A treatise on mental diseases: Based on the lecture course at Johns Hopkins University, 1899, and designed for the use of practitioners and students of medicine.Part II: General pathology.
A treatise on mental diseases: Based on the lecture course at Johns Hopkins University, 1899, and...
Berkley, Henry J.
2012-01-09 00:00:00
The pathology of mental disorders may be roughly divided into two parts, the one belonging to the so-called functional maladies, from which recovery is not unusual, the other that of organic-degenerative types, in which an eventual restoration to mental health cannot be expected. The boundary line between the two forms is not always sharply drawn, inasmuch as cases which apparently begin as a primary form of insanity may, by repetition or continuance, pass over into the second classification. This chapter focuses on general pathology. In particular, it discusses: the boundary lines between degenerative and non-degenerative types of insanity; gross pathology; special pathology; pathology of the cerebral vessels; and syphilitic vascular lesions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
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A treatise on mental diseases: Based on the lecture course at Johns Hopkins University, 1899, and designed for the use of practitioners and students of medicine.Part II: General pathology.
The pathology of mental disorders may be roughly divided into two parts, the one belonging to the so-called functional maladies, from which recovery is not unusual, the other that of organic-degenerative types, in which an eventual restoration to mental health cannot be expected. The boundary line between the two forms is not always sharply drawn, inasmuch as cases which apparently begin as a primary form of insanity may, by repetition or continuance, pass over into the second classification. This chapter focuses on general pathology. In particular, it discusses: the boundary lines between degenerative and non-degenerative types of insanity; gross pathology; special pathology; pathology of the cerebral vessels; and syphilitic vascular lesions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
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