- History of neurology
The study of
neurology dates back to prehistoric times, but the academic discipline did not begin until the16th century . From an observational science it developed a systematic way of approaching the nervous system and possible interventions in neurological disease.Early history
An
ancient Egyptian treatise concerning trauma surgery, theEdwin Smith papyrus , contains descriptions and suggests treatments for various injuries, including some of neurological nature. Specifically, there are descriptions of themeninges , the external surface of thebrain , thecerebrospinal fluid and theintracranial pulsations Wilkins, 1964] . Not only are these neurological features mentioned, but it is also noticed that some bodily functions can be impaired by brain injuries or injuries to the cervical spine.There are many other examples of observations of neurological phenomena throughout history. The
Sumer ians illustratedparaplegia caused by physical trauma in abas relief of a lion with an arrow in its backFact|date=April 2008. Neurological disorders not caused by physical disorder were also investigated. For example in the medicine of theVedic period of ancient India, the Ayurvedic textCharaka Samhita discussesepilepsy , with a discussion of both symptoms and of possible treatments. Slightly later, theancient Greek physicianHippocrates was convinced thatepilepsy has a natural cause, not a sacred oneWorld Health Organization, Fact Sheet #168] .The ancient Greeks also dissected the nervous system. For example,
Aristotle (although he misunderstood the function of the brain) describes the meninges and also distinguishes between the cerebrum and thecerebellum [von Staden, p.157] . Slightly later, in Rome,Galen performed many dissections of thenervous system in a variety of species, including the ape. One particular discovery he made was of the importance of therecurrent laryngeal nerve s. Originally, he cut through them accidentally while performing an experiment on the nerves that control breathing byvivisection of a strapped-down, squealing pig. The pig immediately stopped squealing, but continued struggling. Galen then performed the same experiment on a variety of animals, including dogs, goats, bears, lions, cows and monkeys, finding similar results each time. Finally, to publicise this new result, Galen demonstrated the experiment on a pair of pigs to a large audience in Rome, telling them: "there is a hairlike pair [of nerves] in the muscles of the larynx on both left and right, which if ligated or cut render the animal speechless without damaging either its life or functional activity" [Gross, 1998] .Anatomy and physiology
Along with most other sciences, the first real advances in neurology after the Greeks occur in the
renaissance . The invention of the printing press allowed the publication of anatomical textbooks, allowing the dissemination of knowledge. An early example isJohann Peyligk 's "Compendium philosophiae naturalis", published inLeipzig ,Germany in1499 . This work contained 11 woodcuts, depicting thedura mater andpia mater as well as the ventriclesTessman & Suarez, 2002] .A revolution took place in both neurology in particular and in anatomy in general when Andreas Vesalius published his "
De humani corporis fabrica " in1543 . It includes detailed images depicting the ventricles,cranial nerves ,pituitary gland , meninges, structures of theeye , the vascular supply to the brain and spinal cord, and an image of the peripheral nerves. Vesalius also exposed the non-existence structures that had been believed to be in the brain since Galen's (revered) work, such as the "rete mirabile ". Galen's dissections were all on animals - in particular, the "rete mirabile" is only well developed inungulates [Singer 1956] . Vesalius, unlike many of his contemporaries, did not subscribe to the then common belief that the ventricles were responsible for brain function, arguing that many animals have similar systems of ventricles to those of humans, but had no true intelligence [Gross 1998, p. 38] . It appears that he rarely removed the brain from theskull before cutting it, most of his diagrams showing the brain sitting inside a severed head [See the scanned copy at [http://archive.nlm.nih.gov/proj/ttp/vesaliusgallery.htm] ] .Thomas Willis in1664 , published his Anatomy of the Brain, followed by Cerebral Pathology in1676 . He removed the brain from thecranium , and was able to describe it more clearly, setting forth thecircle of Willis – the circle of vessels that enables arterial supply of the brain. He had some notions as to brain function, including a vague idea as to localization andreflex es, and described epilepsy,apoplexy andparalysis . As already mentioned, he used the word neurology.A beginning of the understanding of disease came with the first morbid anatomists, morbid anatomical illustration, and the development of effective colour printing.
Matthew Baillie (1761-1823) andJean Cruveilher (1791-1874) illustrated the lesions instroke , in1799 and1829 respectively.Microscopy
Only when cells were identified microscopically was it possible to progress beyond the crudest anatomical notion. J.E. Purkinje (1787-1869) in
1837 gave the first description ofneuron es, indeed a very early description of cells of any kind. LaterGolgi and Cajal stained the ramifying branches of nerve cells; these could only touch, orsynapse .The brain now had demonstrated form, without localised function. The famous philosopherRené Descartes (1596-1650) speculated that every activity of an animal was a necessary reaction to some external stimulus; the connection between the stimulus and the response was made through a definite nervous path.Luigi Galvani (1737-1798) demonstrated that electrical stimulation of nerve produced muscle contraction, and the competing work ofCharles Bell (1774-1842) andFrancois Magendie (1783-1855 ) led to the view that theventral horn s of thespinal cord were motor and thedorsal horn s sensory. Ahemiplegic patient who could not speak ledPaul Broca (1824-1880) to the view that functions in thecerebral cortex were anatomically localised.Ivan Pavlov (1849- 1936) realised as his dogs dribbled that a simple reflex could be modified byhigher brain functions . These neurological ideas were coordinated and integrated by the neurophysiologistC.S. Sherrington (1857-1952).Diagnostics
Doctors could use the ideas of neurology in practice only if they developed proper tools and procedures for clinical investigation. This happened step by step in the
nineteenth century --tendon hammer ,ophthalmoscope , pin andtuning fork ,syringe andlumbar puncture .X rays , theelectro-encephalography ,angiography , andCAT scan s were to follow. The clinical neurologists correlated their findings after death with those of theneuropathologist . The best known was W.R. Gowers (1845-1915) who owned a major text in two volumes, of acerebrospinal tract .By the end of the nineteenth century, the connection was established between stroke and hemiplegia, between trauma and paraplegia, between thespirochaete and the paralysed demency people who filled themental hospital s. The first chemotherapeutic cure of a serious infection was salvarsan forsyphilis , followed by the induction offever inneurosyphilis . The treatment of neurosyphilis became highly effective whenantibiotic s were introduced.Neurosurgery
In
1878 ,William McEwen (1848-1924) removed ameningioma , and the patient survived for many years. The first Englishman who did it wasVictor Horsley (1857- 1916) five years later. The Americans did it even later, the surgeon wasHarvey Cushing ( 1869-1939). Cushing in 1909 successfully removed apituitary adenoma from anacromegalic . Treatingendocrine hyperfunction byneurosurgery was a major neurological landmark.Egas Moniz (1874-1955) in Portugal developed neurosurgical treatment of severepsychiatric disorder . (Though it is often said that the development of lobotomy was inspired by the case ofPhineas Gage , a railroad worker who had an iron bar driven through his frontal lobe(s) in 1848, the evidence is against this.)References
Bibliography
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