
-(degenerative insanity). In his seventh edition epilepsy
-was described as a separate entity. In the eighth edition
-we find a new grouping. The psychogenic conditions are
-divided into nervous exhaustion (neurasthenia), the
-dread neuroses, induced insanity, the paranoid conditions
-of the deaf, the traumatic neuroses, the prison and the
-"querulant" psychoses. Hysteria now appears separately.
-Under the constitutional psychopathic disorders
-he discusses nervousness, compulsion neuroses, impulsive
-insanity and the sexual perversions. In view of these
-varying conceptions which are fairly representative of
-the literature of the day, we are certainly on safe ground
-in confining a consideration of the psychoneuroses to hysteria,
-neurasthenia, psychasthenia and various other conditions
-characterized by anxiety and fears.</p>
-
-<p>Hysteria has long been a subject of interest and controversy.
-It has been a topic of discussion since the time
-of Esquirol and even Sydenham. It was studied exhaustively
-by Brachet in 1847. Briquet in 1859 defined hysteria
-as "an encephalic neurosis whose apparent phenomena
-consist principally in the perturbation of the
-vital actions which serve to manifest the affective sensations
-and passions." Lasègue wrote an elaborate treatise
-on the subject in 1864. It was discussed in detail later
-by Möbius, Charcot and many others. To Möbius hysteria
-was "a congenital morbid mental state where diseased
-bodily conditions are produced by ideas." During
-the last twenty or thirty years many new and interesting
-theories have been advanced. Binet sees in hysteria
-a condition of double consciousness, the two states almost
-entirely independent and separated by periods of amnesia.
-Janet's<a name="FNanchor_335_335" id="FNanchor_335_335"></a><a href="#Footnote_335_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a> interesting conception of the disease
-is covered in full in his definition: "Hysteria is a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[494]</a></span>
-mental disease belonging to the large group of the diseases
-due to weakness, to cerebral exhaustion; it has only
-rather vague physical symptoms, consisting especially in
-a general diminution of nutrition; it is above all characterized
-by moral symptoms, the principal one being
-a weakness of the faculty of psychological synthesis, an
-abulia, a contraction of the field of consciousness manifesting
-itself in a particular way; a certain number of
-elementary phenomena, sensations and images, cease to
-be perceived and appear suppressed by the personal perception;
-the result is a tendency to a complete and permanent
-division of the personality, to the formation of
-several groups independent of each other; these systems
-of psychological factors alternate, some in the wake
-of others, or coexist; in fine, this lack of synthesis favors
-the formation of certain parasitic ideas which develop
-completely and in isolation under the shelter of the control
-of the personal consciousness and which manifest
-themselves by the most varied disturbances, apparently
-only physical." He summarized this as a complete doubling
-(dédoublement&mdash;literally undoubling, as translated
-by Corson) of the personality. On analysis there is fundamentally
-much in this view strongly suggestive of the
-theories of Breuer and Freud.</p>
-
-<p>Babinski interprets hysteria as a purely psychic functional
-disturbance due to suggestion. He would eliminate
-from this field all symptoms which cannot be induced by
-suggestion and relieved by methods of persuasion. The
-ordinary physical manifestations of the disease, such as
-anesthesia, hyperesthesia, paralyses, convulsions, etc.,
-Babinski describes as stigmata. His theories lead him to
-suggest "pithiatism" as the correct name for hysteria.</p>
-
-<p>A revolutionary and epochmaking contribution to the
-literature of this important subject was the publication
-of their "Studien über Hysterie" by Breuer and Freud
-in 1895. The latter has made various further expositions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">[495]</a></span>
-of his views more recently. What the ultimate outcome
-of the hysteria problem may be, only time can determine.
-No consideration of the subject, however, is
-complete, nor should any definite conclusions be attempted,
-without a thorough understanding of theories
-which have a material bearing on the mental mechanisms
-involved in all of the psychoneuroses. Breuer and Freud
-advanced the suggestion that hysteria is always the result
-of a psychic trauma. The mechanisms involved may be
-very briefly summarized. Studies of everyday life show
-that the peculiar amnesia often observed for certain
-names and events does not mean usually in the average
-individual a mere fading of memory with the lapse of
-time. Freud found that the inability to recall things in
-such cases is largely due to the fact that they are for
-some reason or other unpleasant in nature and therefore
-not desirable to remember. They are accordingly pushed
-into the background as it were, by burying them in the
-subconscious strata of the mind and intentionally obliterating
-them from memory. When the ordinary well balanced
-individual is confronted with an unpleasant situation
-he meets it as best he can, by the exhibition of normal
-reactions of various sorts. He treats the matter
-lightly, dismisses it as a joke or "laughs it off." His dignity
-may be maintained by a display of anger or resentment.
-The mental equilibrium may be restored by a resort
-to profanity, tears, violence, or even physical flight.
-An emotional outlet in the form of hate or thoughts of
-revenge may be necessary to settle the question and finally
-dispose of it by "getting it off the mind." There are
-unpleasant situations which for various reasons cannot
-be met and treated in this ordinary way. The mental
-shock of the "psychic trauma" may, for instance, be the
-result of an occurrence which is so distasteful and repulsive
-as to be incompatible with the present existence.
-There being no other escape from such a difficulty, it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">[496]</a></span>
-rejected by the psychic censor, to use Freud's expression,
-and repressed or forced into the subconscious. This is
-the inadequate reaction which takes place in hysteria and
-leads to a dissociation and rudimentary splitting of the
-consciousness. Freud finds that in practically every instance
-the repressed and painful idea is due to a psychic
-trauma resulting from some incident of a sexual nature;
-furthermore, that it usually dates back to the time of
-childhood. These buried sexual complexes are completely
-disposed of by what Freud speaks of as the process of
-"conversion," the associated affect being radiated, as it
-were, into the physical sphere where it is converted into a
-memory symbol in the form of an hysterical symptom.
-The mental symptoms of the disease he explains as the
-results of the elaboration and development of hypnoid
-states or erotic day-dreams of the individual. Freud<a name="FNanchor_336_336" id="FNanchor_336_336"></a><a href="#Footnote_336_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a>
-summarized his views in a series of formulae "which
-strive to progressively exhaust the nature of hysteria"
-as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"1. The hysterical symptom is the memory symbol
-of certain efficacious (traumatic) impressions and experience.</p>
-
-<p>"2. The hysterical symptom is the compensation by
-conversion for the associative return of the traumatic experience.</p>
-
-<p>"3. The hysterical symptom&mdash;like all other psychic
-formations&mdash;is the expression of a wish realization.</p>
-
-<p>"4. The hysterical symptom is the realization of an
-unconscious fancy serving as a wish fulfilment.</p>
-
-<p>"5. The hysterical symptom serves as a sexual gratification,
-and represents a part of the sexual life of the
-individual (corresponding to one of the components of
-his sexual impulse).
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">[497]</a></span></p>
-<p>"6. The hysterical symptom, in a fashion, corresponds
-to the return of the sexual gratification which was real
-in infantile life but had been repressed since then.</p>
-
-<p>"7. The hysterical symptom results as a compromise
-between two opposing affects or impulse incitements, one
-of which strives to bring to realization a partial impulse,
-or a component of the sexual constitution, while the
-other strives to suppress the same.</p>
-
-<p>"8. The hysterical symptom may undertake the representation
-of diverse unconscious nonsexual incitements,
-but can not lack the sexual significance."</p>
-
-<p class="p10">The practical application of these theories of Freud is
-illustrated by the line of treatment suggested. By his
-method of "catharsis" the repressed and forgotten painful
-idea is restored to the conscious sphere of the mind
-and a normal reaction brought about by "affording an
-outlet to the strangulated affect through speech." To
-accomplish this result it is obviously necessary to find
-out what the psychic trauma was that originally caused
-the repression. For this purpose he uses psychoanalysis,
-hypnosis and the study of dreams. Psychoanalysis is
-nothing more or less, as Campbell says, than a sort of
-"scientific confessional", a complete analysis of the mental
-mechanisms of the individual in a search for the buried
-complexes. It has largely been preferred by Freud to
-hypnosis, the latter often being impracticable for various
-reasons. The association test of Sommer was very successfully
-adapted to the determination and explanation
-of buried complexes by Jung. Freud's views as to the
-analysis of dreams in the unravelling of mental mechanisms
-are set forth in full in his "Traumdeutung" (1900).
-He describes a dream as being "the more or less disguised
-fulfilment of a suppressed wish." Owing to the
-activities of the psychic censor we may have either manifest
-or latent dreams. The former are recalled on waking;
-the latter are distorted or forgotten and indicate the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">[498]</a></span>
-repressed wish. He classifies dreams as, those which
-represent an unexpressed wish as being fulfilled, those
-which represent the realization of the wish in some
-entirely concealed form and those which represent
-it in a form insufficiently or partly concealed. Freud
-justified his emphasis of the sexual element in his
-studies of the psychoneuroses by the publication
-of his "Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie." In
-this he calls attention to the neglected importance of
-sexual factors in the developing mentality of the child
-and shows that these influences are manifested long before
-the age of puberty. He even maintains that the normal
-child is homosexual as well as incestuous at a certain
-stage. These erotic impulses are largely unconscious and
-become submerged, playing an important part later in
-the development of the neuroses.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin has devoted one hundred and sixty pages
-of his work on psychiatry to a consideration of the subject
-of hysteria. The mental symptoms of the disease
-are all described as being definitely associated with twilight
-or dream states (Dämmerzustände). These he
-refers to as including somnambulisms, definite excitements,
-attacks assuming a characteristic silly or "puerile"
-form, confusions, deliria of various kinds, the Ganser
-complex, prison stupors and double personalities (retrograde
-amnesia). He does not accept Freud's views
-as to the influence of the sexual life in the etiology of
-hysteria.</p>
-
-<p>Neurasthenia was first described by Beard of New
-York in 1880. As has already been shown, it was referred
-to by Kraepelin as one of the psychogenic neuroses.
-Freud is much inclined to question the existence
-of such an entity as the classic neurasthenia described
-by Beard. He feels that most of the cases can be traced
-to a definite association with some other psychosis. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">[499]</a></span>
-does, however, recognize a neurasthenic complex which is
-entirely sexual in origin and attributes it to the excessive
-masturbation of adult life. The symptoms, according to
-Freud, are a result of the inadequate sexual relief afforded
-by the habit, and are those of nervous exhaustion,
-a sense of pressure or fulness in the head, spinal irritation,
-hyperesthesias, paresthesias, diminished sexual
-power, and occasionally a mild form of emotional depression.
-He would also differentiate another psychoneurosis
-of sexual origin&mdash;the anxiety neurosis (Angstneurose).
-He mentions an increased irritability as a prominent
-symptom often in the form of an oversensitiveness to
-noises. The characteristic feature, however, is a state
-of anxious expectation. This may manifest itself in a
-mere uneasiness and general tendency towards pessimism
-or may approach a state of hypochondriasis with paresthesia
-and annoying somatic sensations. Fear of sudden
-death may be experienced. There may be physical
-symptoms such as disturbed heart action (palpitation or
-tachycardia), disturbance of respiration (dyspnea or
-asthmatic attacks), profuse perspiration, periods of trembling,
-dizziness, attacks of inordinate appetite, diarrhea,
-etc. Nocturnal frights are common. The symptoms as
-outlined above are accompanied by a marked anxiety.
-He finds anxious psychoses usually in women, in the
-form of virginal fears in adults, the anxiety of the newly
-married, similar states occurring in widows or intentional
-abstainers, and fears occurring at the climacterium. This
-condition in women he believes to be due as a rule to coitus
-interruptus or ejaculatio praecox. Similar anxieties in
-men, according to Freud, are due to abstinence, frustrated
-sexual excitement, coitus interruptus or senile
-conditions. Masturbation may also be a factor. He also
-admits that there are causes other than sexual, in the
-form of overwork, serious illnesses, etc. The mental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">[500]</a></span>
-mechanism involved is a "deviation of the somatic sexual
-excitement from the psychic, and in the abnormal
-utilization of this excitement occasioned by the former."</p>
-
-<p>In 1903 Janet formulated his conception of psychasthenia,
-describing it as a clinical entity. In this grouping
-he included the obsessions of doubt, phobias, imperative
-ideas, impulsive obsessions, compulsions and other conditions
-described by various authors. The essential mechanism
-to be considered, according to Janet, is a "lowering
-of the psychological tension." This results, as White
-expresses it, in an inadequate perception of the realities
-of the outside world. Meyer has spoken of psychasthenia
-as "a lowering of general interest and tendency to rumination
-over what is accessible to the patient in his memory,
-but is not squarely met, and where the normal reaction
-is replaced by rumination, substitutive acts and
-panics." These conditions are described by Freud as
-belonging to the "Zwangsneurose" or compulsion neuroses.
-The obsessing ideas force themselves into the consciousness
-of the individual, who is perfectly clear as to
-their inconsistency but cannot escape them. These he
-also looks upon as being of sexual origin and due to repression
-as in hysteria. After the unpleasant idea is
-repressed, however, the mechanism is different. Instead
-of converting the concept into a bodily symbol, a defense
-reaction displaces the affect from the painful thought,
-connecting it with some entirely disinterested and innocuous
-idea. This process he spoke of as substitution.
-This transference, as in hysteria, takes place in the subconscious
-and is not recognized by the patient as having
-anything to do with his peculiar symptoms. Compulsive
-ideas prevent the recurrence in thought, of the repressed
-etiological factor. It must be conceded that these mechanisms
-are exceedingly interesting from a psychological
-point of view. Freud's theories have, however, met with
-a great deal of opposition, due apparently to the fact that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">[501]</a></span>
-all of his conceptions are based almost exclusively on the
-influence of the sexual life on the human mind. The
-characteristic and entirely consistent Freudian answer to
-this objection is that it is a "defense reaction." Without
-attempting to determine the exact basis of the psychoneuroses
-the fact remains that their importance from a
-psychiatric point of view cannot be questioned. They
-constitute in a large measure the field of observation
-covered by the out-patient clinics and psychopathic hospitals.
-They played an exceedingly important part in
-the psychiatry of the late war.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving out of consideration the mental mechanisms
-involved, the American Psychiatric Association has endeavored
-to collect statistical data relating to the various
-psychoneuroses generally recognized, as is shown by
-the suggestions regarding their delimitation, in the
-<span class="no-break">manual:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"The psychoneurosis group includes those disorders
-in which mental forces or ideas of which the subject is
-either aware (conscious) or unaware (unconscious) bring
-about various mental and physical symptoms; in other
-words these disorders are essentially psychogenic in
-nature.</p>
-
-<p>"The term neurosis is now generally used synonymously
-with psychoneurosis, although it has been applied
-to certain disorders in which, while the symptoms are
-both mental and physical, the primary cause is thought
-to be essentially physical. In most instances, however,
-both psychogenic and physical causes are operative and
-we can assign only a relative weight to the one or the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>"The following types are sufficiently well defined clinically
-to be specified:</p>
-
-<p>"(a) Hysterical type: Episodic mental attacks in
-the form of delirium, stupor or dream states during which
-repressed wishes, mental conflicts or emotional experiences<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">[502]</a></span>
-detached from ordinary consciousness break
-through and temporarily dominate the mind. The attack
-is followed by partial or complete amnesia. Various
-physical disturbances (sensory and motor) occur in hysteria,
-and these represent a conversion of the affect of
-the repressed disturbing complexes into bodily symptoms
-or, according to another formulation, there is a dissociation
-of consciousness relating to some physical function.</p>
-
-<p>"(b) Psychasthenic type: This includes the compulsive
-and obsessional neuroses of some writers. The main
-clinical characteristics are phobias, obsessions, morbid
-doubts and impulsions, feelings of insufficiency, nervous
-tension and anxiety. Episodes of marked depression
-and agitation may occur. There is no disturbance of consciousness
-or amnesia as in hysteria.</p>
-
-<p>"(c) Neurasthenic type: This should designate the
-fatigue neuroses in which physical as well as mental
-causes evidently figure; characterized essentially by mental
-and motor fatigability and irritability; also various
-hyperesthesias and paresthesias; hypochondriasis and
-varying degrees of depression.</p>
-
-<p>"(d) Anxiety neuroses: A clinical type in which
-morbid anxiety or fear is the most prominent feature.
-A general nervous irritability (or excitability) is regularly
-associated with the anxious expectation or dread;
-in addition there are numerous physical symptoms which
-may be regarded as the bodily accompaniments of fear,
-particularly cardiac and vasomotor disturbances; the
-heart's action is increased, often there is irregularity and
-palpitation; there may be sweating, nausea, vomiting,
-diarrhea, suffocative feelings, dizziness, trembling, shaking,
-difficulty in locomotion, etc. Fluctuations occur in
-the intensity of the symptoms, and acute exacerbations
-constituting the "anxiety attack."</p>
-
-<p>"(e) Other types."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">[503]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2">The psychoneuroses occur very infrequently in institutions
-for mental diseases. In 49,640 first admissions to
-the New York state hospitals during a period of eight
-years, only 671 cases were reported as neuroses or psychoneuroses,
-constituting 1.35 per cent of the total. Of
-this number 29.97 per cent were of the hysterical type,
-37.35 of the psychasthenic, 30.27 of the neurasthenic form,
-and 2.41 per cent were anxiety psychoses. In the Massachusetts
-hospitals during the year 1919, thirty-six, or
-1.19 per cent, of the 3,011 admissions reported were neuroses
-or psychoneuroses. Of these, 44.83 per cent were
-of the hysterical, 24.14 of the psychasthenic, and 18.39 per
-cent of the neurasthenic forms. On analyzing 18,336
-admissions to twenty-one hospitals in other states we
-find 297 cases of neurosis or psychoneuroses, 1.63
-per cent of the total. Of these, 44.11 per cent were
-cases of hysteria, 28.28 of psychasthenia, 22.90 of neurasthenia
-and 4.71 per cent of anxiety psychoses. The
-neuroses or psychoneuroses constituted 1.42 per cent of
-over seventy thousand admissions to all institutions. Of
-the 1,048 psychoneuroses reported, 35.20 per cent were
-cases of hysteria, 33.68 of psychasthenia, 29.19 of neurasthenia,
-and 3.91 per cent of anxiety psychoses.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">[504]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES WITH PSYCHOPATHIC
-PERSONALITY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The introduction of the term psychopathic personality
-is probably to be attributed to the description of
-"Die Psychische Minderwertigkeiten" by Koch in 1893.
-These were referred to by Morel<a name="FNanchor_337_337" id="FNanchor_337_337"></a><a href="#Footnote_337_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a> as "Psychopathic
-Depreciations," a group in which he says Koch included
-"a very large number of these psychical manifestations,
-so varied in their nature and intensity which, without belonging
-to the class of mental diseases proper, cannot,
-nevertheless, be reconciled with the idea of perfect mental
-sanity." These were described as being either congenital
-or acquired and including psychopathic predisposition,
-psychopathic defect and degeneration. To congenital defects
-were attributed the "Eccentrics, disequilebrated,
-overscrupulous and capricious persons, foolish, misanthropes,
-redressers of wrong, reformers of society, etc."
-In the degenerative processes he included mental deficiencies
-both intellectual and moral. Meyer,<a name="FNanchor_338_338" id="FNanchor_338_338"></a><a href="#Footnote_338_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> who
-based his conception of "constitutional inferiority"
-largely on the work of Koch, says that the latter by
-"Psychische Minderwertigkeiten" "meant those little
-defects which constitute the inferiority of the individual
-in the whole strife of life, that inferiority which does not
-allow him to come up to an actually efficient balance in
-the struggle of life.... They were oddities, peculiar
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">[505]</a></span>
-nicks in the personalities of the various people, and he
-designated those as constitutionally inferior." Koch in
-this grouping unfortunately included hysteria, psychasthenia
-and neurasthenia. Meyer eliminated these: "I
-wanted to do justice to the hysterias and psychasthenias
-which I could define as such, but I knew there was a
-whole group of cases in which the definition could not
-be pushed. I also knew that it was difficult to give the
-definition in the downward line towards imbecility, and
-since it was so very hard to give the definition in the individual
-cases, I thought that the least trouble would
-arise from making a relatively large group of 'inferiorities
-not sufficiently differentiated' and let those be entered
-under the heading of 'constitutional inferiority.'"</p>
-
-<p>The original conception of this group was that it included
-intellectual defects which have subsequently been
-classified with the mental deficiencies, leaving only those
-cases showing purely psychopathic taints of a constitutional
-origin. There have been numerous other descriptions
-of these conditions. Ziehen<a name="FNanchor_339_339" id="FNanchor_339_339"></a><a href="#Footnote_339_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> included under the
-psychopathic constitution "chronic, psychopathic conditions,
-which in their symptomatology and course not only
-involve defect of the affectivity but also of the intelligence,
-even though pronounced psychopathic symptoms,
-such as delusions, hallucinations, etc., do not intrude for
-any extended period. Where hallucinations and analogous
-symptoms do appear they are solitary and the patient
-retains insight into the condition." Ziehen's psychopathic
-constitution covers a very wide field, including
-not only hysteria and neurasthenia but epilepsy.</p>
-
-<p>The psychopathic personalities as described today
-represent only a modern interpretation of conditions
-which have been given ample consideration in the psychiatric
-literature of the past. An early illustration of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">[506]</a></span>
-this fact is Pritchard's definition of "moral insanity"
-in 1835:&mdash;"A morbid perversion of the feelings, affections
-and active powers, without any illusion or erroneous
-conviction impressed upon the understanding; it sometimes
-coexists with an apparently unimpaired state of
-intellectual faculties." The psychopathic states were undoubtedly
-fully covered in Morel's description of the
-insanity of degeneracy in 1860. This he divided into
-cases arising from constitutional nervous temperaments,
-moral insanity, the feebleminded with or without morbid
-impulses, and those with criminal tendencies. This conception
-was well summarized by <span class="no-break">Diefendorf
-<a name="FNanchor_340_340" id="FNanchor_340_340"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_340_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a>:&mdash;</span>"The
-disharmony of the intellectual and the moral faculties is
-one of the most striking features of degeneracy. As in
-the defects of the intellectual development, so in the
-moral sphere, the condition varies from a complete arrest
-of moral development to all forms of moral perversion
-and even to an abnormal development of the moral
-and emotional susceptibility. All of these conditions may
-exist, with a perfect development of the intellectual faculties....
-The professional criminals should also, without
-doubt, be included in this class, as they present all
-possible varieties of moral perversions and anomalies,
-all of which may exist with preservation of the intellect
-and even with intellectual keenness."</p>
-
-<p>Magnan described compulsions, impulsions and contrary
-sexual instincts as episodes of the insanity of degeneracy.
-The psychopaths were undoubtedly the "déséquilibrés"
-or ill-balanced individuals of Régis,<a name="FNanchor_341_341" id="FNanchor_341_341"></a><a href="#Footnote_341_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> whose
-work on "Mental Medicine" included an exceedingly
-elaborate discussion of the so-called "borderline"
-conditions. "After maturity they are complex beings,
-heterogeneous, made up of disproportioned elements, contradictory
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">[507]</a></span>
-qualities and defects, and as over-endowed in
-some directions as they are deficient in others. Intellectually,
-they often possess in a very high degree, the
-faculties of imagination, of invention, and of expression,
-that is to say, the gifts of speech, the arts, and poetry;
-on the moral side, they possess a singular emotivity, or
-rather, sensibility. What they lack, more or less completely,
-is good judgment, the moral sense, and especially
-continuity or logical consecutiveness, a unity of direction
-in intellectual production and the actions of life. It
-follows, that in spite of their often superior qualities,
-these persons are incapable of conducting themselves in a
-rational manner, of following regularly the exercise of a
-profession that seems well beneath their capacity, of looking
-after their interests or those of their families, of carrying
-on business prosperously or of directing the education
-of their children; their existence, therefore, constantly
-recommencing, is one long contradiction between
-the apparent wealth of means and poverty of results.
-They are the utopians, the theorists, the dreamers, who
-are enamored with the best things but accomplish nothing.
-The public which sees only the brilliant exterior
-looks upon these individuals as artists and superior beings.
-The medal is reversed, however, to those who are
-compelled to associate with them and share their existence;
-they see their defects, their incapacities and evil
-tendencies, of which they are not merely the witnesses,
-but also the victims. Aside from their lack of mental poise
-these individuals also display an excessive emotional sensibility
-and an enfeeblement of psychic energy that reveals
-itself by a noticeable predominance of spontaneity
-over reflection and volition. Hence their inability, their
-instability, and their irresolution; hence also their alternations
-of apathy and activity, of excitement and torpor,
-their violent attacks of passion and their cries of despair
-for the most trivial and slightest reasons." Régis divided<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">[508]</a></span>
-the "psychic discordances" or disharmonies into the ill-balanced,
-the original and the eccentric. These were all
-included in the degeneracies of evolution. Clouston covers
-this same ground fully and in a somewhat similar
-manner in his "Unsoundness of Mind" (1911).</p>
-
-<p>The insanities of degeneracy have also been given considerable
-space by such Italian writers as Lombroso, Bianchi,
-etc. Lombroso in "The Man of Genius" (1888)
-discussed this subject as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span>"A theory, which has
-for some years flourished in the psychiatric world, admits
-that a large proportion of mental and physical affections
-are the result of degeneration, of the action, that is, of
-heredity in the children of the inebriate, the syphilitic,
-the insane, the consumptive, etc.; or of accidental causes,
-such as lesions of the head or the action of mercury,
-which profoundly change the tissues, perpetuate neuroses
-or other diseases in the patient, and, which is worse, aggravate
-them in his descendants, until the march of degeneration,
-constantly growing more rapid and fatal, is
-only stopped by complete idiocy or sterility. Alienists
-have noted certain characteristics which very frequently,
-though not constantly, accompany these fatal degenerations.
-Such are, on the moral side, apathy, loss of moral
-sense, frequent tendencies to impulsiveness or doubt,
-psychical inequalities owing to the excess of some faculty
-(memory, aesthetic taste, etc.) or defect of other qualities
-(calculation, for example), exaggerated mutism or verbosity,
-morbid vanity, excessive originality, and excessive
-preoccupation with self, the tendency to put mystical interpretations
-on the simplest facts, the abuse of symbolism
-and of special words which are used as an almost exclusive
-mode of expression."</p>
-
-<p>Several other very elaborate works have been published
-on the subject of degeneracy. One of the better
-known of these perhaps is that of Max Nordau on "Degeneration"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">[509]</a></span>
-(1894). The book of Grasset<a name="FNanchor_342_342" id="FNanchor_342_342"></a><a href="#Footnote_342_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a> on the
-"Demifous et Demiresponables" has been translated into
-English and constitutes one of our most valuable contributions
-on this subject. Grasset credits Trélat with
-making the first comprehensive study of the semi-insane
-in his "La Folie Lucide," etc., in 1861. His classification
-of these conditions included imbeciles, the feebleminded,
-satyrists, nymphomaniacs, monomaniacs, erotomaniacs,
-jealous individuals, dipsomaniacs, spendthrifts, adventurers,
-the conceited or boastful, evildoers, kleptomaniacs,
-suicides and the inert and lucid manias. Grasset
-gives some interesting illustrations of the psychopathic
-traits of various men of genius. Tolstoï fell sixteen
-feet as a result of attempting to fly when eight years
-old, and whipped himself with ropes to become accustomed
-to pain. In school he chose a course in Oriental languages
-because everyone else was interested in law. Not
-being able to finish a college career in two years, he decided
-to go to a desert and live a purely animal life. It
-was necessary for him to resort to devices of various
-kinds to prevent suicide. Rousseau was at various times
-a clockmaker, music master, painter and servant in addition
-to studying medicine, music, theology, and botany.
-He dedicated a pamphlet "to all Frenchmen who were
-friends of justice" and distributed it on the streets. One
-of his acts was to write a letter "to God Almighty" and
-place it under the altar of Notre Dame. Persecutory
-ideas were entertained by him for years. Emile Zola was
-evidently a psychasthenic as well as a psychopath. He
-counted the gas jets on the street, the numbers on the
-doors, and the cabs passing by. These were added together.
-"For a long time the multiples of three seemed
-to him of good omen, then the multiples of seven were
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">[510]</a></span>
-reassuring." "For a long time he was afraid he would
-not succeed in any proceeding on which he was about to
-enter if he did not leave the house with his left foot
-first." Balzac had an ambulatory mania and could not be
-found when called for military service. It is said that on
-one occasion "when he had put on a handsome new dressing
-gown he wanted to go out into the street with it on
-with a lamp in his hand to excite the admiration of the
-public." His father is said to have stayed in bed for
-twenty years without any reason for so doing, suddenly
-resuming his former mode of life at the end of that time.
-Schopenhauer broke a hotel proprietor's arm because he
-heard him talking outside of his room. He refused to
-pay a legitimate account because his name was spelled
-with two p's instead of one, on the bill. He often burned
-his beard instead of shaving and wrote his notes in
-Greek, Latin and Sanskrit for fear someone would read
-them. In his will he left all of his possessions to soldiers
-and to his dog. Goethe alternated between great joy and
-extreme depression and had unjustifiable attacks of anger.
-Frederick II had such a dislike for changing his coat
-that he had only two or three during the course of his life.
-When Schiller wanted to meditate he had a habit of putting
-his feet on ice and sniffing the aroma of fermenting
-apples. Nordau says "that Richard Wagner is accused
-of having a greater degree of degeneracy than all the
-degenerates that we have thus far seen put together."
-Mozart played the harpsichord at three years of age,
-composed concertos at five and made a concert tour at
-the age of six. He was extremely nervous and fell in
-love at fifteen with a girl of twenty-five. In the last
-months of his life he was obsessed with the idea that he
-had to prepare his own funeral mass. Lombroso's theory
-is that "genius is a true degenerative psychosis, belonging
-to the group of moral insanities which may temporarily
-spring from other psychoses and take their form,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">[511]</a></span>
-but always conserving certain special characteristics
-which distinguish it from the others." Although his conclusions
-may not be warranted it must be admitted that
-many men of genius have been psychopaths.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_343_343" id="FNanchor_343_343"></a><a href="#Footnote_343_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a> in discussing the influence of heredity
-on psychoses and personalities, says, "Hence we may,
-perhaps, discriminate between congenital states of disease
-and morbid personalities, according as the disturbances
-are apparently the expression of the morbid conditions
-of past generations, or seem to be purely personal
-abnormalities, although it is certainly impossible to make
-any sharp distinction." In 1915, in the fourth volume of
-his eighth edition, Kraepelin devoted nearly one hundred
-and fifty pages to the subject of psychopathic personalities.
-These he divides into the excitable, the
-unstable, the impulsive, the eccentric, the liars and swindlers,
-the antisocial or enemies of society, and the quarrelsome.</p>
-
-<p>A study of the "excitable" psychopaths in Kraepelin's<a name="FNanchor_344_344" id="FNanchor_344_344"></a><a href="#Footnote_344_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a>
-clinic showed the intellectual standard of
-these individuals to be above the average. Apprehension
-and judgment were unimpaired even when mental inferiority
-was not entirely lacking. Some complained of
-poor memory or absentmindedness, others of a feeling of
-fatigue. A definite mental activity was noted, usually of
-a happy mood, but occasionally with depressive tendencies.
-The characteristic feature was an emotional excitement,
-associated often with violent rages, without any
-adequate reason. The emotional reaction changed
-quickly to one of despair, anxiety, irritability or inaccessibility.
-The mood in a large number of cases was
-depressed and tearful, while others were cheerful and
-elated, laughing and joking, or erotic. Often without any
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">[512]</a></span>
-apparent cause, irritability, pessimism, unsociability,
-weariness of life and thoughts of suicide appeared&mdash;more
-particularly during menstrual periods. The emotional
-state as a rule was kind, affable, good-natured,
-tractable, often religious, sensitive or sympathetic. The
-patients are often spoken of as well-liked, industrious,
-honest and substantial citizens. Some are timid, bashful
-or gloomy in disposition. Others are conceited, overbearing,
-tyrannical, rude, unsociable and quarrelsome. Many
-are childish, foolish or eccentric, highstrung and affected
-or untruthful. Some are unsteady, restless and over-occupied,
-full of schemes, rash, talkative, gossiping, and
-assuming striking mannerisms. Occasionally they are
-disinclined to any regular occupation, neglect their work,
-loaf around and are supported by their relatives. In
-sixty-two per cent of these cases the patients were
-brought to the clinic on account of suicidal tendencies.
-This was due to reduced circumstances in nearly fifty
-per cent of the men and in seventy-one per cent of the
-women. In the men marital troubles and love affairs
-were more common; sometimes loss of position, or death
-in the family, etc. Spurious attempts at suicide of a
-theatrical type were frequently reported. Next to suicidal
-inclinations as a cause for being brought to the
-clinic there were assaults, attacks of rage and outbursts
-of despair. In any stress or anger over a disagreeable
-occurrence these individuals are likely to become abusive,
-shout, scream, run around, strike the head against the
-wall, tear their clothes off, pull out their hair, etc. Some
-rush around all night in the streets in a senseless rage,
-improperly clothed. Occasionally they attack others unjustifiably
-and for no apparent reason. They are exceedingly
-susceptible to alcohol. During their excitements,
-consciousness may be clouded. Afterwards they say they
-were confused, not themselves, in a dream as it were,
-etc. Some have no recollection whatever as to what was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">[513]</a></span>
-done. These excitements rarely last more than a few
-hours. Thirty-two per cent of the men and less than ten
-per cent of the women were convicted of crime, usually
-for disturbing the peace, or criminal assaults, but occasionally
-for much more serious offenses. As a rule alcohol
-is a factor in these cases. The relations between
-the sexes are characterized by jealousy and quarreling.
-The women are particularly likely to have delusions of
-infidelity. Genuine hysterical attacks occur in a certain
-number of cases. They often see visions and may have
-dizzy spells or syncopes. Somnambulism may occur.
-Nervous symptoms often appear&mdash;headaches, unpleasant
-dreams, palpitations, tremors, increased reflexes, tics, etc.
-The excitable cases constituted nearly one-third of the
-psychopaths admitted at Kraepelin's clinic. Sixty per
-cent of these were women. The majority of cases were
-between fifteen and twenty-five years of age. Heredity
-appeared to be a factor in forty-seven per cent and many
-showed physical defects. Fifty per cent of the men were
-intemperate.</p>
-
-<p>The "unstable" psychopaths are characterized by a
-dominating weakness of the will. In nearly one-half of
-the cases the intellectual endowment is normal, some having
-a surprising power of comprehension and ability to
-take up new things, with accurate observation of their
-surroundings and keen discrimination. These persons
-have no great persistence and do not exert themselves, are
-inattentive, tire easily and are distractible. They never
-go into things deeply and have only a superficial knowledge
-of events. They learn readily and forget quickly.
-The memory is poor and unreliable. The imagination is
-usually very active, with a tendency to exaggerate, dream
-of the impossible and relate great stories. There is an
-inclination to boast and fabricate, telling of wonderful
-but wholly imaginary deeds and accomplishments. They
-often represent themselves to be important personages.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">[514]</a></span>
-Some show artistic talent, write plays or fantastic
-poetry and discuss literary and dramatic problems. They
-are strongly inclined to become actors. The higher intellectual
-development is uniformly defective. Comprehension
-is not clear and judgment is immature and short-sighted.
-Their interests are devoted to frivolous matters
-without much attention to more important questions.
-They sometimes show great prospects in school but do
-not fulfill them later. The mood is cheerful and conceited,
-with a very high opinion of themselves and great
-ambitions. They blame their relatives for their lack of
-success and claim they are not understood or appreciated.
-Sometimes the emotional trend is more sad and gloomy.
-They complain of being unlucky, everything goes wrong.
-Occasionally anxieties appear, with a feeling of oppression,
-fear of being alone, of mental troubles or suicide.
-These feelings are, however, superficial in character,
-usually disappearing in a short time, to be followed by
-excitement, outbursts of anger or anxiety. They are
-often quarrelsome. The characteristic disturbance, however,
-is that of the will. They are entirely lacking in the
-capacity to stick to any one occupation. They are not
-punctual, are interfered with in innumerable ways and
-often change their work, looking for something more suitable.
-Hypochondriacal notions hamper their activities.
-Senseless journeys and trips are often undertaken.
-Some become vagabonds and tramps. They are much inclined
-to bad company and resort to immoderate use of
-tea, coffee, drugs and alcohol. Sixty-four per cent of
-Kraepelin's male cases and twenty per cent of the women
-were intemperate. The sexual habits are very often irregular
-and venereal diseases to be expected. Kraepelin
-found either gonorrhea or syphilis in twenty-two
-per cent of the women examined. Some exhibited homosexual
-tendencies. Many become spendthrifts, making
-extravagant and foolish purchases. They are inclined to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">[515]</a></span>
-speculate unwisely. Fifty-four per cent of the men and
-nearly a third of the women as a result of their moral
-deterioration come into conflict with the courts on account
-of thefts, assaults, quarrels, vagrancy, etc. Suicidal tendencies
-were shown in forty-eight per cent of the men
-and sixty-five per cent of the women in Kraepelin's clinic.
-In many cases these were induced by alcoholism, in other
-instances by family quarrels, etc. Often the reasons
-given were foolish. Hysterical attacks appear in a certain
-percentage of cases in the women. Some had hallucinations
-and confusional attacks or syncopes. Tremors,
-headaches, increased reflexes and other neurological
-symptoms occasionally appeared. The "unstable" group
-included about one-fifth of the psychopaths observed by
-Kraepelin. Thirty-six per cent of these were women.
-The majority of those admitted were between the ages of
-fifteen and twenty-five. Heredity was a factor in forty-nine
-per cent of the cases.</p>
-
-<p>The "impulsive" psychopaths are characterized by a
-domination of the conduct by emotional impulses. The
-intellectual makeup of these individuals is usually good.
-They often have a special bent for art, music, poetry, etc.
-They frequently show a considerable mental activity and
-versatility. They express themselves well, make witty
-remarks and appear brilliant, although they may complain
-of absentmindedness or fatigability. They are always
-conceited, born to greater things and have a great
-future. There is an almost unbounded egotism in some
-cases. The emotional tone is good-natured, easygoing
-and accessible. Many are sensitive and visionary; others
-obstinate, inconsiderate, pretentious or quarrelsome. The
-mood is usually high-spirited and confident but variable.
-The patients are often depressed and hopeless, complaining
-of their luck. At other times they are sullen, surly,
-irritable and faultfinding. Many exhibit suicidal tendencies.
-An emotional irritability is exceedingly common,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">[516]</a></span>
-with violent outbursts of anger. Often they refuse to
-associate with others for a time and will speak to no one.
-The three common types are the spendthrift, the wanderer
-and the dipsomaniac. The spendthrifts usually indulge
-in alcohol and naturally soon contract enormous
-debts. They frequently have little insight into their condition
-or blame someone else for it. Many become wanderers
-and go aimlessly from one place to another&mdash;wherever
-their inclination leads them. The memory for
-these events is good. Some inadequate reason is always
-offered. These wanderers usually are children between
-the ages of ten and fifteen. The impulsive alcoholics may
-have attacks very rarely, sometimes only once a year.
-Debauches are preceded by restless and moody conduct.
-After constant drinking for days or weeks they sometimes
-have suicidal impulses. Sexual excitements may
-occur. They always show psychopathic traits between
-attacks. They are unsteady, unreliable, make sudden
-resolutions, change their occupations and residence and
-lead a wild existence with surprising adventures. Some
-have hysterical attacks, fainting spells, or even convulsions.
-The impulsive psychopaths constituted only two
-or three per cent of Kraepelin's cases. Practically all
-were over twenty-five years of age. There was a hereditary
-taint in seventy-one per cent of the cases.</p>
-
-<p>The "eccentric" psychopaths are characterized by a
-lack of uniformity and consistency in the mental makeup.
-The intellectual endowment of these individuals is usually
-normal. They are often absentminded, forgetful and
-show a variation in productivity. Some are artists or
-devote themselves to inventions. Judgment is impaired
-and reasoning becomes distorted and onesided. There
-is a tendency towards exaggeration and extravagance in
-their viewpoints, with a leaning towards queer notions.
-They are often quickwitted, versatile and write long and
-wordy documents. Their mode of expression is bombastic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">[517]</a></span>
-and labored, and the content of speech or writing, verbose,
-desultory, flighty and full of meaningless expressions.
-They show a certain shrewdness and cunning,
-dissimulate, resort to all kinds of evasions, and are conspicuous
-in their conduct. Occasionally there is a tendency
-towards delusional ideas of a mild form. As a rule
-the mood is cheerful, although often depressed, suspicious
-or irritable. They are opinionated, boastful and better
-than others. Usually there is an emotional excitability.
-The patients are sensitive and irritated by small things,
-scold and complain. Sometimes they are sentimental and
-dreamy, with extravagant language. They often take sudden
-dislikes to brothers, sisters or other members of the
-family. They are capricious, quarrelsome, and faultfinding.
-Their conduct is aimless, contrary and incomprehensible.
-They lose all capacity for judgment of real
-conditions. They cannot proceed in any orderly way in
-things which they are really fitted for. They do not stick
-to anything long, changing plans and occupations frequently.
-They often go about at night talking, arguing
-and drinking. It is not unusual for them to quarrel with
-their wives or even commit assaults. The majority of
-these eccentric psychopaths were men over thirty-five and
-of degenerate families. This group constitutes only a
-small number of cases.</p>
-
-<p>The "liars and swindlers" are characterized by an
-excitability of the imaginative faculties and a variable
-and uncertain will power. At first these individuals are
-likely to appear as unusually gifted persons. They are
-good-natured, present an excellent appearance and are
-apparently well informed on almost all subjects. They
-have a faculty for quoting foreign languages and sometimes
-are familiar with many tongues. Often they are
-brilliant conversationalists. On investigation their actual
-knowledge is found to be very superficial. They are inclined
-to art, poetry and literature. Many become interested<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">[518]</a></span>
-in hypnotism or spiritualism. They are inclined
-to join religious sects or attach themselves to the Salvation
-Army. These individuals learn quickly but do not
-stick to things long. Their mental powers are not orderly
-or consistent. They have an extraordinary imagination
-but accomplish nothing. They are liars from
-birth, the falsifications usually being entirely useless.
-Many are anonymous letter writers. They are often unable
-to discriminate, themselves, between the true and the
-false in their own stories. These fabrications appear to
-be an emotional product, the imaginary occurrence practically
-always relating to the individual himself. They
-boast of their superiority in literary and scientific accomplishments
-and claim to be theologians, mathematicians,
-jurists, chemists, etc. In their imaginations and fabrications
-the patients always better themselves. In many
-instances they assume pretentious titles, represent themselves
-as counts, princes, etc. Sometimes they strongly
-suggest paranoia. In a small number of cases self-accusations
-appear and they confess to all kinds of imaginary
-crimes. As a rule they are elated and optimistic, but
-often affected and theatrical. Occasionally suicidal attempts
-are made. At times general depressions or
-anxious states appear. Some are coarse and deceitful.
-They are usually uncertain and capricious in everything.
-Some become spendthrifts. They are naturally cheats
-and swindlers; occasionally thieves. The swindling
-schemes resorted to are innumerable. The use of false
-names and assuming of uniforms and titles of various
-kinds is the most common. They make purchases of all
-kinds without any ability to pay or any intention of doing
-so. Many refuse to pay bills without any excuse whatever.
-Others attempt to marry rich women by deceitful
-means and misrepresentations. Some practice medicine
-without a license; others claim damages for imaginary
-injuries. Sexual offenses are common. If arrested they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">[519]</a></span>
-are often inclined to claim amnesia for the period of time
-when the act was committed. They occasionally have
-genuine psychoses and hysterical attacks. These simulate
-various diseases. The group of liars and swindlers
-constituted from six to seven per cent of the psychopaths
-in Kraepelin's clinic. Seventy-one per cent of the men
-were accused of crimes. The majority of cases were
-under twenty-five years of age. Heredity was a very important
-factor.</p>
-
-<p>The "antisocial" psychopaths or enemies of society
-are characterized by a blunting of the moral elements of
-their makeup and a lack of adjustment to their environment.
-Kraepelin found that forty per cent of his cases
-were persons who had done well in school. They have a
-strong dislike for regular occupations and avoid them in
-every possible way. Their behavior is variable, with a
-tendency to be industrious occasionally and more often
-lazy. Frequently they appear queer, abstracted, inattentive,
-dreamy, sleepy or dull. When at their best they
-are not bright mentally and have no ambition or far
-reaching interest. They learn quickly and forget as
-rapidly. Their store of knowledge is very limited. They
-have no capacity for going into things thoroughly and
-cannot acquire a higher education. They are lacking in
-judgment, foresight and discrimination. Many have a
-weakness for cheap stories of adventure, pictures of
-crime, etc. In expression they are usually quick as well
-as verbose. A characteristic is their lack of truthfulness.
-They are liars and braggarts. The mood is usually cheerful
-and confident; sometimes arrogant, surly, moody, irritable
-and occasionally depressed or anxious. They
-change unexpectedly from one mood to the other. Irritability,
-with outbursts of anger, is common. They often
-become threatening and destructive. Eighteen per cent
-of Kraepelin's cases attempted suicide. At least one-third
-of these were theatrical attempts on account of fear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">[520]</a></span>
-of punishment. Childish vanity and conceit is a very
-common symptom, with boastful tendencies. A prominent
-feature is the lack of any deep emotional reactions. They
-do not react normally and properly to their surroundings.
-Another characteristic defect is their entire lack
-of sympathy for anyone else. They are likely to be cruel
-to animals as well as persons. They show little affection
-for parents, children or relatives and are lacking in a
-sense of decency and personal cleanliness. As children
-they are exceedingly troublesome in school. Some have
-to go to custodial institutions for care. Many are truants
-at school and run away from home, becoming wanderers
-and vagabonds. They are inclined to sexual excitement,
-irregularities and crimes of various sorts. Seventy per
-cent of Kraepelin's cases were thieves, beginning to steal
-as children; twenty per cent were embezzlers and twelve
-per cent guilty of fraud or forgery. Practically every
-variety of crime was represented. They exhibit an extraordinary
-tendency to revert to criminal habits. Prison
-life makes some submissive but starts others in a war
-against society. They often attempt violence or make
-passive resistance to the law. They occasionally develop
-hypochondriacal tendencies. Friendly advances are
-greeted with mistrust. Some are stubborn, sulky, unrepentant
-and have nothing to say, or lie and explain by
-putting the blame on others. Thus an opposition to all
-organized society develops. They often look upon themselves
-as martyrs. Others take the situation lightly and
-minimize the gravity of their position. Some seem to
-really see the error of their ways. The antisocial individuals
-sooner or later, like other psychopaths, are very
-prone to hysterical attacks, fainting spells, or even convulsions.
-Anesthesias and hyperesthesias may be noted.
-Some patients complain of headache, disturbed sleep,
-dreams, etc. The antisocial in Kraepelin's clinic constituted
-less than ten per cent of the psychopaths, of which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">[521]</a></span>
-seventy per cent were men. Half of the women were prostitutes.
-Over eighty per cent of the cases were under
-twenty years of age.</p>
-
-<p>The intellectual makeup of the "quarrelsome" psychopath
-is usually fairly good. As a rule these persons
-show a narrowing of the intellectual sphere, with, however,
-a well-defined shrewdness which enables them to
-take advantage of others. Some show a tendency to
-pedantry and hair-splitting arguments. Memory is good
-but distorted by an emotional coloring. Judgment is
-warped and unreliable. They are credulous and accept
-statements without proof, but they look with suspicion on
-anything not in accord with their own ideas. The influence
-of these factors leads to an emotional excitability.
-They are always passionate, sensitive individuals who
-become excited over trivial matters. This is complicated
-by a marked self-confidence, minimizing their own failings.
-Quarrels are the inevitable consequence. Everything
-is exaggerated in importance. The conclusion is
-reached that the neighbors and others are all organized
-against them. Sometimes the feeling of enmity is transferred
-from one individual to another. The patient is
-constantly in trouble with someone. They are almost
-invariably of the male sex and usually of middle age or
-older when they come under observation.</p>
-
-<p>For statistical purposes the differentiation of the psychopathic
-personalities has been described by the Association's
-committee as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>"Under the designation of psychopathic personality
-is brought together a large group of pathological personalities
-whose abnormality of makeup is expressed
-mainly in the character and intensity of their emotional
-and volitional reactions. To meet the demands of current
-usage, the term for this group has been shortened
-from the older one "psychoses with constitutional psychopathic
-inferiority" with which it is synonymous. Individuals<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">[522]</a></span>
-with an intellectual defect (feeblemindedness)
-are not to be included in this group.</p>
-
-<p>"Several of the preceding groups, in fact all of the so-called
-constitutional psychoses, manic-depressive, dementia
-praecox, paranoia, psychoneuroses, etc., may be
-considered as arising on a basis of psychopathic inferiority
-or constitution because the previous mental makeup
-in these conditions shows more or less clearly abnormalities
-in the emotional and volitional spheres. These reactions
-are apparently related to special forms of psychopathic
-makeup now fairly well differentiated, and the
-associated psychoses also have their own distinctive
-features.</p>
-
-<p>"There remain, however, various other less well differentiated
-types of psychopathic personalities, and in
-these the psychotic reactions (psychoses) also differ from
-those already specified in the preceding groups.</p>
-
-<p>"It is these less well differentiated types of emotional
-and volitional deviation which are to be designated, at
-least for statistical purposes, as psychopathic personality.
-The type of behavior disorder, the social reactions,
-the trends of interests, etc., which psychopathic personalities
-may show give special features to many cases,
-<i>e.g.</i>, criminal traits, moral deficiency, tramp life, sexual
-perversions and various temperamental peculiarities.</p>
-
-<p>"The pronounced mental disturbances or psychoses
-which develop in psychopathic personalities and bring
-about their commitment are varied in their clinical form
-and are usually of an episodic character. Most frequent
-are attacks of irritability, excitement, depression, paranoid
-episodes, transient confused states, etc. True
-prison psychoses belong in this group.</p>
-
-<p>"In accordance with the standpoint developed above,
-a psychopathic personality with a manic-depressive attack
-should be classed in the manic-depressive group, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">[523]</a></span>
-likewise a psychopathic personality with a schizophrenic
-psychosis should go in the dementia praecox group.</p>
-
-<p>"Psychopathic personalities without an episodic mental
-attack or any psychotic symptoms should be placed in
-the <em>without psychosis</em> group under the appropriate subheading."</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately there are no statistics which show the
-incidence of psychopathic personalities in the community.
-A study of 70,987 first admissions to state hospitals shows
-that the psychoses associated with this condition constituted
-only 1.12 per cent of the total number. On the
-other hand, the reports of the Phipps Psychiatric Clinic
-show an admission rate for psychopaths of over six per
-cent during a five-year period. When they reach a state
-hospital it is usually owing to the development of manic-depressive
-insanity or some other well-defined psychosis.
-The important and troublesome cases from a social point
-of view are those that do not reach hospitals. A much
-larger percentage is to be found in institutions of the correctional
-and penal type. There is no greater problem
-today than the attitude of the state towards the psychopathic
-criminal. The influence of these individuals on the
-community at large is something that we have no means
-of estimating at the present time.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">[524]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br /><br />
-
-<span class="st">THE PSYCHOSES WITH MENTAL DEFICIENCY</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>The literature of mental deficiency is almost as old as
-that of medicine. Imbecility was studied at some length
-by Plato and Galen and was recognized by Felix Plater,
-who has been accredited with the first classification of
-mental diseases known (seventeenth century). Fitzherbert<a name="FNanchor_345_345" id="FNanchor_345_345"></a><a href="#Footnote_345_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a>
-in his "Natura Brevium" in 1652 included the
-following interesting definition of idiocy: "He that shall
-be said to be a sot and idiot from his birth, is such a person
-who cannot count or number twenty pence, nor tell
-who was his father or mother, nor how old he is, so as
-it may appear that he hath no understanding or reason
-what shall be for his profit, or what for his loss; but,
-if he have sufficient understanding to know and understand
-his letters, and to read by teaching or information,
-then it seems he is not an idiot." One of the first medical
-writers to discuss mental defects at any length was
-Esquirol. In differentiating them from mental diseases
-he said: "Idiocy is not a disease, but a condition in which
-the intellectual faculties are never manifested; or have
-never been developed sufficiently to enable the idiot to
-acquire such an amount of knowledge as persons of his
-own age, and placed in similar circumstances with himself,
-are capable of receiving. Idiocy commences with life,
-or at that age which precedes the development of the
-intellectual and affective faculties, which are from the
-first, what they are doomed to be during the whole period
-of existence." ... "A man in a state of Dementia is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">[525]</a></span>
-deprived of advantages which he formerly enjoyed. He
-was a rich man, who has become poor. The idiot, on the
-contrary, has always been in a state of want and misery."
-An elaborate treatise on the subject of cretinism
-was published by Fodéré in 1792.</p>
-
-<p>Tredgold,<a name="FNanchor_346_346" id="FNanchor_346_346"></a><a href="#Footnote_346_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a> in discussing the etiology of mental deficiency,
-divides the causes into factors indicative of, or
-producing, a variation of the germ plasm and those acting
-directly upon the offspring. The former include neuropathic
-inheritance, alcoholism, tuberculosis, syphilis,
-consanguinity and the age of the parents. Among the
-latter are abnormal mental and physical conditions of the
-mother during pregnancy, or injury to the fœtus; abnormalities
-of labor, primogeniture and premature delivery;
-and after birth&mdash;traumatic, toxic, convulsive and
-nutritional factors. He found neuropathic inheritance in
-over eighty per cent of the cases studied. In 64.5 per
-cent the heredity took the form of mental defects, insanity
-or epilepsy, and in eighteen per cent paralysis, cerebral
-hemorrhage, neuroses of various kinds, or psychoses.
-There was a history of alcoholism in 46.5 per cent of the
-series investigated. Tuberculosis occurred in the families
-of thirty-four per cent, syphilis in 2.5 per cent, consanguinity
-in five per cent, and a marked disparity in the
-ages of the parents in four per cent. Factors acting
-directly on the offspring, either before, during or after
-birth, were found to be present in sixty-five per cent.
-Goddard<a name="FNanchor_347_347" id="FNanchor_347_347"></a><a href="#Footnote_347_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> in a study of 327 cases found a history of
-inherited mental deficiency in fifty-four per cent, probable
-heredity in 11.3 per cent, neuropathic ancestry in twelve
-per cent, accidents of various kinds in nineteen per cent,
-and no ascertainable cause of any kind in 2.6 per cent of
-the total number.</p>
-
-<p>The definition of a feebleminded person, proposed by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">[526]</a></span>
-the Royal College of Physicians of London, and subsequently
-adopted by the English Royal Commission, reads
-as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span>"One who is capable of earning a living
-under favorable circumstances, but is incapable, from
-mental defect existing from birth, or from an early age,
-(a) of competing on equal terms with his normal fellows;
-or (b) of managing himself and his affairs with ordinary
-prudence." The English Mental Deficiency Act of 1913
-included the following <span class="no-break">definition:&mdash;</span>"Persons in whose
-case there exists from birth or from an early age mental
-defectiveness not amounting to imbecility, yet so pronounced
-that they require care, supervision, and control
-for their own protection or for the protection of others,
-or, in the case of children, that they, by reason of such
-defectiveness, appear to be permanently incapable of
-receiving proper benefit from the instruction in ordinary
-schools." It will be noted that imbeciles and idiots do
-not come within the scope of these definitions. This is
-due to the fact that the term feeblemindedness as used in
-England includes only the High Grade Amentia of Tredgold
-or the Morons as defined by Goddard. The classification
-of the latter is as follows:</p>
-
-<p>1. High Grade Morons&mdash;Those that can do fairly complicated
-work, with only occasional or no supervision, run
-simple machinery or take care of animals, but are unable
-to plan.</p>
-
-<p>2. Middle Grade&mdash;Those capable of doing routine institution
-work only.</p>
-
-<p>3. Low Grade&mdash;Those who are only capable of running
-errands, doing light work, making beds, scrubbing or
-caring for rooms&mdash;if there is no great complexity of
-furniture.</p>
-
-<p>Tredgold describes imbecility as Medium Grade
-Amentia and idiocy as Low Grade Amentia.</p>
-
-<p>The Mental Deficiency Act of England defines idiots
-as "persons so deeply defective in mind from birth, or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">[527]</a></span>
-from an early age, as to be unable to guard themselves
-against common physical dangers." It also refers to
-moral imbeciles as "persons who from an early age display
-some permanent mental defect coupled with strong
-vicious or criminal propensities on which punishment
-has had little or no deterrent effect." The imbecile as defined
-by the Royal Commission of England is "one who
-by reason of mental defect existing from birth or from
-an early age is incapable of earning his own living, but
-is capable of guarding himself against common physical
-dangers."</p>
-
-<p>Tredgold classifies either feeblemindedness, imbecility
-or idiocy if due to pathological germinal variations
-(caused by alcoholism, tuberculosis, syphilis, etc., and
-manifested by amentia, insanity, epilepsy, etc.) as being
-either simple, microcephalic, or Mongolian. He describes
-those which represent somatic modifications due
-to gross cerebral lesions as syphilitic, amaurotic, hydrocephalic,
-porencephalic, sclerotic, paralytic and other
-toxic, inflammatory or vascular forms. The somatic
-modifications due to defective cerebral nutrition he divides
-into epilepsy, cretinism, nutritional forms and isolation
-(sense deprivation).</p>
-
-<p>The classification of mental defects used by Fernald
-at the Massachusetts School for the Feebleminded and
-based on mental ages is as <span class="no-break">follows:&mdash;</span>Idiot,&mdash;low grade,
-less than one year; middle grade, one year or more; high
-grade, two years. Imbecile,&mdash;low grade, three and four
-years; middle grade, five years; high grade, six and
-seven years. Moron,&mdash;low grade, eight and nine years;
-middle grade, ten years; high grade, eleven and twelve
-years. Fernald calls attention to the fact that the diagnosis
-cannot be based on the mental age alone. The
-intelligence quotient must be taken into consideration.
-This is determined by dividing the mental by the physical
-age. It is a comparison of the average intelligence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">[528]</a></span>
-of the child, using the normal as a standard. The diagnosis
-cannot be definitely made until the age of sixteen,
-or until the probable mental age at sixteen is determined.</p>
-
-<p>The following definitions are used by the American
-Association for the Study of the <span class="no-break">Feebleminded:&mdash;</span>"An
-idiot is a mentally defective person having a mental age
-of not more than 35 months, or, if a child, an intelligence
-quotient of less than 25. An imbecile is a mentally defective
-person having a mental age between 36 months
-and 83 months inclusive, or, if a child, an intelligence
-quotient between 25 and 49. A moron is a mentally defective
-person having a mental age between 84 months
-and 144 months inclusive, or, if a child, an intelligence
-quotient between 50 and 74."</p>
-
-<p>Tredgold expresses the opinion that "the insanity of
-the feebleminded and high grade imbeciles does not, on
-the whole, differ from that occurring in ordinary persons."
-In sixty-two cases under his observation he found
-the following <span class="no-break">forms:&mdash;</span>Mania, thirty-two; melancholia,
-sixteen; alternating mania and melancholia, six; stupor,
-one; delusional insanity, one; and juvenile general paresis,
-six. He also speaks of epileptic insanity and terminal
-dementia in his cases.</p>
-
-<p>Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_348_348" id="FNanchor_348_348"></a><a href="#Footnote_348_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a> describes certain characteristics as applying
-very generally to the mental deficiency group
-which he prefers to speak of as "Oligophrenia." Sense
-perception is often interfered with by defective vision,
-opacities of the lens and cornea, errors of refraction,
-optic atrophy or deafness. The apprehension of external
-impressions may be prevented to a certain extent also by
-disturbances of attention. Only the sharper and stronger
-stimuli reach the patients as a rule and these impressions
-are retarded. Many occurrences escape their notice entirely
-and their sense perceptions are poor and scanty at
-best. Disturbances of attention are shown by the attitude,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">[529]</a></span>
-facial expression, carriage and conduct, so that they
-have an appearance of apathy and indifference when their
-real feelings are entirely different. An increased effort
-cannot be produced by an exertion of the will, nor can the
-fatigue which such attempts result in, be overcome. Repeated
-tests of various kinds show a marked decrease in
-the power of apprehension. In profound idiocy it is
-difficult to determine whether any impression can be made
-on the sense organs or not. When the patients react to
-a severe pin prick it is only after a considerable delay,
-apprehension and attention being equally impaired.
-Schlesinger found fifty-five per cent of his cases lacking
-in interest, thirty-five per cent were distractible and ten
-per cent showed an increased fatigability. An evidence
-of the lack of attention is the fact that the weakminded as
-a rule are not susceptible to hypnotism.</p>
-
-<p>The apprehension of colors, form and dimensions is
-uncertain and difficult. The patients learn to distinguish
-colors very late usually. They can form no clear conception
-as to the outlines, surface or contents of objects.
-They have considerable difficulty in putting syllables and
-sentences together. They recognize the details but not
-the significance of pictures. In the elaboration of impressions
-they are unable to distinguish between the real and
-the accidental or nonessential. This gives rise to a confusion
-of ideas. Changes in size, color, shape, etc, always
-annoy them. Their lack of observation and discrimination
-explains the absence of timidity in the presence
-of strangers which characterizes normal children.
-There is also a defective apprehension of auditory impressions
-and they are unable to understand very familiar
-sounds. Ley showed that they were often unable to identify
-letters they heard pronounced. There is a marked
-inability to grasp the meaning of ordinary words. The
-sense of taste and smell is comparatively much less impaired.
-Very defective children object at once to quinine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">[530]</a></span>
-when it is placed on the tongue. Nevertheless, many do
-not notice unpleasant odors or even the taste of excreta,
-etc.,&mdash;things which are exceedingly offensive to normal
-individuals,&mdash;and are entirely indifferent as to the quality
-of their food. Sensory disturbances of the skin are not
-very marked. In a series of esthesiometric tests, however,
-Ley obtained unsatisfactory "automatic" responses
-in eighteen cases, meaningless answers in forty-eight, and
-intelligent responses in eleven of 127 mental defectives
-examined. The application of the sense of touch in
-recognizing articles is acquired with difficulty. Pain
-sensations are somewhat diminished also and some defectives
-are apparently insensible to blows, etc. That the
-sense of position and location is not well developed is
-often shown by coarse, awkward movements. The sense
-of weight and motion is lacking. Demoor found that the
-feebleminded usually pointed out the larger article as
-being the heavier even when lighter in weight. Claparede
-found this characteristic present in one per cent of ninety-seven
-pupils rejected as a result of mental tests, in eight
-per cent of the mildly weakminded, and in sixty-five per
-cent of the markedly defective cases. Memory is always
-involved. Superficial impressions are easily lost.
-Johnson subjected seventy-two defective children to retention
-tests. Seventy could correctly repeat only three
-numbers; sixty-six only four; fifty-one only five; twenty-seven
-only six; fourteen only seven, and four only eight.
-Ranchburg's tests showed them to be very susceptible to
-suggestion. Some defectives, on the other hand, have a
-peculiar faculty for remembering dates, numbers, performing
-feats of arithmetic, etc. The memory defect is
-usually shown more especially by the inability to take
-advantage of the experience of the past. The patients
-learn with difficulty, read little and forget what they are
-taught. The events of life leave few traces and make
-only a superficial impression on them. The intellectual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">[531]</a></span>
-horizon for this reason is very limited. Their thoughts
-are confined largely to the matter of clothing, food, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The fundamental obstacle in the mental progress of
-the defectives is the inadequate elaboration of general impressions
-and conceptions. There is an absence of any
-understanding of the importance of time, events, numbers,
-etc. They often have no idea whatever as to the
-significance of money. Dates mean nothing usually and
-they are often unable to determine the time of day. The
-train of thought as shown by tests made by Buccola is
-delayed. Their poverty of thought is shown by the fact
-that defective children can think of only about one-fourth
-as many words during a given time as suggest themselves
-to the normal child&mdash;a test suggested by Binet. Tests
-reported by Sommer, Nathan, Binet and others show a
-marked delay in association time and an impoverished
-mental capacity. They frequently repeat the test word
-or give entirely meaningless replies. Associations do
-not become fixed on repeated tests as they do with normal
-individuals (Wreschner). It is not easy for them to repeat
-numbers, the months of the year or days of the week
-backwards. They cannot supply omitted words or syllables
-in sentences (Ebbinghaus test). It is hard for them
-to assemble picture puzzles or pieces of cards. Revesz
-found that it was more difficult for them to learn to
-divide than to subtract or add. Multiplication he found
-to be most easily acquired. They did not do well in tests
-requiring any reason or judgment. They are entirely
-incapable of defining or explaining abstract conceptions
-of any kind. They cannot explain the meaning of fables
-and have no appreciation of irony. Nor can they correct
-the most obvious faults in test sentences. They have no
-insight into their own condition and no grasp on either
-past or present events. Their capacity for efficient occupation
-and employment is much diminished. Their ability
-to acquire an education is also limited. Of 286 cases<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">[532]</a></span>
-examined in school Schlesinger found only fifteen per
-cent to be industrious in their habits. Nine per cent
-failed in writing, eighteen in reading and twenty-four per
-cent in arithmetic tests.</p>
-
-<p>The emotional life is also much impoverished and unstable.
-There is no sense of shame and no feeling of
-family pride or patriotism. There is often a tendency
-to commit criminal acts. As a rule the mood is indifferent
-and apathetic&mdash;in strange surroundings they are
-sometimes timid and anxious. Some feel ashamed of
-their speech defects and awkwardness. Others show a
-childish cheerfulness, or satisfaction and self-confidence.
-There is a tendency to uncontrollable laughter, attacks
-of anxiety, angry excitement, or childish despair with
-hysterical manifestations which disappear quickly.
-Usually the patients are inoffensive, manageable and well
-behaved, but easily susceptible to bad influences. Often
-they are queer, whimsical, capricious, obstinate and childish.
-Henneberg, who examined a large series of cases,
-described 33.8 per cent as anxious, timid, sensitive and
-inclined to weep; 15.7 per cent as apathetic, dreamy, sluggish
-and seclusive; 12.6 per cent as quiet, serious, good-natured,
-sociable and pleasant; 18.7 as active, cheerful,
-shallow, playful and talkative; and nineteen per cent as
-rude, malicious, obstinate, irritable and bad-tempered.
-The sexual life is sometimes undeveloped or may show
-actual perversions. Bonhöffer found six idiots and fifty-three
-feebleminded persons in an examination of 190
-prostitutes. The volitional expressions of the defective
-are very largely impulsive. They act without reflection
-or regard to consequences and are easily induced to do
-improper acts. The inhibition of will is shown by the
-defective control of ordinary movements in responding to
-commands. They are always slow in learning to walk.
-The childish inability to perform finer and more precise
-movements does not disappear later as it does in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">[533]</a></span>
-course of normal development. This is shown in their
-gait, awkward movements, etc. Kraepelin interprets the
-tendency to bedwetting as an evidence of volitional disturbance,
-also the stereotyped, rhythmical movements of
-the idiot. Laser found that forty per cent of his cases
-had the habit of biting the finger nails.</p>
-
-<p>Dependent upon the inhibition of volitional impulses,
-two clinical groups of the feebleminded have been described
-by Kraepelin,&mdash;the excitable and the apathetic or
-dull. The excited forms are much more common. Schlesinger,
-however, found thirty-one per cent of his cases
-of the apathetic variety; twenty-nine per cent were excitable;
-twenty-eight per cent had simple mental defects,
-and the remainder showed antisocial tendencies. In the
-apathetic or dull form there is a marked disturbance of
-the attention; the patient takes no interest in his surroundings,
-appears sluggish, awkward, emotionally dull,
-and devoid of any voluntary impulse, often doing only
-what he is urged to do. They are usually good-natured,
-contented, and do simple work under direction, in a slow
-and mechanical way. The lighter grades are of a dull,
-weak-willed, readily influenced type. They are timid, unconcerned
-and agreeable. The excitable variety, on the
-other hand, show a purposeless, mercurial variability.
-Their attention is easily distracted from one thing to another.
-They cannot sit still, are restless and constantly
-on the go. Occasionally they are violent.</p>
-
-<p>The defective control of motor impulses by the will is
-also shown in defectives by the disturbance of speech and
-writing. Crailsheimer found speech disturbances in 36.3
-per cent of his cases, Schlesinger in thirty per cent, and
-Leubuscher in fifty per cent. They can often hear although
-mute, sometimes recovering their speech during
-an attack of excitement. Ley reported stammering in
-twelve per cent of his cases and stuttering in thirteen per
-cent. Agrammatism and akataphasia sometimes occur.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">[534]</a></span>
-Word-blindness is also referred to as a symptom and
-various disturbances of reading and writing have been
-observed.</p>
-
-<p>According to Kraepelin, the important developmental
-landmarks in the life of the young are the acquisition of
-speech (one year), the beginning of the school life (six
-years), the appearance (fourteen years) and the completion
-(eighteen years) of sexual development. The first
-and second periods represent the relative levels of low
-and high grade idiocy, the third imbecility and the fourth
-feeblemindedness. This classification is somewhat similar
-to that of Weygandt. The education ordinarily acquired
-by the higher grade of the feebleminded is somewhat
-limited. They may even excel in certain occasional
-lines of work, for example, in music, art, etc. They are
-usually poor in mathematics and lack interest and application
-as a rule. Difficult apprehension and mental fatigability
-are to be expected. They have to go over things
-repeatedly, as their memory is not good. Their education
-is often ample in some directions and very lacking in
-others. Their judgment is onesided, their viewpoint narrow
-and their worldly knowledge childish. What they
-acquire at school is soon forgotten. They take no interest
-in religion, politics or current events of importance,
-and very impractical ideas are expressed on all questions.
-The emotional manifestations vary. Some are agreeable,
-cheerful, tractable; others timid, tenderhearted, sensitive,
-slightly emotional or anxious. They are more likely to
-be obstinate, stubborn, unruly, rude, irritable, unsociable
-and violent-tempered. Some have periods of active excitement
-and become threatening, abusive and violent.
-Occasionally suicidal attempts are made, although they
-are usually not genuine. Some are addicted to sexual
-excesses, lying or swindling. Sexual perversions also
-occur in some cases. They are usually incapable of any
-continuous occupation and drift from one thing to another.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">[535]</a></span>
-As a rule they have little conception of the value
-of money and spend it recklessly. They are very susceptible
-to alcoholism and often commit petty crimes.
-Occasionally hysterical manifestations&mdash;syncopes, seizures,
-etc.&mdash;appear. Clouded and confused states have
-been observed. Frequently impulsive tendencies are
-noted. In some instances psychopathic traits are very
-striking. Excitable, unstable, impulsive, quarrelsome
-and antisocial types appear as well as liars and swindlers.
-Periodical excitements and depressions suggest manic-depressive
-forms.</p>
-
-<p>Considerable confusion has been occasioned by the
-relation thought by some to exist between mental deficiency
-and dementia praecox. Kraepelin<a name="FNanchor_349_349" id="FNanchor_349_349"></a><a href="#Footnote_349_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a> has spoken
-of an engrafted hebephrenia, as shown by the following
-quotation from his eighth <span class="no-break">edition:&mdash;</span>"I made the suggestion
-a long time ago that certain, not very frequent, forms
-of idiocy with well developed mannerisms and stereotypies
-were an early expression of dementia praecox."
-He is of the opinion that "the affected manners
-of certain idiots, as well as the associated stereotypies
-of attitude and movement in addition to the negativistic
-impulses and the permanent obstinate inaccessibility
-to all attempts at approach, show no relation
-whatever to ordinary childish peculiarities and
-belong on the contrary to the well-known picture
-of dementia praecox." He interprets the "demenza
-precocissima" of Sante de Sanctis and the "dementia
-infantilis" of Heller as belonging to dementia praecox
-rather than the mental deficiency group. He
-further makes the suggestion that "weakmindedness existing
-from youth without focal symptoms, and later leading
-to deterioration, is as a rule to be looked upon as
-pfropfhebephrenia, if epilepsy and cerebral syphilis can
-be excluded, the former by the absence of seizures, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">[536]</a></span>
-latter by the results of the Wassermann reaction." Engrafted
-hebephrenia or "pfropfhebephrenia" has been
-studied by various observers. After an analysis of ten
-cases Wasner reached the conclusion that feeblemindedness
-predisposes to dementia praecox. Weygandt and
-various other writers are not in accord with Kraepelin on
-this subject. It is, however, generally conceded that the
-occurrence of manic-depressive and other affective psychoses
-in mental defectives is not at all infrequent.</p>
-
-<p>As special types Kraepelin described microcephalic
-varieties, the tuberous sclerosis of Hartdegen and
-Bourneville (1880), vascular and other cerebral defects,
-infantilismus, dysadenoid and other endocrine conditions,
-Mongolian idiocy, hydrocephalus, encephalitic forms, etc.
-Alzheimer, Hammarberg, and Bourneville have made
-pathological classifications of the mental deficiencies.</p>
-
-<p>Psychoses which render the commitment of mental
-defectives to hospitals for mental diseases necessary are
-comparatively infrequent, as is shown by statistics. In
-the words of the statistical manual, "the most common
-mental disturbances are episodes of excitement or irritability,
-depressions, paranoid trends, hallucinatory attacks,
-etc." Cases diagnosed as showing manic-depressive
-psychoses or dementia praecox are not shown in the
-mental defective group. Three and forty-eight hundredths
-per cent of the admissions to the Massachusetts
-hospitals during 1919 were diagnosed as psychoses with
-mental deficiency. During a period of eight years the
-admission rate to the New York hospitals amounted to
-2.8 per cent. The admissions to twenty-one institutions
-in other states constituted 4.33 per cent of the whole number
-reported. In 70,987 admissions to forty-eight hospitals
-in sixteen states the psychoses with mental deficiency
-amounted to 3.22 per cent of all first admissions.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_537" id="Page_537">[537]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table style="width:75%;" border="1" summary="alpha jump table">
- <tr>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_A">A</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_B">B</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_C">C</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_D">D</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_E">E</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_F">F</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_G">G</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_H">H</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_I">I</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_J">J</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_K">K</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_L">L</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_M">M</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_N">N</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_O">O</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_P">P</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_Q">Q</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_R">R</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_S">S</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_T">T</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_U">U</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_V">V</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_W">W</a></td>
- <td class="ix"><a href="#IX_Z">Z</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_A" name="IX_A"></a>Abbot, E. Stanley, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-<li>Abraham, Karl, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-<li>Abrahamson, Isador, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-<li>Acute chorea, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-<li>Acute hemorrhagic polioencephalitis superior, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
-<li>Administration and legislation, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-<li>Adrenal diseases, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-<li>Adrenal stigmata, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-<li>Adrenals, lesions of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-<li>Agnew, D. Hayes, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li>Albany Hospital, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-<li>Albrecht, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-<li>Alcoholic psychoses, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>acute hallucinosis, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
- <li>acute intoxication, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
- <li>alcoholic deterioration, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a></li>
- <li>alcoholic paralysis, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
- <li>chronic hallucinosis, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
- <li>chronic intoxication, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
- <li>delirium tremens, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
- <li>Korsakow's psychosis, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
- <li>pathological intoxication, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
- <li>pathology, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Aliens in hospitals, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-<li>Alzheimer, A., <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>, <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
-<li>Alzheimer's disease, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-<li>Amentia, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-<li>American Institute of Criminal Law, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-<li>American Psychiatric Association, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a></li>
-<li>Anderson, Victor V., <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-<li>Anxiety neuroses, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-<li>Appropriations, hospital, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-<li>Aretaeus, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-<li>Arnold, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-<li>Arsenic psychoses, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li>Arteriosclerosis, cerebral, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>apoplectiform attacks, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
- <li>delimitation of psychoses, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
- <li>depressions, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
- <li>deterioration, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
- <li>epileptiform attacks, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
- <li>excitements, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
- <li>pathology, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Aschaffenburg, G., <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-<li>Aurelianus, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_B" name="IX_B"></a>Babcock, J. W., <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-<li>Babinski, J., <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
-<li>Bailey, Pearce, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-<li>Baillarger, J., <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-<li>Ball, Jau Don, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-<li>Ballet, G., <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-<li>Barker, Lewellys F., <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
-<li>Barrett, Albert M., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-<li>Baths, continuous, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-<li>Bayle, A. L., <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-<li>Beers, Clifford W., <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-<li>Bellevue Hospital, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-<li>Bianchi, L., <a href="#Page_384">384</a></li>
-<li>Billigheimer, E., <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-<li>Binswanger, Otto, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li>Birnbaum, K., <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-<li>Bleuler, E., <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a></li>
-<li>Bloomingdale Hospital, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li>Blumer, G. Alder, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-<li>Blumgarten, A. S., <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li>Boards of Charities and Corrections, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-<li>Boards of control, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-<li>Boards of managers, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-<li>Boards of trustees, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-<li>Bonhöffer, K., <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-<li>Boston Police Act, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-<li>Boston State Hospital, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-<li>Boveri, Piero, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-<li>Brachet, J. L., <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-<li>Brain or nervous diseases, psychoses with, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>acute chorea, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
- <li>cerebral embolism, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- <li>cerebral hemorrhage, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- <li>cerebral thrombosis, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- <li>encephalitis lethargica, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
- <li><a class="pagenum" name="Page_538" id="Page_538">[538]</a>meningitis, tubercular, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
- <li>multiple sclerosis, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
- <li>paralysis agitans, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
- <li>tabes dorsalis, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Brain lesions, symptoms due to, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li>Brain tumors, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>frequency, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
- <li>psychoses, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
- <li>statistics, of psychoses, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
- <li>symptoms, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Brattleboro Retreat, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-<li>Breuer, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495</a></li>
-<li>Briggs, L. Vernon, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-<li>Briquet, <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-<li>British Association, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-<li>Bromide psychoses, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li>Buckley, A. C., <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
-<li>Bucknill, J. C., <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-<li>Bumke, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-<li>Burnham, Wm. H., <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li>Burr, C. W., <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-<li>Buzzard, E. F., <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_C" name="IX_C"></a>Cabot, Richard C., <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-<li>Calmeil, J. L., <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-<li>Camp, Carl D., <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-<li>Campbell, C. Macfie, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-<li>Casamajor, Louis, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li>Case rate, general diseases, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li>Causes of death, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li>Celsus, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-<li>Central neuritis, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-<li>Cerebral embolism, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-<li>Cerebral hemorrhage, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-<li>Cerebral syphilis, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>delimitation of psychoses, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
- <li>gummatous, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
- <li>meningeal, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
- <li>pathology, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
- <li>salvarsan therapy, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
- <li>symptomatology, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
- <li>treponema in inactive cases, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
- <li>vascular, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Cerebral thrombosis, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-<li>Cerebropathica psychica toxaemica, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-<li>Chloral hydrate, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
-<li>Chorea, acute, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-<li>Civil war psychoses, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-<li>Clark, L. Pierce, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-<li>Classification of mental diseases, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>American Psychiatric Association, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li>
- <li>Aretaeus, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
- <li>Aurelianus, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>British Association, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
- <li>Celsus, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
- <li>Cullen, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>Esquirol, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
- <li>Flemming, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
- <li>Galen, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>Griesinger, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
- <li>Hippocrates, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
- <li>Kraepelin, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
- <li>Krafft-Ebing, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
- <li>Linnaeus, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>Maudsley, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
- <li>Pinel, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
- <li>Plater, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>Pritchard, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
- <li>Régis, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
- <li>Roman, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>Sauvages, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- <li>Vogel, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Clouston, T. S., <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a></li>
-<li>Cobb, Stanley, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-<li>Cocaine psychoses, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-<li>Colajanni, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-<li>Collapse delirium, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-<li>Columbia State Hospital, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-<li>Columbus State Hospital, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-<li>Commitment, methods of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-<li>Communicable diseases, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-<li>Compression of brain, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-<li>Concord State Hospital, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-<li>Concussion of brain, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-<li>Continuous baths, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-<li>Copp, Owen, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li>Cramer, <a href="#Page_463">463</a></li>
-<li>Criminal responsibility, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li>Criminal responsibility, laws relating to, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-<li>Criminals, psychoses in, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-<li>Crowbar case, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-<li>Cullen, William, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
-<li>Curtin, Roland G., <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-<li>Cushing, Harvey, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_D" name="IX_D"></a>DaCosta, J. C., <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-<li>Davenport, Chas. B., <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-<li>Davis, Thomas K., <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li>Death rate:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>diseases of the nervous system, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
- <li>mental diseases, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li>registration area, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- <li>state hospitals, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Definition of insanity, legal, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-<li>DeFursac, J. R., <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-<li><a class="pagenum" name="Page_539" id="Page_539">[539]</a>Delirium:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>acute, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
- <li>collapse, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
- <li>exhaustion, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
- <li>febrile, <a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
- <li>infection, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
- <li>initial, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
- <li>tremens, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Dementia praecox, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
- <li>hebephrenia, <a href="#Page_441">441</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
- <li>katatonia, <a href="#Page_441">441</a></li>
- <li>Kraepelin's views, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
- <li>mental mechanisms, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
- <li>schizophrenia, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Diagnosis, errors in, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-<li>Dickens, Charles, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-<li>Diefendorf, A. R., <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-<li>Diem, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-<li>Diseases, communicable, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-<li>Diseases, general case rate, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-<li>Diseases, general, cause of death, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-<li>Diseases, mental, social and economic importance of, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-<li>Dix, Dorothea, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-<li>Dreyfus, G, L., <a href="#Page_429">429</a></li>
-<li>Drugs and other exogenous poisons, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>arsenic, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
- <li>bromides, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
- <li>chloral hydrate, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
- <li>cocaine, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
- <li>gases, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
- <li>lead, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
- <li>mercury, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
- <li>morphine, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
- <li>silver, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Drusen, senile, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-<li>Dublin, Louis I., <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-<li>Dunlap, Chas. B., <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_E" name="IX_E"></a>Earle, Pliny, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-<li>Eastern State Hospital, Ky., <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-<li>Eastern State Hospital, Va., <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-<li>Economic loss on account of mental diseases, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-<li>Economo, C. von, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-<li>Eder, Montague D., <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-<li>Edsall, David L., <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li>Embolism, cerebral, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-<li>Emerson, H., <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li>Encephalitis lethargica, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-<li>Endocrinology and psychiatry, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-<li>Epilepsy, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>delimitation of psychoses, <a href="#Page_487">487</a></li>
- <li>epileptic delirium, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
- <li>epileptic deterioration, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
- <li>epileptic dream states, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
- <li>epileptic ill-humor, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
- <li>etiology, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
- <li>pathology of, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_488">488</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Epileptic personality, <a href="#Page_478">478</a></li>
-<li>Epileptics, institutions for, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li>Erlenmeyer, A., <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-<li>Errors in diagnosis, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-<li>Esquirol, J. E. D. 142, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
-<li>Etiology of mental diseases, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>alcoholism, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>arteriosclerosis, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>brain tumor, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>cerebral syphilis, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>epilepsy, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>heredity, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
- <li>other factors, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
- <li>pellagra, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>psychic traumata, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>senility, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- <li>traumatism, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Evolution of the modern hospital, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li>Exhaustion delirium, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-<li>Expenditures, hospital, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_F" name="IX_F"></a>Falret, J., <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-<li>Falta, Wm., <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-<li>Farrar, Clarence B., <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-<li>Febrile delirium, <a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
-<li>Fernald, Walter E., <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-<li>Ferri, E., <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-<li>Feuchertsleben, E. von, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-<li>Flemming, C. F., <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-<li>Focal symptoms due to brain lesions, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li>Foreign born in hospitals, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-<li>Fracastoro, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-<li>Franz, S. I., <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-<li>Friedreich, J. B., <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-<li>Freud, S., <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495</a>, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
-<li>Furbush, Edith M., <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_G" name="IX_G"></a>Galen, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-<li>Garofalo, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-<li>Garretson, W. V. P., <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li>Gases, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li>General diseases:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>case rate, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
- <li>cause of death, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li><a class="pagenum" name="Page_540" id="Page_540">[540]</a>General paralysis, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
- <li>etiology, <a href="#Page_294">294</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
- <li>juvenile form, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
- <li>pathology, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
- <li>physical signs, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
- <li>types, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Georgia State Sanitarium, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-<li>Gesell, Arnold, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li>Goddard, H. H., <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
-<li>Goldberger, J., <a href="#Page_381">381</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-<li>Gonadal stigmata, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li>Grasset, Joseph, <a href="#Page_509">509</a></li>
-<li>Gregor, A., <a href="#Page_386">386</a></li>
-<li>Griesinger, W., <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_H" name="IX_H"></a>Hamilton, A. S., <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-<li>Handcock, Thos., <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-<li>Harlow, John M., <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-<li>Harrisburg State Hospital, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-<li>Hartford Retreat, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-<li>Hartung, M. U., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-<li>Haslam, J., <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-<li>Hecker, E., <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a></li>
-<li>Heinroth, J., <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
-<li>Hemorrhage, cerebral, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-<li>Henderson, D. K., <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-<li>Heredity, Mendelian, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-<li>Heredity in mental diseases, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
-<li>Heubner, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-<li>Hippocrates, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
-<li>History-taking, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-<li>Hitzig, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-<li>Hoch, Aug., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-<li>Holmes, Oliver Wendell, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-<li>Hospitals:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>Albany, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
- <li>Bellevue, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
- <li>Bloomingdale, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
- <li>Boston Psychopathic, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
- <li>Boston State, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li>Brattleboro Retreat, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li>Columbia State, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
- <li>Columbus State, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li>Concord State, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
- <li>Eastern State, Ky., <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
- <li>Eastern State, Va., <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
- <li>Georgia State Sanitarium, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
- <li>Harrisburg State, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
- <li>Hartford Retreat, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
- <li>Maryland, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
- <li>McLean, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
- <li>New York, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
- <li>Pennsylvania, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
- <li>Philadelphia, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
- <li>Sheppard and Enoch Pratt, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
- <li>Spring Grove State, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
- <li>St. Elizabeths, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
- <li>Trenton State, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
- <li>Utica State, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
- <li>Worcester State, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Hospital social service, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li>Hospital treatment, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-<li>Hübner, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-<li>Hunt, J. Ramsey, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li>Huntington, Geo., <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-<li>Huntington's chorea, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>classification, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
- <li>mental symptoms, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Hurst, A. F., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-<li>Huss, Magnus, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-<li>Hydrotherapy, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-<li>Hysteria, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_I" name="IX_I"></a>Idiocy, <a href="#Page_527">527</a>, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a></li>
-<li>Imbecility, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
-<li>Immigration and mental diseases, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-<li>Immigration laws, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-<li>Incidence of mental diseases, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-<li>Infantilismus, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-<li>Infection delirium, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-<li>Insanity, legal definition of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-<li>Institutions for mental defectives, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li>Institutions for mental diseases, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-<li>Involution melancholia, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>(see Melancholia)</li></ul></li>
-<li>Ireland, M. W., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_J" name="IX_J"></a>Janet, Pierre, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-<li>Jelliffe, S. E., <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
-<li>Jung, C. G., <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_K" name="IX_K"></a>Kahlbaum, K. 222, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a></li>
-<li>Kaplan, D. M., <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li>Karpas, M. J., <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-<li>Kehrer, F., <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-<li>Kempf, E. J. 245</li>
-<li>Kirby, Geo. H., <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-<li>Kirkbride, Thos., <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-<li>Kline, Geo. M., <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-<li>Knapp, P. C., <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-<li>Knauer, A., <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-<li>Koch, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-<li>Koch, M. L., <a href="#Page_380">380</a></li>
-<li>Koller, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-<li>Köppen, M., <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-<li><a class="pagenum" name="Page_541" id="Page_541">[541]</a>Koren, John, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-<li>Korsakow's psychosis, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-<li>Kraepelin, E., <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>, <a href="#Page_532">532</a></li>
-<li>Krafft-Ebing, R. von, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_L" name="IX_L"></a>Lambert, C. I., <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-<li>Laws, immigration, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-<li>Laws, Massachusetts, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-<li>Laws, New York, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-<li>Laws relating to criminal responsibility, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-<li>Laws relating to mental diseases, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-<li>Lead psychoses, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-<li>Legal definition of insanity, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-<li>Legislation and administration, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-<li>Lesions of the adrenals, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-<li>Lhermitte, J., <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li>Life insurance statistics, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-<li>Linnaeus, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li>Local boards of control, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-<li>Locomotor ataxia, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-<li>Lombroso, C., <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a></li>
-<li>Louis, Pierre, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-<li>Lust, F., <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_M" name="IX_M"></a>MacCurdy, J. T., <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-<li>Magnan, V., <a href="#Page_466">466</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-<li>Manic-depressive psychoses, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
- <li>depressed type, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
- <li>manic type, <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
- <li>mixed type, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
- <li>psychological mechanisms, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>, <a href="#Page_426">426</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mannheim, Paul, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-<li>Maryland Hospital, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-<li>Massachusetts legislation, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-<li>Massachusetts temporary care laws, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-<li>Maudsley, H., <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a></li>
-<li>McCarthy, D. J., <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-<li>McLean Hospital, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-<li>McNaughton case, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li>Melancholia, involution, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mendel, E., <a href="#Page_463">463</a></li>
-<li>Mendel, G., <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-<li>Mendelian heredity, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-<li>Meningitis, tubercular, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-<li>Mental cases in jails, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-<li>Mental deficiency, <a href="#Page_524">524</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>criminals, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
- <li>etiology, <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
- <li>institutions for, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
- <li>pfropfhebephrenia, <a href="#Page_535">535</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
- <li>types, <a href="#Page_526">526</a>, <a href="#Page_527">527</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mental diseases:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>appropriations for, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
- <li>classification, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
- <li>criminal responsibility, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
- <li>death rate, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li>economic loss, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
- <li>expenditures for, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
- <li>heredity in, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a></li>
- <li>history-taking, <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
- <li>hospital treatment, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
- <li>incidence of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
- <li>institutional care of, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
- <li>laws relating to, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
- <li>mental examination, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
- <li>military problems, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
- <li>physical examination, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
- <li>social and economic importance, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
- <li>state care of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mental hygiene movement, the, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>Canadian committee, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
- <li>French society, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
- <li>National Committee, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
- <li>objects and purposes, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
- <li>state societies, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mercury psychoses, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li>Methods of commitment, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-<li>Methods of control, <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-<li>Metropolitan Life Insurance statistics, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-<li>Meyer, Adolf, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
-<li>Meyer, E., <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-<li>Meynert, Th., <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
-<li>Miliary plaques, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-<li>Military problems, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-<li>Misaurus, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
-<li>Mitchell, S. Weir, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
-<li>Möbius, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
-<li>Modern hospital, evolution of the, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li>Modern progress of psychiatry, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-<li>Mongeri, L., <a href="#Page_384">384</a></li>
-<li><a class="pagenum" name="Page_542" id="Page_542">[542]</a>Morel, Jules, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a></li>
-<li>Morgagni, G. B., <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-<li>Morons, <a href="#Page_526">526</a></li>
-<li>Morphine psychoses, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-<li>Mortality statistics, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-<li>Mortality statistics, wage earners, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-<li>Mott, Frederick W., <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-<li>Multiple sclerosis, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-<li>Murray, J. H., <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_N" name="IX_N"></a>National Committee for Mental Hygiene, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-<li>Neubürger, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li>Neurasthenia, <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
-<li>Neuritis, central, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-<li>Neuroses, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
-<li>New York Hospital, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li>New York laws, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-<li>Niles, G. M., <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
-<li>Nissl, F., <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
-<li>Nolan, Wm. J., <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-<li>Nonne, Max, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-<li>Norbury, Frank P., <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-<li>Nordau, Max, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a></li>
-<li>Nothnagel's syndrome, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li>Nurses, training schools for, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_O" name="IX_O"></a>Observation wards, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-<li>Occupational therapy, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-<li>Occupations, <a href="#Page_32">32</a></li>
-<li>O'Malley, Mary, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
-<li>Opium, use of, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-<li>Oppenheim, H., <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-<li>Orton, Samuel T., <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-<li>Osler, Wm., <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-<li>Out-patient clinics, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_P" name="IX_P"></a>Paralysis agitans, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-<li>Paranoia and paranoid conditions, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_473">473</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Parant, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-<li>Paraphrenia, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a></li>
-<li>Parathyroid stigmata, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-<li>Pathologists, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-<li>Paton, S., 228 364, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-<li>Pavilion F., Albany Hospital, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-<li>Pellagra, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>classification, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
- <li>etiology, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
- <li>psychoses, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
- <li>symptoms, <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Pennsylvania Hospital, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-<li>Pfropfhebephrenia, <a href="#Page_535">535</a></li>
-<li>Philadelphia Hospital, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li>Phipps Clinic, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-<li>Physical examination, <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-<li>Pilgrim, Chas. W., <a href="#Page_67">67</a></li>
-<li>Pineal stigmata, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li>Pinel, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-<li>Pituitary stigmata, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-<li>Plater, Felix, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li>Plato, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-<li>Plocquet, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-<li>Pollock, Horatio M., <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
-<li>Portal, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-<li>Post-infectious psychoses, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-<li>Post-rheumatic psychoses, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-<li>Pritchard, J. C., <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-<li>Procopiu, G., <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
-<li>Psychasthenia, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
-<li>Psychiatric Institute, N. Y., <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-<li>Psychiatry, modern progress of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-<li>Psychiatry of the war, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-<li>Psychoneuroses and neuroses, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>classification, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
- <li>hysteria, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
- <li>neurasthenia, <a href="#Page_498">498</a></li>
- <li>psychasthenia, <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Psychopathic Hospital, Boston, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-<li>Psychopathic Hospital, development of the, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-<li>Psychopathic Hospital, University of Michigan, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-<li>Psychopathic hospitals, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-<li>Psychopathic personality, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>classification, <a href="#Page_521">521</a>, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
- <li>the antisocial, <a href="#Page_519">519</a></li>
- <li>the eccentric, <a href="#Page_516">516</a></li>
- <li>the excitable, <a href="#Page_511">511</a></li>
- <li>the impulsive, <a href="#Page_515">515</a></li>
- <li>the quarrelsome, <a href="#Page_521">521</a></li>
- <li>the unstable, <a href="#Page_513">513</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Psychoses:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>alcoholic, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
- <li>arteriosclerotic, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
- <li>dementia praecox, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
- <li>due to drugs and other exogenous poisons, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
- <li>epileptic, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
- <li>general paralysis, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
- <li>involution melancholia, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
- <li>manic-depressive, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
- <li>of criminals, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
- <li><a class="pagenum" name="Page_543" id="Page_543">[543]</a>of different races, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
- <li>of recruits, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
- <li>of the civil war, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
- <li>of the Russo-Japanese war, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
- <li>paranoia and paranoid conditions, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
- <li>psychoneuroses and neuroses, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
- <li>senile, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
- <li>traumatic, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
- <li>with brain tumor, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
- <li>with cerebral syphilis, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
- <li>with Huntington's chorea, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
- <li>with mental deficiency, <a href="#Page_524">524</a></li>
- <li>with other brain and nervous diseases, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
- <li>with other somatic diseases, <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
- <li>with pellagra, <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
- <li>with psychopathic personality, <a href="#Page_504">504</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_Q" name="IX_Q"></a>Quincke, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_R" name="IX_R"></a>Races of patients, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-<li>Races, psychoses of, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-<li>Raeder, O. J., <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-<li>Ray, Isaac, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-<li>Rayner, H., <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li>Régis, E., <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
-<li>Rehm, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-<li>Richards, R. L., <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-<li>Roberts, S. R., <a href="#Page_382">382</a></li>
-<li>Roman classification, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li>Rosanoff, A. J., <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-<li>Rush, Benjamin, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-<li>Russell, Wm. L., <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_S" name="IX_S"></a>Sachs, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-<li>Salmon, Thos. W., <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
-<li>Salvarsan therapy, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-<li>Sandy, Wm. A., <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
-<li>Sankey, W. H., <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
-<li>Sauvages, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li>Savage, G. H., <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-<li>Schaudinn, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-<li>Schizophrenia, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a></li>
-<li>Schläger, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-<li>Scholz, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-<li>Schüle, H., <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a></li>
-<li>Schuster, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-<li>Seelert, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
-<li>Senile drusen, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-<li>Senile psychoses, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>Alzheimer's disease, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
- <li>delirious and confused states, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
- <li>depressed and agitated types, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
- <li>errors in diagnosis, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Senile psychoses, paranoid forms, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>pathology, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
- <li>presbyophrenia, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
- <li>presenile conditions, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
- <li>senile deterioration, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Shadwell, A., <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-<li>Shell shock, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-<li>Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-<li>Sibbald, J., <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-<li>Silver psychoses, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li>Simon, T. W., <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-<li>Singer, H. Douglas, <a href="#Page_387">387</a></li>
-<li>Sinkler, Wharton, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-<li>Smith, Frank R., <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
-<li>Social and economic importance of mental diseases, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-<li>Social service, hospital, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-<li>Somatic diseases with psychoses, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>acute delirium, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
- <li>amentia, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
- <li>classification, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
- <li>collapse delirium, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
- <li>febrile delirium, <a href="#Page_396">396</a></li>
- <li>history, <a href="#Page_392">392</a></li>
- <li>infection delirium, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
- <li>infectious exhaustions, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
- <li>initial delirium, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
- <li>post-infectious psychoses, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
- <li>post-rheumatic psychoses, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
- <li>types, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Southard, E. E., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-<li>Specht, <a href="#Page_435">435</a></li>
-<li>Spratling, Wm. P., <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
-<li>Spring Grove State Hospital, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li>St. Elizabeths Hospital, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-<li>State care of mental diseases, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
-<li>State hospitals:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>construction, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
- <li>death rate, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
- <li>location, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
- <li>management of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
- <li>number of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
- <li>organization and functions, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
- <li>reception buildings, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Statistics:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>case rate, general diseases, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
- <li>communicable diseases, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
- <li>death rate and psychoses, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li>death rate, mental diseases, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
- <li>epileptics, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
- <li>errors in diagnosis, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
- <li>hospitals for mental diseases, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
- <li>incidence of mental diseases, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
- <li><a class="pagenum" name="Page_544" id="Page_544">[544]</a>mental defectives, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
- <li>mortality, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
- <li>psychopathic hospitals, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
- <li>psychoses:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>alcoholic, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
- <li>dementia praecox, <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
- <li>epileptic, <a href="#Page_488">488</a></li>
- <li>general paralysis, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
- <li>manic-depressive, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
- <li>melancholia, involution, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
- <li>paranoia or paranoid conditions, <a href="#Page_474">474</a></li>
- <li>psychoneuroses and neuroses, <a href="#Page_503">503</a></li>
- <li>senile, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
- <li>traumatic, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
- <li>with brain or nervous diseases, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
- <li>with brain tumor, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
- <li>with cerebral arteriosclerosis, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
- <li>with cerebral syphilis, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
- <li>with drugs or other exogenous poisons, <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
- <li>with Huntington's chorea, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
- <li>with mental deficiency, <a href="#Page_536">536</a></li>
- <li>with pellagra, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
- <li>with psychopathic personality, <a href="#Page_522">522</a></li>
- <li>with somatic diseases, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
- </ul></li>
- <li>wage earners, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Stigmata:
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>adrenal, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
- <li>gonadal, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
- <li>parathyroid, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
- <li>pineal, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
- <li>pituitary, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
- <li>thymus, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
- <li>thyroid, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Stöcker, Wm., <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-<li>Stransky, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
-<li>Straus, S. G., <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li>Striatum syndrome, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-<li>Sutton, Thos., <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-<li>Sydenham, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-<li>Symptoms due to brain lesions, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li>Syphilis, cerebral, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_T" name="IX_T"></a>Tabes, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-<li>Tanzi, <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
-<li>Temporary care laws, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-<li>Thalmic syndrome, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li>Thomas, Henry M., <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-<li>Thymus stigmata, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li>Thymus subinvolution, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-<li>Thyroid stigmata, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
-<li>Thrombosis, cerebral, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-<li>Timme, Walter, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-<li>Training schools for nurses, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
-<li>Traumatic psychoses, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>
- <ul class="IXa">
- <li>compression, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
- <li>concussion, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
- <li>delimitation, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
- <li>Friedmann's complex, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
- <li>mental enfeeblement, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
- <li>Meyer's classification, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
- <li>statistics, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
- <li>traumatic constitution, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
- <li>traumatic neuroses, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Tredgold, A. F., <a href="#Page_525">525</a></li>
-<li>Trenton State Hospital, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
-<li>Treponema pallidum, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-<li>Tubercular meningitis, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-<li>Tuke, D. Hack, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
-<li>Turner, <a href="#Page_437">437</a></li>
-<li>Turro, R., <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_U" name="IX_U"></a>Ullman, A. E., <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-<li>Utica State Hospital, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_V" name="IX_V"></a>Verrücktheit, <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
-<li>Voegtlin, Karl, <a href="#Page_380">380</a></li>
-<li>Vogel, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li>Vogt, Cecile and Oskar, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li>Voluntary patients, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_W" name="IX_W"></a>Wage earners, mortality statistics, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
-<li>Wahnsinn, <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
-<li>War psychoses, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-<li>Warthin, Alfred S., <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-<li>Wassermann reaction, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-<li>Waters, C. O., <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-<li>Weber-Gubler syndrome, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li>Weber, Hermann, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-<li>Wernicke, C., <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_444">444</a></li>
-<li>Westphal, A., <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-<li>Weygandt, Wm., <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-<li>White, Wm. A., <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a></li>
-<li>Widal, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-<li>Williams, Frankwood E., <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-<li>Willis, Thos., <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-<li>Wilson, J. C., <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li>Wilson, S. A. K., <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li>Wilson's syndrome, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li>Wolfsohn, Julian M., <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li>Worcester, Dean A., <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-<li>Worcester State Hospital, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-<li>Wright, R. B., <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li><a id="IX_Z" name="IX_Z"></a>Ziehen, Th., <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>,
-<a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3 class="fn">FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Cabot, Richard C.: Diagnostic Pitfalls Identified During a Study of
-3000 Autopsies. Journal of the American Medical Association. December
-28, 1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Dublin, Louis I.: Mortality Statistics of Insured Wage Earners and
-Their Families. 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Statistical Directory of State Institutions, Department of Commerce,
-Bureau of the Census, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Pollock, Horatio M., and Furbush, Edith M.: Patients with Mental
-Disease, Mental Defects, etc., in Institutions of the United States.
-Mental Hygiene, January, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Pollock, Horatio M., and Furbush, Edith M.: Patients with Mental
-Disease, Mental Defects, etc., in Institutions of the United States.
-Mental Hygiene, January, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Ball, Jau Don: The Correlation of Neurology, Psychiatry, Psychology
-and General Medicine as Scientific Aids to Industrial Efficiency.
-The American Journal of Insanity, April, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Nineteenth Annual Report of the State Commission in Lunacy, N. Y.,
-1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Curtin, Roland G.: The Philadelphia General Hospital. Philadelphia
-General Hospital Reports Vol. VIII, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and Canada,
-Vol. III, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Friends' Asylum for the Insane, Frankford, Pa. Annual Report, 1853.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and Canada,
-Vol. II, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and Canada,
-Vol. II, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Reports and other documents relating to the State Hospital at Worcester,
-Mass. Published by order of the Senate, Boston, 1837.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Reports and other documents relating to the state Hospital at
-Worcester, Mass. Published by order of the Senate, Boston, 1837.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and Canada,
-Vol. III, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Dickens, Charles: American Notes, 1842.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United states and Canada,
-Vol. III, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> The Institutional Care of the Insane in the United States and Canada,
-Vol. III, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Koren, John: Summaries of State Laws Relating to the Insane. National
-Committee for Mental Hygiene, New York, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Koren, John: Summaries of State Laws Relating to the Insane.
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene, New York, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Salmon, Thomas W.: The State Care of the Insane under State Boards
-of Control. State Hospital Bulletin, February 15, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Kline, George M.: Proposed Reorganization and Correlation of State
-Institutions in Massachusetts. American Journal of Insanity, January,
-1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Thirteenth Annual Report, New York State Hospital Commission. Albany,
-1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Fourth Annual Report of the Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases.
-Boston, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Mitchell, S. Weir: Address before the Fiftieth Annual Meeting of
-the American Medico-Psychological Association. Transactions, 1894.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Copp, Owen: Barriers to the Treatment of Mental Patients. Mental
-Hygiene, April, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Kirby, G. H.: Guides for History Taking and Clinical Examination
-of Psychiatric Cases. 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Wright, R. B.: Medical Staff Manual&mdash;Hydrotherapy. Boston State
-Hospital. 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Sibbald, John: Psychiatry in General Hospitals. Review of Neurology
-and Psychiatry. January, 1903.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Smith, Frank R.: Extracts from the Writings of Wilhelm Griesinger,
-a Prophet of the Newer Psychiatry. American Journal of Insanity,
-July, 1903.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Earle, Pliny: The Psychopathic Hospital of the Future. Address at
-the laying of the corner stone of the General Hospital for the Insane
-of the State of Connecticut, June 20, 1867. Utica, 1867.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: The Aims of a Psychiatric Clinic. Proceedings of the
-Mental Hygiene Conference at the College of the City of New York,
-November, 1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Beers, Clifford W.: A Mind That Found Itself, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Notes and Comments. The American Journal of Insanity, July, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Farrar, Clarence B.: The Autopathography of C. W. Beers. American
-Journal of Insanity, July, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Notes and Comments. The American Journal of Insanity, July, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Beers, Clifford W.: A Mind That Found Itself. Revised. Fourth
-edition, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Beers, Clifford W.: A Mind That Found Itself. Revised. Fourth
-edition, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Russell, William L.: Community Responsibilities in the Treatment
-of Mental Disorders. Mental Hygiene, July, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Notes and Comments. Mental Hygiene, July, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Ibid., October, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> White, William A.: Childhood: the Golden Period for Mental Hygiene.
-Mental Hygiene, April, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> Copp, Owen: The Duty of the State and the Physician to the Mental
-Patient. The Pennsylvania Medical Journal, December, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Burnham, William H.: The Scope and Aim of Mental Hygiene.
-Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, December 19, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Gesell, Arnold: Mental Hygiene and the Public School. Mental
-Hygiene, January, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> Campbell, C. Macfie: The Responsibilities of the Universities in Promoting
-Mental Hygiene. Mental Hygiene, April, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Cobb, Stanley: Applications of Psychiatry to Industrial Hygiene.
-The Journal of Industrial Hygiene, November, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Southard, Elmer E.: Notes and Comments. Mental Hygiene. January,
-1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> Clouston, T. S.: Unsoundness of Mind. 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Morgagni, G. B.: De Sedibus et Causis Morborum per Anatomem
-Indegatis. 1761.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> Journal of Mental Science. January, 1870.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> Clouston, T. S.: Unsoundness of Mind. 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Mendel, Gregor J.: Versuche über Pflanzen Hybriden. 1865.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Davenport, Charles B.: Heredity in Relation to Eugenics. 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Rosanoff, A. J., and Orr, Florence: A Study of Heredity in the Light
-of the Mendelian Theory. American Journal of Insanity, October,
-1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Rosanoff, A. J.: On the Inheritance of the Neuropathic Constitution.
-New York State Hospitals Bulletin, August 15, 1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> Kraepelin, Emil: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 1. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Kraepelin, Emil: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 1. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> Kraepelin, Emil: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 1. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in Relation
-to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of Nervous
-and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. 1, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in Relation
-to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of Nervous
-and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. 1, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> Twenty-fifth Annual Report of the State Hospital Commission. Albany,
-1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in Relation
-to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of
-Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. I, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> Thirtieth Annual Report of the State Hospital Commission. Albany,
-1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Thirty-first Annual Report of the State Hospital Commission. Albany,
-1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> Salmon, Thomas W.: Immigration and the Mixture of Races in Relation
-to the Mental Health of the Nation. Modern Treatment of
-Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. Vol. I, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Ray, Isaac: A Treatise on the Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity.
-1838.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> Ray, Isaac: A Treatise on the Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity.
-1838.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> Report of the Committee on Medical Expert Testimony. Transactions
-of the American Medico-Psychological Association. 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Anderson, Victor V.: Mental Disease and Delinquency. Mental
-Hygiene, April, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> May, James V.: Mental Diseases and Criminal Responsibility. New
-York State Hospitals Bulletin, November, 1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Nolan, William J.: Some Characteristics of the Criminal Insane. The
-State Hospital Quarterly, May, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion. Part Third.
-Vol. 1, 1888.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> Weygandt, W.: Psychiatry in the Field. Medizinische Klinik. Abstract
-of, Journal of American Medical Association, November 7, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Richards, R. L.: Nervous and Mental Disorders in their Military Relations.
-Modern Treatment of Nervous and Mental Disease. White
-and Jelliffe, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> Physical Examination of the First Million Draft Recruits. Bulletin
-No. 11, War Department, Burgeon General, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> Bailey, Pearce: Reconstruction in Nervous and Mental Diseases, Medical
-Record, June 16, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Farrar, Clarence B.: The Problem of Mental Diseases in the Canadian
-Army. Mental Hygiene, July, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Oppenheim, H.: The War and the Traumatic Neuroses. Berlin klin.
-Woch., March 15, 1915. Abstract of War Work Committee of the
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> Nonne, Max: Shall War Injuries Still Be Diagnosed as Traumatic
-Neuroses? Med. klin., Berlin, August 1, 1915. Abstract of the Journal
-of the American Medical Association. Sept. 18, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> Binswanger, Otto: Hystero-somatic Symptoms in War Hysteria.
-Monat. für Psych. u. Neurol., Berlin, July and August, 1915. Abstract
-of War Work Committee of the National Committee for Mental
-Hygiene, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Wolfsohn, Julian M.: The Predisposing Factors of War Psychoneuroses.
-Lancet, London, Feb. 2, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Salmon, Thomas W.: The Care and Treatment of Mental Diseases
-and War Neuroses (Shell Shock) in the British Army. War Work
-Committee of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> Mott, Frederick W.: Effects of High Explosives upon the Central
-Nervous System. Lancet, London, February 26, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Mott, Frederick W.: The Brain in Shell Shock. Brit. Med. Journal,
-November 10, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Eder, Montague D.: War Shock: the Psychoneuroses in War. Psychology
-and Treatment. 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Ballet, Gilbert, and de Fursac, Rogues J.: The Concussion Psychoses:
-Psychoses from Nervous "Commotion" or Emotional Shock. Paris
-Méd., January 1, 1916. Abstract of the War Work Committee of the
-National Committee for Mental Hygiene. 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Lust, F.: War Neuroses and Prisoners. München Med. Woch., Dec.
-26, 1916. Abstract of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
-Feb. 24, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> MacCurdy, John T.: War Neuroses. Psychiatric Bulletin, July, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Hartung, M. U.: German Experiences of War Neuroses. Zeitschrift
-für d. ges. Neur. u. Psych., 1918. Abstract of the Journal of Nervous
-and Mental Diseases, Oct., 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> Hurst, A. F.: Observations of the Etiology and Treatment of War
-Neuroses. Brit. Med. Journal, September 29, 1918. Abstract of the
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. Oct., 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Ireland, Merritte W.: Care of the Army's Mental Defectives. Journal
-of Nervous and Mental Diseases, December, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Salmon, Thomas W.: The Insane Veteran and a Nation's Honor.
-The American Legion Weekly, January 28, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Falta, Wilhelm: The Ductless Glandular Diseases. Trans. by Milton
-K. Meyers. 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> Blumgarten, A. S.: The Rôle of the Endocrine System in Internal
-Medicine. New York Medical Journal, February 5, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> Kaplan, D. M.: Internal Secretions. New York Medical Journal,
-February 5, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> Garretson, William V. P.: The Dominance of the Endocrines. New
-York Medical Journal, May 17, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> Falta, Wilhelm: The Ductless Glandular Diseases. Trans. by Milton
-K. Meyers. 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> Raeder, Oscar J.: Endocrine Imbalance in the Feebleminded. Journal
-of the American Medical Association, August 21, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Neubürger: Arch. für Psychiatrie. Vol. 55. Abstract of, Psychiatric
-Bulletin, January, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Walter and Krumbach: Zeitschrift f. d. g. Neurologie und Psychiatrie.
-Vol. 28. Abstract of, Psychiatric Bulletin, January, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> Emerson, H.: A Note on the Incidence of Status Lymphaticus in
-Dementia Praecox. Arch. Int. Medicine, December, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> Davis, Thomas K.: Status Lymphaticus; Its Occurrence and Significance
-in the War Neuroses. Arch. of Neurology and Psychiatry,
-October, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Straus, S. G.: Thyroidal Constipation. New York Medical Journal,
-February 14, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Turro, R.: Emotions and Endocrine Functions. Abstract of Journal
-of the American Medical Association, December 13, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Knauer, A., and Billigheimer, E.: Concerning Organic and Functional
-Disturbances of the Vegetative Nervous System with Special Reference
-to the Fear Neuroses. Zeitschrift f. d. g. Neurologie und Psychiatrie,
-1919, Vol. 50. Abstract of the Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases,
-August, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Vol. 4, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Vol. 4, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> Mott, Frederick W.: British Medical Journal, November, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> Timme, Walter: Clinical Endocrinology. Neurological Bulletin, January
-1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. Seventh edition, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Paton, Stewart: Psychiatry. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> Simon, T. W.: The Occurrence of Convulsions in Dementia Praecox,
-Manic-Depressive Insanity and the Allied Groups. The State Hospital
-Bulletin, November 15, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Ullman, A. E.: Proceedings of the Inter-hospital Meeting at the Central
-Islip State Hospital. The State Hospital Bulletin, November 15,
-1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> Thirty-first Annual Report of the New York State Hospital Commission.
-1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. H.: A Manual of Psychological Medicine.
-1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. H.: A Manual of Psychological Medicine.
-1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> Jolliffe, S. E.: A Summary of the Origins, Transformations and
-Present-day Trends of the Paranoia Concept. The Medical Record,
-April 5, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. H.: A Manual of Psychological Medicine.
-1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Pritchard, J. C.: A Treatise on Diseases of the Nervous System. 1822.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification der Seelenstörungen, etc.
-Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1844.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> Pritchard, J. C.: A Treatise on Insanity. 1835.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> Griesinger, W.: Die Pathologie und Therapie der psychischen Krankheiten.
-1845.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> Krafft-Ebing, R. v.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Third edition. 1888.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Ziehen, Th.: Psychiatrie, 1894.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> Savage, G. H.: Insanity and Allied Neuroses. Fourth edition. 1907.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> Savage, G. H.: Insanity and Allied Neuroses. Fourth Edition. 1907.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> Kempf, E. J.: The Mechanistic Classification of Neuroses and Psychoses
-Produced by Distortion of Anatomic-Affective Functions. The
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. August, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Southard, E. E.: A Key to the Practical Grouping of Mental Diseases.
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. January, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> Southard, E. E.: Recent American Classification of Mental Diseases.
-Transactions, American Medico-Psychological Association, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> Southard, E. E.: A Key to the Practical Grouping of Mental Diseases.
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. January, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> DaCosta, J. C.: Modern Surgery. Seventh edition. 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Harlow, John M.: Recovery from the Passage of an Iron Bar through
-the Head. Boston, 1868.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> Witmer, Lightner: Brain: Functions of the Cerebral Cortex. Reference
-Handbook of the Medical Sciences. 1899.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: The Anatomical Facts and Clinical Varieties of Traumatic
-Insanity. Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association, 1903.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: The Anatomical Facts and Clinical Varieties of Traumatic
-Insanity. Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association, 1903.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: The Anatomical Facts and Clinical Varieties of Traumatic
-Insanity. Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association, 1903.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> Griesinger, W.: Mental Pathology and Therapeutics. Translated by
-C. L. Robertson and James Rutherford. 1867.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2. 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> Clouston, T. S.: Unsoundness of Mind. 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> Ziehen, Th.: Psychiatrie. 1894.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> Southard, E. E.: Anatomical Findings in Senile Dementia, etc. Transactions
-of the American Medico-Psychological Association, 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> Lambert, Charles I.: A Clinical-Anatomical Classification of the Senile
-and Arteriosclerotic Disorders. Transactions of the American Medico-Psychological
-Association. 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine. Vol. 4, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> Lhermitte, J.: The Anatomical and Clinical Syndromes of the Corpus
-Striatum. Translated by J. H. Huddleson and W. M. Kraus. The
-Neurological Bulletin. May, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Krafft-Ebing, R. v.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. 1888.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> Régis, E.: A Practical Manual of Mental Medicine. Translated by
-H. M. Bannister. 1894.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> May, James V.: A Résumé of the Work of the Pathological Laboratory
-of the Binghamton State Hospital. July 1, 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> May, James V.: A Review of the Recent Studies of General Paresis.
-American Journal of Insanity. April, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> Mott, F. W.: Oliver-Sharpey Lectures on the Cerebro-Spinal Fluid.
-Lancet, July 2 and 10, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> Alzheimer, Alois: Histologische Studien zur Differentialdiagnose des
-Progres s. Paralyse. Hist. und Histopath. Arbeiten. 1904.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> Movimiento de la Casa de Orates de Santiago, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> Oppenheim H.: Diseases of the Nervous System. Translated by Edward
-E. Mayer, 1900.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine. Vol, 4, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> Dunlap, Charles B.: Anatomical Borderline between the So-called
-Syphilitic and Metasyphilitic Disorders in the Brain and Spinal Cord.
-American Journal of Insanity, April, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine. Vol. 4, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> Raeder, Oscar J.: Interim Report of the Neurosyphilis Investigation
-of the Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases. Transactions
-of the American Medico-Psychological Association, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> Warthin, Alfred S.: The Persistence of Active Lesions in the Tissue
-of Clinically Inactive or "Cured" Syphilis. American Journal of Medical
-Sciences. October, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> McCarthy, Daniel J.: Paralysis Agitans, Chorea, etc. Modern Medicine,
-Osler and McCrae. 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> Hamilton, Arthur S.: A Report of Twenty-seven Cases of Chronic
-Progressive Chorea. American Journal of Insanity. January, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> Diefendorf, A. Ross: Neurographs. May, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Cushing, Harvey. Tumors of the Brain and Meninges. Modern Medicine,
-Osier and McCrae. 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> Redlich, E. The Pathogenesis of Psychic Disturbances in Brain
-Tumors. Reviewed by Morris J. Karpas. State Hospitals Bulletin,
-June, 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> Thomas, Henry M.: Diseases of the Cerebral Bloodvessels. Modern
-Medicine, Osler and McCrae. 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> Thomas, Henry M.: Diseases of the Cerebral Bloodvessels. Modern
-Medicine. Osler and McCrae. 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> Camp, Carl D.: Paralysis Agitans and Multiple Sclerosis and Their
-Treatment. Modern Treatment of Nervous and Mental Diseases. White
-and Jelliffe. 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> McCarthy, Daniel J.: Paralysis Agitans, Chorea, etc. Modern Medicine.
-Osler and McCrae. 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> Henderson, D. K.: Disseminated Sclerosis with Psychosis. State
-Hospitals Bulletin. March, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Sachs, Bernard: Syphilitic Diseases of the Central Nervous System.
-Modern Medicine, Osler and McCrae. 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> McCarthy, Daniel J.: Paralysis Agitans, Chorea, etc. Modern Medicine,
-Osler and McCrae. 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> Economo, C. von: Wien Klin. Wochenschrift. July 26, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Buzzard, E., Farquhar, and Greenfield, J. G.: Lethargic Encephalitis
-Brain, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> Boveri, Piero: The Cerebrospinal Fluid in Epidemic Encephalitis.
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. October, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> Abrahamson, Isador: Mental Disturbances in Lethargic Encephalitis.
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. September, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> Kirby, George H., and Davis, Thomas K.: Psychotic Aspects of
-Epidemic Encephalitis. Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry. May,
-1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: Alcohol, Use of, as a Beverage in Asylums. A
-Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification die Seelenstörungen. Allgemeine
-Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1844.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> Clousten, T. S.: Clinical Lectures on Mental Diseases. 1898.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> Krafft-Ebing, R. von: Text book of Insanity. Translated by C. G.
-Chaddock. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: Modern Psychiatry: Its Possibilities and Responsibilities.
-New York State Hospitals Bulletin. September, 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> Stöcker, Wilhelm: Klinischer Beitrag zur Frage der Alkoholpsychosen.
-Jena, 1910. Abstract of Morris J. Karpas in State Hospitals Bulletin,
-December, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> Shadwell, A.: Article on Temperance. The Encyclopedia Britannica,
-Vol. 26, 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> Pollock, H. M.: A Statistical Study of 1739 Patients with Alcoholic
-Psychoses. State Hospital Bulletin. August, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> Krafft-Ebing, R. von: Text-book of Insanity. Translated by C. G.
-Chaddock. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> Paton, Stewart: Psychiatry. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine, Vol. 4, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> Erlenmeyer, A.: Die Morphiumsucht und ihre Behandlung. 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> Mannheim, Paul: Ueber das Cocain und seine Gefahren, etc. Zeitschrift
-für klinische Medicin. 1891.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> Erlenmeyer, A.: Cocainsucht. 1886. Abstract in Zentralblatt für
-Nervenheilkunde, Psychiatrie, etc., by Goldstein. November, 1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> Wilson, James C.: The Opium Habit and Kindred Affections. System
-of Medicine. Pepper. 1886.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> Casamajor, Louis: Bromide Intolerance and Bromide Poisoning.
-Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases. June, 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> Hoch, August: A Study of Some Cases of Delirium Produced by
-Drugs. Review of Neurology and Psychiatry. February, 1906.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> O'Malley, Mary, and Franz, Shepherd Ivory: A Case of Delirium
-Produced by Bromides. Bulletin No. 1. Government Hospital for
-the Insane. Washington, 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> Edsall, David L.: Chronic Lead, Arsenic and Other Forms of Poisoning.
-Modern Medicine. Osler and McCrae. Vol. 2, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> Rayner, H.: Journal of Mental Science. 1880.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> Edsall, David L.: Chronic Lead, Arsenic and Other Forms of Poisoning.
-Modern Medicine. Osler and McCrae. Vol. 2, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> O'Malley, Mary: A Psychosis Following Carbon-Monoxide Poisoning
-with Complete Recovery. American Journal of the Medical Sciences.
-June, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> Drug Addiction in the United States. Journal of Nervous and Mental
-Diseases. August, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> Niles, George M.: Pellagra. 1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> Babcock, J. W.: The Prevalence and Psychology of Pellagra. Transactions
-of the American Medico-Psychological Association, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> Studies in Pellagra. U. S. Treasury Department. Hygienic Bulletin.
-No. 106. January, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> Voegtlin, Carl: The Treatment of Pellagra. Journal of the American
-Medical Association. September 26, 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> Koch, M. L., and Voegtlin, Carl: Chemical Changes in the Central
-Nervous System in Pellagra. Hygienic Laboratory Bulletin No. 103,
-February, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> Goldberger, J.: Pellagra: Causation and a Method of Prevention:
-A Summary of Some of the Recent Studies of the Public Health Service.
-Journal of the American Medical Association, February 12, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> Goldberger, J., Wheeler, G. A., and Sydenstricker, Edgar: A Study
-of the Diet of Nonpellagrous and of Pellagrous Households. Journal
-of the American Medical Association. September 21, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> Roberts, Stewart R.: Types and Treatment of Pellagra. Journal of
-the American Medical Association, July 3, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> Barker, Lewellys F.: Monographic Medicine, Vol. 4, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> Babcock, J. W.: The Prevalence and Psychology of Pellagra. Transactions
-of the American Medico-Psychological Association, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> Griesinger, W.: Pathology and Therapeutics of Mental Diseases.
-1887.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> Mongeri, L.: Malattie Mentali. Milan, 228. Quoted by Babcock.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> Bianchi, Leonardo: A Textbook of Psychiatry. Translated by James
-H. Macdonald. 1906. Quoted by Babcock.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> Régis, E.: Precis de Psychiatrie. 1909. Quoted by Babcock.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> Procopiu, G.: La Pellagre. Paris. 1903. Quoted by Babcock.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> Tanzi, Eugenio: Textbook of Mental Diseases. Translated by Robertson.
-1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> Gregor, A.: Jahrb. Psychiat. Neurol. Leipsig, 1907</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> Singer, H. Douglas: Mental and Nervous Disorders Associated with
-Pellagra. Archives of Internal Medicine. January, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> Sandy, William A.: Psychiatric Aspects of Pellagra. Transactions
-of the American Medico-Psychological Association. 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_261_261" id="Footnote_261_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. Hack: A Manual of Psychological Medicine.
-1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_262_262" id="Footnote_262_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. Hack: A Manual of Psychological Medicine.
-1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_263_263" id="Footnote_263_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> Feuchtersleben, E. von: Lehrbuch der Aerzlichen Seelenkunde. 1845.
-Translated by H. E. Lloyd. 1847.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_264_264" id="Footnote_264_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> Friedreich, J. B.: Historisch kritische Darstellung der Theorieen über
-den Wahnsinn. 1839. Quoted by von Feuchtersleben.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_265_265" id="Footnote_265_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_266_266" id="Footnote_266_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> Knauer, A.: The Psychoses Occurring as a Result of Acute Articular
-Rheumatism. Zeitschrift f. d. ges. Neurol. u. Psychiatrie. Vol.
-21, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_267_267" id="Footnote_267_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_268_268" id="Footnote_268_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_269_269" id="Footnote_269_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_270_270" id="Footnote_270_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> Pritchard, James C.: A Treatise on Insanity and Other Disorders
-Affecting the Mind. 1835.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_271_271" id="Footnote_271_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a> Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification der Seelenstörungen. Allgemeine
-Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1844.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_272_272" id="Footnote_272_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> Griesinger, Wilhelm: Die Pathologie und Therapie der psychischen
-Krankheiten. 1845.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_273_273" id="Footnote_273_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_274_274" id="Footnote_274_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a> Sankey, W. H. O.: Lectures on Mental Disease. 1884.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_275_275" id="Footnote_275_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a> Schüle, Heinrich: Klinishe Psychiatrie. Third edition. 1886.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_276_276" id="Footnote_276_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276_276"><span class="label">[276]</span></a> Ziehen, Th.: Psychiatrie. 1894.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_277_277" id="Footnote_277_277"></a><a href="#FNanchor_277_277"><span class="label">[277]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Sixth edition. 1899.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_278_278" id="Footnote_278_278"></a><a href="#FNanchor_278_278"><span class="label">[278]</span></a> White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_279_279" id="Footnote_279_279"></a><a href="#FNanchor_279_279"><span class="label">[279]</span></a> Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_280_280" id="Footnote_280_280"></a><a href="#FNanchor_280_280"><span class="label">[280]</span></a> Buckley, Albert C.: The Basis of Psychiatry. 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_281_281" id="Footnote_281_281"></a><a href="#FNanchor_281_281"><span class="label">[281]</span></a> Paton, Stewart: Psychiatry. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_282_282" id="Footnote_282_282"></a><a href="#FNanchor_282_282"><span class="label">[282]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_283_283" id="Footnote_283_283"></a><a href="#FNanchor_283_283"><span class="label">[283]</span></a> Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_284_284" id="Footnote_284_284"></a><a href="#FNanchor_284_284"><span class="label">[284]</span></a> Dreyfus, G. L.: Die Melancholia ein Zustanbild des Manisch-Depressiven
-Irreseins. 1907. Reviewed by Dr. George H. Kirby. The
-State Hospitals Bulletin, December 1, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_285_285" id="Footnote_285_285"></a><a href="#FNanchor_285_285"><span class="label">[285]</span></a> Dreyfus, G. L.: Die Melancholia ein Zustandbild des Manisch-Depressiven
-Irreseins. 1907. Review by Dr. George H. Kirby. The
-State Hospitals Bulletin, December 1, 1908.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_286_286" id="Footnote_286_286"></a><a href="#FNanchor_286_286"><span class="label">[286]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_287_287" id="Footnote_287_287"></a><a href="#FNanchor_287_287"><span class="label">[287]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 2, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_288_288" id="Footnote_288_288"></a><a href="#FNanchor_288_288"><span class="label">[288]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_289_289" id="Footnote_289_289"></a><a href="#FNanchor_289_289"><span class="label">[289]</span></a> Kehrer, F.: Die Psychosen des Um- und Rückbildungsalters. Zentralblatt
-für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, April 1, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_290_290" id="Footnote_290_290"></a><a href="#FNanchor_290_290"><span class="label">[290]</span></a> Kehrer, F.: Die Psychosen des Um- und Rückbildungsalters. Zentralblatt
-für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, April 1, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_291_291" id="Footnote_291_291"></a><a href="#FNanchor_291_291"><span class="label">[291]</span></a> Kehrer, F.: Die Psychosen des Um- und Rückbildungsalters. Zentralblatt
-für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie, April 1, 1921.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_292_292" id="Footnote_292_292"></a><a href="#FNanchor_292_292"><span class="label">[292]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: Insanity: General Pathology. Reference Handbook
-of the Medical Sciences. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_293_293" id="Footnote_293_293"></a><a href="#FNanchor_293_293"><span class="label">[293]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: Insanity: General Pathology. Reference Handbook of
-the Medical Sciences. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_294_294" id="Footnote_294_294"></a><a href="#FNanchor_294_294"><span class="label">[294]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_295_295" id="Footnote_295_295"></a><a href="#FNanchor_295_295"><span class="label">[295]</span></a> Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Second edition, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_296_296" id="Footnote_296_296"></a><a href="#FNanchor_296_296"><span class="label">[296]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_297_297" id="Footnote_297_297"></a><a href="#FNanchor_297_297"><span class="label">[297]</span></a> Hoch, August: Review of Bleuler's "Schizophrenia." New York
-State Hospitals Bulletin, August 15, 1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_298_298" id="Footnote_298_298"></a><a href="#FNanchor_298_298"><span class="label">[298]</span></a> Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Second edition, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_299_299" id="Footnote_299_299"></a><a href="#FNanchor_299_299"><span class="label">[299]</span></a> Hoch, August: Review of Bleuler's "Schizophrenia." New York
-State Hospitals Bulletin, August 15, 1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_300_300" id="Footnote_300_300"></a><a href="#FNanchor_300_300"><span class="label">[300]</span></a> Bleuler, E.: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Second edition, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_301_301" id="Footnote_301_301"></a><a href="#FNanchor_301_301"><span class="label">[301]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: Fundamental Conceptions of Dementia Praecox. British
-Medical Journal, September, 1906.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_302_302" id="Footnote_302_302"></a><a href="#FNanchor_302_302"><span class="label">[302]</span></a> Hoch, August: Constitutional Factors in the Dementia Praecox
-Group. Review of Neurology and Psychiatry, August, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_303_303" id="Footnote_303_303"></a><a href="#FNanchor_303_303"><span class="label">[303]</span></a> Jung, C. G.: The Psychology of Dementia Praecox. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_304_304" id="Footnote_304_304"></a><a href="#FNanchor_304_304"><span class="label">[304]</span></a> White, William A.: Outlines of Psychiatry. 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_305_305" id="Footnote_305_305"></a><a href="#FNanchor_305_305"><span class="label">[305]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_306_306" id="Footnote_306_306"></a><a href="#FNanchor_306_306"><span class="label">[306]</span></a> Ibid.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_307_307" id="Footnote_307_307"></a><a href="#FNanchor_307_307"><span class="label">[307]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: The Nature and Conception of Dementia Praecox.
-The Journal of Abnormal Psychology. Dec., 1910, Jan., 1911.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_308_308" id="Footnote_308_308"></a><a href="#FNanchor_308_308"><span class="label">[308]</span></a> Buckley, Alfred C.: The Basis of Psychiatry. 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_309_309" id="Footnote_309_309"></a><a href="#FNanchor_309_309"><span class="label">[309]</span></a> Diefendorf, A. Ross: Clinical Psychiatry. 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_310_310" id="Footnote_310_310"></a><a href="#FNanchor_310_310"><span class="label">[310]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth Edition, Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_311_311" id="Footnote_311_311"></a><a href="#FNanchor_311_311"><span class="label">[311]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_312_312" id="Footnote_312_312"></a><a href="#FNanchor_312_312"><span class="label">[312]</span></a> Pollock, Horatio M., and Nolan, William J.: Sex, Age, and Nativity
-of Dementia Praecox First Admissions to the New York State Hospitals,
-1912-1918. The State Hospital Quarterly, August, 1919.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_313_313" id="Footnote_313_313"></a><a href="#FNanchor_313_313"><span class="label">[313]</span></a> Pollock, Horatio M.: Dementia Praecox as a Social Problem. The
-State Hospital Quarterly, August, 1918.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_314_314" id="Footnote_314_314"></a><a href="#FNanchor_314_314"><span class="label">[314]</span></a> Jelliffe, S. E.: A Summary of Origins, Transformation and Present-Day
-Trend of the Paranoia Concept. New York Medical Record, April
-5, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_315_315" id="Footnote_315_315"></a><a href="#FNanchor_315_315"><span class="label">[315]</span></a> Flemming, C. F.: Ueber Classification die Seelenstörungen. Allgemeine
-Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1844.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_316_316" id="Footnote_316_316"></a><a href="#FNanchor_316_316"><span class="label">[316]</span></a> Quoted by Cramer. Abgreugung und Differenzial-Diagnose der Paranoia.
-Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie. 1894.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_317_317" id="Footnote_317_317"></a><a href="#FNanchor_317_317"><span class="label">[317]</span></a> Krafft-Ebing, R. von: A Text-book of Insanity. Translated by C.
-G. Chaddock. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_318_318" id="Footnote_318_318"></a><a href="#FNanchor_318_318"><span class="label">[318]</span></a> Krafft-Ebing, R. von: A Text-book of Insanity. Translated by C. G.
-Chaddock. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_319_319" id="Footnote_319_319"></a><a href="#FNanchor_319_319"><span class="label">[319]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Sixth edition. 1899. Book Review,
-American Journal of Insanity. July, 1900.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_320_320" id="Footnote_320_320"></a><a href="#FNanchor_320_320"><span class="label">[320]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_321_321" id="Footnote_321_321"></a><a href="#FNanchor_321_321"><span class="label">[321]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Die Erscheinungsformen des Irreseins. Zeitschrift für
-die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie. December, 1920.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_322_322" id="Footnote_322_322"></a><a href="#FNanchor_322_322"><span class="label">[322]</span></a> Bleuler, E.: Affectivität, Suggestibilität, Paranoia. Translated by
-Charles S. Ricksher. New York State Hospitals Bulletin. February,
-1912.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_323_323" id="Footnote_323_323"></a><a href="#FNanchor_323_323"><span class="label">[323]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: Paranoia and Paranoid States. The Modern Treatment
-of Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_324_324" id="Footnote_324_324"></a><a href="#FNanchor_324_324"><span class="label">[324]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: Paranoia and Paranoid States. The Modern Treatment
-of Nervous and Mental Diseases. White and Jelliffe. 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_325_325" id="Footnote_325_325"></a><a href="#FNanchor_325_325"><span class="label">[325]</span></a> Tuke, D. Hack: A Dictionary of Psychological Medicine. 1892.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_326_326" id="Footnote_326_326"></a><a href="#FNanchor_326_326"><span class="label">[326]</span></a> Spratling, William P.: Epilepsy and its Treatment. 1904.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_327_327" id="Footnote_327_327"></a><a href="#FNanchor_327_327"><span class="label">[327]</span></a> Clark, L. Pierce: Clinical Studies in Epilepsy. Psychiatric Bulletin.
-January, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_328_328" id="Footnote_328_328"></a><a href="#FNanchor_328_328"><span class="label">[328]</span></a> Clark, L. Pierce; Clinical Studies in Epilepsy. Psychiatric Bulletin.
-January, 1916.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_329_329" id="Footnote_329_329"></a><a href="#FNanchor_329_329"><span class="label">[329]</span></a> Clark, L. Pierce: Clinical Studies in Epilepsy (Concluded). Psychiatric
-Bulletin. January, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_330_330" id="Footnote_330_330"></a><a href="#FNanchor_330_330"><span class="label">[330]</span></a> Clark, L. Pierce: A Further Study of Mental Content in Epilepsy.
-Psychiatric Bulletin, October, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_331_331" id="Footnote_331_331"></a><a href="#FNanchor_331_331"><span class="label">[331]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition, Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_332_332" id="Footnote_332_332"></a><a href="#FNanchor_332_332"><span class="label">[332]</span></a> Murray, James A. H.: A New English Dictionary. 1888.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_333_333" id="Footnote_333_333"></a><a href="#FNanchor_333_333"><span class="label">[333]</span></a> Brachet, J. L.: Traité de l'hysteria. 1847.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_334_334" id="Footnote_334_334"></a><a href="#FNanchor_334_334"><span class="label">[334]</span></a> Krafft-Ebing, R. von: Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie. Translated by C. G.
-Chaddock. 1905.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_335_335" id="Footnote_335_335"></a><a href="#FNanchor_335_335"><span class="label">[335]</span></a> Janet, Pierre: État mental des hystériques. Translated by C. R. Corson.
-1901.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_336_336" id="Footnote_336_336"></a><a href="#FNanchor_336_336"><span class="label">[336]</span></a> Freud, Sigmund: Sammlungen kleiner Schriften zur Neurosenlehre.
-1906 and 1909. Translated by A. A. Brill. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_337_337" id="Footnote_337_337"></a><a href="#FNanchor_337_337"><span class="label">[337]</span></a> Morel, Jules: The Treatment of Degenerative Psychoses. International
-Congress of Charities, etc., Chicago, 1893.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_338_338" id="Footnote_338_338"></a><a href="#FNanchor_338_338"><span class="label">[338]</span></a> Meyer, Adolf: Constitutional Abnormality. C. P. Obendorf. Discussion.
-State Hospitals Bulletin, March, 1910.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_339_339" id="Footnote_339_339"></a><a href="#FNanchor_339_339"><span class="label">[339]</span></a> Ziehen, Th.: Psychiatrie. 1911. Quoted by Hickson. Report of the
-Psychopathic Laboratory, etc., Chicago, 1917.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_340_340" id="Footnote_340_340"></a><a href="#FNanchor_340_340"><span class="label">[340]</span></a> Diefendorf, A. Ross: Degenerative Insanity. Reference Handbook
-of the Medical Sciences. 1909.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_341_341" id="Footnote_341_341"></a><a href="#FNanchor_341_341"><span class="label">[341]</span></a> Régis, E.: A Practical Manual of Mental Medicine. Translation of H.
-M. Bannister, 1894.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_342_342" id="Footnote_342_342"></a><a href="#FNanchor_342_342"><span class="label">[342]</span></a> Grasset, Joseph: The Semi-Insane and the Semi-Responsible. Translated
-by Smith Ely Jelliffe. 1907.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_343_343" id="Footnote_343_343"></a><a href="#FNanchor_343_343"><span class="label">[343]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Clinical Psychiatry. Translated by Thomas Johnstone.
-1906.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_344_344" id="Footnote_344_344"></a><a href="#FNanchor_344_344"><span class="label">[344]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 4, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_345_345" id="Footnote_345_345"></a><a href="#FNanchor_345_345"><span class="label">[345]</span></a> Bucknill, J. C., and Tuke, D. Hack: Psychological Medicine. Fourth
-edition. 1879.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_346_346" id="Footnote_346_346"></a><a href="#FNanchor_346_346"><span class="label">[346]</span></a> Tredgold, A. F.: Mental Deficiency, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_347_347" id="Footnote_347_347"></a><a href="#FNanchor_347_347"><span class="label">[347]</span></a> Goddard, H. H.: Feeblemindedness. 1914.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_348_348" id="Footnote_348_348"></a><a href="#FNanchor_348_348"><span class="label">[348]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 4, 1915.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_349_349" id="Footnote_349_349"></a><a href="#FNanchor_349_349"><span class="label">[349]</span></a> Kraepelin, E.: Psychiatrie. Eighth edition. Vol. 3, 1913.</p></div></div>
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