Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T03:58:28.496Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

On the Degenerative Lesions of the Arterial System in the Insane, with Remarks upon the nature of Granular Ependyma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Cecil F. Beadles*
Affiliation:
Colney Hatch Asylum. (With Plates.)

Extract

The degenerative changes in the tissues of lunatics are more or less well known, at any rate the grosser or naked-eye lesions that are to be expected, but even amongst these there are some points that, I venture to think, may receive further attention. Of histological changes we can say more positively that much light may yet be thrown on their nature. As to their cause—the cause of the degeneration of nerve cells, for instance—we are lamentably ignorant.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1895 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. “Rupture of the heart in the insane,” Path. Soc. Trans., 1893.Google Scholar
1b. The Annual Reports of the Asylums' Committee of the London County Council for the years 1890–94.Google Scholar
2. “An abstract of 1,565 post-mortem examinations of the brain performed at the Wakefield Asylum during a period of eleven years,” Jour. Ment. Sc., Jan., 1890.Google Scholar
3. Jour. Ment. Sc., Oct., 1870.Google Scholar
4. Annual Report of the Fife and Kinross Asylum, 1871.Google Scholar
5. “Pathological appearances observed in the brains of the insane,” Jour. Ment. Sc., April, 1874.Google Scholar
6. Jour. Path, and B$act., 1894.Google Scholar
7. “Pathological Retrospect,” Jour. Ment. Sc., July, 1893.Google Scholar
8. “Vacuolation of the nerve-cells of the human cortex cerebri,” Jour. Path. and Bact.,” Feb., 1894.Google Scholar
9. Text-book of Mental Diseases.Google Scholar
10. “Vacuolation of the nuclei of nerve-cells in the cortex,” Brit. Med. Jour., May 19, 1894.Google Scholar
11. “The relative importance of the minute histological features of the brain cortex in general paralysis,” Brain, 1893.Google Scholar
12. “A contribution to the morbid anatomy and pathology of the neuromuscular changes in general paralysis of the insane,” Jour. Ment. Sc., April, 1894.Google Scholar
13. “Diseases of modern life.” Google Scholar
14. “Disorders of digestion.” Google Scholar
15. “The pathology of mind,” Maudsley, , 1879, p. 506.Google Scholar
16. “Psychological medicine,” Bucknill, and Tuke, , 1879, p. 616; “Dictionary of psychological medicine,” Hack Tuke, 1892, Art. Pathology, p. 910.Google Scholar
17. “Mental diseases,” 1883, pp. 376 and xxvii.Google Scholar
18. “General paralysis of the insane,” 1886, p. 310.Google Scholar
19. “A case of chronic syphilitic meningitis, etc., with some notes on the histology of granular shagreen appearance of the ependyma observed in some cases of hydrocephalus,” with plate, Path. Trans., 1889.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.