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Psychological Aspects of a Conscious Temporary Generalized Paralysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

G. de M. Rudolf*
Affiliation:
Ministry of Pensions; R.A.M.C.
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Conscious generalized immobility, in which the musculature remains in the tonic state in which it has been placed voluntarily, is known amongst naval officers, printers and nurses, amongst the last being known as “night nurses' paralysis.” Its duration is of a few seconds or minutes, and it appears to be a cataleptic phenomenon. It differs from cataplexy in that the musculature is tonic, and perhaps hypertonic, with the eyelids open, whereas in cataplexy the subject falls to the ground with muscles limp and eyelids closed, as if asleep.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1946 

References

Rudolf, G. de M. (1946), Bristol Med.-Chir. Journ., 43.Google Scholar
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