A Practical Manual of Insanity for the Medical Student and General PractitionerW.B. Saunders, 1902 - 422 pages 2000, Gift of the South Carolina State Hospital. |
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Page 13
... ment of the functions of the cerebral cortex , and this is so intimately connected with every other bodily organ and function that it is easy to see that the range of its symptoms is practically infinite . Its definition , being of ...
... ment of the functions of the cerebral cortex , and this is so intimately connected with every other bodily organ and function that it is easy to see that the range of its symptoms is practically infinite . Its definition , being of ...
Page 15
... ment of the brain producing disordered action of the mind in such a way as to put the subject in a condition varying from his normal self and out of relation with his environ- ment , " and we may add generally " in such a way as to ...
... ment of the brain producing disordered action of the mind in such a way as to put the subject in a condition varying from his normal self and out of relation with his environ- ment , " and we may add generally " in such a way as to ...
Page 27
... ment of their physiologic destiny . In the widowed insanity is somewhat more frequent than in the married state , but far less so than in celibates . According to French statistics ( Dagonet ) , the relative liability is OTHER ...
... ment of their physiologic destiny . In the widowed insanity is somewhat more frequent than in the married state , but far less so than in celibates . According to French statistics ( Dagonet ) , the relative liability is OTHER ...
Page 46
... ment or intellect , the emotions , and the will . Under the sensations must necessarily be included their con- scious appreciation , and the term perception might have been used , though it would be in some respects undesirable for the ...
... ment or intellect , the emotions , and the will . Under the sensations must necessarily be included their con- scious appreciation , and the term perception might have been used , though it would be in some respects undesirable for the ...
Page 54
... ment ; acute alcoholism , for example , and hashisch intoxication , which is often a continued series of visual hallucinations . They occur also very largely in post- febrile insanity with other sensory hallucinations , and are common ...
... ment ; acute alcoholism , for example , and hashisch intoxication , which is often a continued series of visual hallucinations . They occur also very largely in post- febrile insanity with other sensory hallucinations , and are common ...
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Practical Manual of Insanity: For the Medical Student and General ... Daniel R. Brower No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
acute mania alcoholic insanity alienists appear asylum attack attention bodily brain catatonia cause cerebral characteristic chronic circular insanity Clinical Cloth commonly condition confusional insanity considered dangerous defect degenerative delusional delusions depression diagnosis drug Edition effect emotional epilepsy epileptic epileptic insanity especially etiologic excitement exhaustion exist extent fact forms of insanity forms of mental frequent hallucinations heredity hypomania idiocy imbecility impulses individual intellectual irritability Jefferson Medical College Kraepelin later lesions less liable mania manifestations marked Medical College Medicine melan melancholia ment mental derangement mental disease mental disorder moral insanity moral treatment morbid Morocco morphin nervous neurasthenic normal observed occur octavo ordinary organic paranoia paresis pathologic patient peculiar period physical physician possible predisposition probably Professor prognosis pronounced proportion psychoses rare recognized recovery rule Rush Medical College sanity senile Sheep or Half sleep sometimes stage stigmata stuporous suicidal Surgery symptoms syphilis tendency tion toxic treatment typical usually
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