Neurology,
said Thomas Willis, who coined the word, is the study of the
nervous system. The peculiar glory of neurology is that it
deals with the part of the body which makes humankind human, the
seat of sleeping and waking, the harbour of love and hate, the
secret of swinging a golf club, and driving into the rough, the
engine which writes a sonnet, the spirit which makes each of us
unique, the madness which sends us to the psychiatrist, the
immortal soul which some of us believe we have--all of these
have a local habitation and a name, if they have any such in the
nervous system; wherever it lives, the soul does not reside in
the sigmoid colon. Neurology is about all these things, and
neurologists are the high priests thereof.
I
am going to try to describe some stages in our knowledge, and
name a few of the famous names. This is an essay and not a
complete or formal account. It is randomly selective -- and
insolent. Anyone, who is neither an historian, nor a
neurologist, who talks about the history of neurology, deserves
at least the pillory, and possibly the scaffold.
It outlines briefly and selectively the history of our knowledge
of the nervous system, with a few words on several of the major
figures. The objectives are that the reader should be able to
describe one way of approaching the historical literature, and
then to list some of the major advances in neurology. It stops
in 1932; the rest is modern neurology. The limits are the books
in the University of Manitoba
Health
Sciences Library.
How does one go about preparing a seminar on something one knows
nothing about? The 'Net is the last place to go. Start off
with a book, a general history of medicine, identified from the
local library catalogue, then look for a history of neurology in
the same place. Then look for the books written by some of the
major figures listed in sources, or for the biographies of these
individuals. These point to the original papers written by one
or other of the important figures, and in one or other source
there are pictures.
In the beginning there was observation, the Sumerians
illustrated paraplegia in a bas relief of a lion with an arrow
in its back. The Egyptians described the effect of high
transection of the spinal cord in the human. Hippocrates wrote
of epilepsy that it was a natural disease, not a sacred
disease. The Alexandrian Greeks dissected the
human
brain and distinguished cerebrum from cerebellum. Galen
dissected the nervous system, in a variety of species, including
the ape. Of recurrent laryngeal nerves he wrote: "If one cuts
these nerves, the voice of the animal is damaged and its
resonance is lost."
These were beginnings. The god remained hidden behind the
altar; the veils remained until the sixteenth century, when they
were rent asunder, one after another, to reveal the brain. A
complete history would encompass brain function, cortical
localisation, vision, hearing, touch, pain, smell, motor
function, sleep and dreaming, emotion, intellect, memory and
speech; it would take 500 pages and 50 hours.
The first milestone was the anatomy of the brain. Vesalius
described it and much else; he had little notion of function,
thinking that it lay mainly in the ventricles. He did not
remove the brain from the skull before cutting it.
Thomas Willis (1621-1675) in 1664, published his Anatomy
of the Brain, followed by Cerebral Pathology in 1676.
He removed the brain from the cranium, and was able to describe
it more clearly, setting forth the arterial supply, the famous
circle. He had some notions as to brain function, including a
vague idea as to localization and reflexes, and described
epilepsy, apoplexy and paralysis. He called neurology
neurology.
Only
when cells were identified microscopically was it possible to
progress beyond the crudest anatomical notion. JE Purkinje
(1787-1869) in 1837 gave the first description of neurones,
indeed a very early description of cells of any kind. Later
Golgi and Cajal stained the beautiful ramifying branches of
nerve cells; these could only touch, or synapse.
A
beginning of the understanding of disease came with the first
morbid anatomists, morbid anatomical illustration, and the
development of effective colour printing. Matthew Bailie
(1761-1823) and Jean Cruveilher (1791-1874) illustrated the
lesions in stroke, in 1799 and 1829 respectively.
The brain now had demonstrated form, without localised
function. How could it work? Philosophers think, sometimes
without evidence. Rene 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 of
Charles Bell (1774-1842) and Francois Magendie (1783-1855 ) led
to the view that the ventral horns of the spinal cord were motor
and the dorsal horns sensory. A hemiplegic patient who could
not speak led Paul Broca (1824-1880) to the view that functions
in the cerebral cortex were anatomically localised. Ivan Pavlov
(1849- 1936) realised as his dogs dribbled that a simple reflex
could be modified by higher brain functions. These neurological
ideas were co-ordinated and integrated by the neurophysiologist
C.S. Sherrington (1857-1952).
The stage had been set for the clinical doctors: they came in
one brand. Clinical neurologists, or neurological physicians,
were grave, highly intellectual people with dismal expressions,
partly because the brain confused them totally, and partly
because they could not do anything for their patients but
diagnose them. Only when antibacterials and neurosurgeons
appeared, were neurological diseases treatable.
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 and tuning fork,
syringe and lumbar puncture. X rays, the
electro-encephalography, angiography, and CAT scans were to
follow. The clinical neurologists correlated their findings
after death with those of an even more dismal specialist who
could do even less for the patient than the clinical
neurologist--the neuropathologist. They scribbled long books,
as a substitute for cure. It may not cure the patient, but it
gets the doctor a promotion. The best known was W.R. Gowers
(1845-1915) who owned a major text in two volumes, and a
cerebrospinal tract.
By
the end of the nineteenth century, there was a tie between
stroke and hemiplegia, between trauma and paraplegia, between
the spirochaete and the paralysed demented people who filled the
mental hospitals. The first chemotherapeutic cure of a serious
infection was salvarsan for syphilis, followed by the induction
of fever in neurosyphilis. The clinical neurologists became
highly effective when antibiotics were introduced.
Neurology had however become a more hopeful science when the
surgeons took a hand. In 1878, William McEwen (1848-1924)
removed a meningioma, and the patient survived for many years.
As usual the English did it five years later, and Victor Horsley
(1857- 1916) was revered, and the Americans did it even later,
and Harvey Cushing ( 1869-1939) was canonized. Cushing in 1909
successfully removed a pituitary adenoma from an acromegalic,
the first of many; treating endocrine hyperfunction by
neurosurgery was a major neurological landmark. Modifying
personality was the next trick; many years before, a metal bar
through the head of an unfortunate railway worker had
demonstrated that mechanical disruption of the brain could alter
personality. Egas Moniz (1874-1955) in Portugal developed
neurosurgical treatment of severe psychiatric disorder.
This brief account should end with a question. Descartes
thought that the soul was localised to the pineal; he was
probably wrong. What is the anatomical localisation of the
human spirit, what makes you you, and of the soul, which may
outlast the brief fabric of the body? What is truth, said
jesting Pilate, and would not wait for an answer.
References
Baillie M A.
Series of engravings accompanied with explanations which are
intended to illustrate The Morbid Anatomy of Some of the Most
Important Parts of the Human Body, Tenth Fasciculus
Plate VIII p 227, Bulmer: London,1799, reprinted Melbourne
University Press: Melbourne, 1986, ed. Attwood H.
Bowman AK.
The Life and Teaching of Sir William Macewen: A chapter in
the history of surgery. Hodge : London; Edinburgh;
Glasgow, 1942 .
Finger S.
Origins of Neuroscience: A History of explorations into
brain function Oxford UP: New York;Oxford 1994
Fulton JF.
Harvey Cushing, a Biography, CC Thomas:
Springfield, 1946.
Gordon-Taylor G, Walls EW.
Sir Charles Bell His Life and Times, Livingstone:
Edinburgh & London, 1958.
Olmsted JMD,
Francois Magendie Pioneer in Experimental Physiology and
Scientific Medicine in XIX Century. France Schuman's:
New York, 1944.
Pavlov IP.
Conditioned Reflexes, translated Anrep GV. Oxford
University Press, 1927, reprinted Dover: New York, 1960.
Spillane JD.
The Doctrine of the Nerves: Chapters in the History of
Neurology. Oxford UP: Oxford; New York, 1981.
Willis T
The Anatomy of the Brain and nerves. Feindel W ed.,
McGill UP: Montreal, 1965/6.
Willis T
Opera Omnia Genevae apud Samuelem de Tournes. 1680. |