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On the Physiology of General Paralysis of the Insane and of Epilepsy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

George Thompson*
Affiliation:
Bristol Lunatic Asylum
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In the introductory remarks contained in the previous portion of this essay, I said that, as far as possible, I would refrain from referring to the condition of the nervous centres as seen after death, except to explain the nature of certain phenomena seen in these diseases during life. Having arrived at the second portion of my subject, I shall draw attention to the condition of the brain and spinal cord where death has been the result of an epileptic fit, or while the patient has been in what is now so well understood as the Status Epilepticus.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists 1875 

References

Op. Cit., fol. 625.Google Scholar

Jones, Handfield, quoted in “Bnoknill and Take.”Google Scholar

Art. Epilepsy, Dr. Bazire's Transi. fol. 69.Google Scholar

April, 1874, fol. 94.Google Scholar

W. E. Beporte, Vol. II., fol. 805.Google Scholar

Van der Kolk.Google Scholar

W. R. Reports, Vol. III., fol. 39.Google Scholar

W. R. Reporte, Vol. II., fol. 303.Google Scholar

W. R. Reporte, Vol. II., fol. 304, fig. 1.Google Scholar

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