Vertigo : five physician scientists and the quest for a cure /
Vertigo: Five Physician Scientists and the Quest for a Cure follows this centuries long trek. The book follows the key discoveries made by Prosper Meniere (1799-1862) who first recognized that vertigo could originate from the inner ear, Josef Breuer (1842-1925) who conducted groundbreaking research...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
Oxford University Press,
[2017]
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Vertigo; Copyright; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; 1. Introduction; The Inner Ear; Dizziness, Vertigo, and the Inner Ear; What Is Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo?; Who Discovered the Cure?; Section 1 Prosper Ménière (1799-1862); 2. Ménière Recognizes That Vertigo Can Originate from the Inner Ear; What Was Known About the Inner Ear in the Mid-19th Century?; First Hint That the Semicircular Canals May Be Related to Balance; Ménière Presents His Findings in 1861; The First Recorded Case of Ménière's Disease?; More Evidence That Vertigo Can Originate from the Inner Ear
- Inconsistencies in Ménière's Description of the Young Girl with VertigoTreatments for Vertigo in the Mid-19th Century; Ménière's Comments Trigger Heated Debate; 3. Ménière, a Man of Many Interests; Ménière's Academic Career; Ménière Balances Academic, Patient, and Family Activities; Ménière's Everyday Life; Ménière's Role in French Society; Section 2 Josef Breuer (1842-1925); 4. Breuer Discovers How the Balance Portion of the Inner Ear Works; Eye Movements and the Semicircular Canals; The Gravity-Sensing Otolith Organs; Evolutionary Development of the Inner Ear
- Mach and His Psychophysical ExperimentsBreuer and Mach Work Together to Defend Their Theory; Crum-Brown, the Model Maker; Who Contributed Most to Our Current Understanding of the Vestibular System?; 5. Breuer, the Renaissance Man; Upbringing and Formative Years; Breuer's Medical Training; Breuer Chooses Private Practice over Academic Medicine; Breuer, the Family Doctor; 6. Breuer's Experiments on the Semicircular Canals and Otolith Organs; Studies on the Semicircular Canals; Ewald's Laws; The Breuer-Von Cyon Feud; Studies on the Otolith Organs; Overview of the Inner Ear Sensory Receptors
- 7. Breuer's Contributions to Psychiatry and PhilosophyFreud's Early Work in Neuroanatomy; Anna O. and the Beginnings of Psychoanalysis; Breuer and Freud and Studies on Hysteria; The Friendship Between Breuer and Freud Dissolves; Breuer's Philosophical Beliefs; The Final Years; Section 3 Robert Bárány (1876-1936); 8. Politzer's Otology Clinic and the Discovery of the Caloric Test; Politzer Maneuver; Teaching in Politzer's Clinic; Robert Bárány Joins Politzer's Clinic; Bárány Discovers the Caloric Test; 9. Bárány's Formative Years and the Conflict in Politzer's Clinic
- Bárány's Medical TrainingSource of Conflict in Politzer's Clinic; Accusations Against Bárány; 10. The War Years and Bárány's Decision to Leave Vienna; Bárány Receives the 1914 Nobel Prize in Medicine; Formal Charges Against Bárány; Nobel Committee Response; Questions Regarding Bárány's Caloric Theory; 11. Bárány's Test Battery and the First Description of Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo; Romberg Test; Past-Pointing Test; Bárány's Syndrome; First Description of Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo; 12. Bárány's Life in Uppsala and His Work with Lorente de Nó