首页> 外文期刊>Child's nervous system: ChNS : official journal of the International Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery >'Infantile convulsions' in the early nineteenth century. Abnormal brain blood flow and leeches, teething and gums' scarification and food and purgatives: the historical contribution of John Clarke (1760-1815)
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'Infantile convulsions' in the early nineteenth century. Abnormal brain blood flow and leeches, teething and gums' scarification and food and purgatives: the historical contribution of John Clarke (1760-1815)

机译:在十九世纪初的“婴儿痉挛”。 异常脑血流和水蛭,出牙和口香糖的划痕和食物和炼油:约翰克拉克的历史贡献(1760-1815)

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In this article, we discuss on the role of the British physician and midwifery practitioner John Clarke (1760-1815) in the characterisation of the various types of seizures and epilepsy and related phenomena ('convulsions') occurring in children. In his unfinished work Commentaries on Some of the Most Important Diseases of Children (1815), Clarke discussed the pathophysiology of convulsions and was the first to describe, 12 years before the French neurologist Louis Francois Bravais (1801-1843) and more than 30 years before the Irish-born physician Robert Bentley Todd (1809-1860), the postictal paresis. He believed that convulsions originated from changes in pressure within the ventricles as a consequence of abnormal blood flow to the cerebral vessels. In keeping with the theories of his time (e.g. Baumes 1789, 1805; Brachet 1824), Clarke believed that teething was a major cause of 'infantile convulsions'. His proposed remedies ranged from scarification of the gums to ammonia, application of leeches, cold water, and purgatives. The use of antispasmodics, quite popular at the time, was instead questioned. In his Practical Observations on the Convulsions of Infants (1826), the London practitioner and midwifery John North (1790-1873) deeply criticised Clarke's view that convulsions arise inevitably as a consequence of organic brain lesions. North inferred that the results of autopsies of children who had died of convulsions revealed no brain damages, and claimed that cerebral irritation could also occur as the effect of distant lesions. Other Clarke's contemporaries (e.g. Jean Baptiste Timoth,e Baumes-1756-1828) inferred that all convulsions reflected a hereditary diathesis, which rendered children (especially those with softer and limper nervous and muscular tissues!) extremely sensitive to all sorts of provocation that could trigger convulsions, including bad digestion (more pronounced at the time of teething), loud noise, and bright light. Although almost every aspect of Clarke's view on convulsions was subsequently proved wrong, his (and his contemporaries') work provides fascinating insights into the theories and therapies of seizures, which were popular at the dawn of modern neurology.
机译:在本文中,我们讨论了英国医生和助产士John Clarke(1760-1815)在儿童中发生的各种癫痫发育和癫痫和相关现象('抽搐')的表征中的作用。在他未完成的工作评论中关于一些最重要的儿童疾病(1815年),克拉克讨论了抽搐的病理生理学,并且是第一个描述的人在法国神经科学专家Louis Francois Bravais(1801-1843)和30多年前在爱尔兰出生的医师罗伯特·宾利托德(1809-1860)之前,分析了。他认为,由于对脑血管异常血液流动的后果,痉挛起源于心室内的压力变化。与他的时间的理论保持(例如Baumes 1789,1805; Braumes 1824),克拉克认为,出牙是“婴儿抽搐”的主要原因。他提出的补救措施范围从膀胱划分为氨,施用水蛭,冷水和丙种。据质疑,使用反问题,非常受欢迎。在他对婴儿抽搐(1826年)的实际观察中,伦敦从业者和助产士约翰北(1790-1873)深深批评Clarke的观点,因为有机脑病变的后果是不可避免的。北北方推断出尸体死亡的儿童尸检的结果显示没有脑损害,并声称也可能发生脑刺激作为远处病变的影响。其他克拉克的同时代人(例如让Jean Baptiste Timoth,E Baumes-1756-1828)推断所有抽搐反映了一种遗传性素质,使儿童(特别是那些有更柔软的细胞和肌肉组织的人!)对可能的各种挑衅极其敏感触发痉挛,包括糟糕的消化(在出牙时比较明显),嘈杂的噪音和明亮的光线。虽然克拉克对抽搐观点的各个方面都被证明是错误的,但他的(和他的同时代人)工作提供了迷人的见解,以癫痫发作的理论和治疗,这在现代神经病学的曙光中受欢迎。

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