Dr Charles West was the founder (1852) of the first paediatric hospital in the English-speaking world. In a career spanning four decades, he devoted a great part of his energies to describing the nervous diseases of infants and children. In 1871, West published a series of lectures which focused uniquely on the developmental and acquired language and mental disorders of children. West's clinical experience indicated that acquired aphasia was almost always a transitory condition in children. However, there was one exceptional case which West followed for over 3 years. It represents the youngest case of persistent aphasia described in the modern English medical literature. West's writings reflect a significant early attempt to document and ca...
Contains fulltext : 55485.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Background: Ap...
Although the eponym "West syndrome" is used widely for infantile spasms, the originators of the term...
People in the early modern period had long been fascinated by ‘monstrous births’ as portents, prodig...
Dr Charles West was the founder (1852) of the first paediatric hospital in the English-speaking worl...
In 1889, William Osler published an important contribution to paediatric neurology, his monograph on...
In 1877, Barlow described a ten-year-old boy with right hemiplegia and aphasia, quick recovery of la...
The 21st century has seen an upsurge in interest in the speech of young children. Government reports...
There are few disorders in child neurology, even in medi-cine, about which thinking has changed more...
In 1899, Byrom Bramwell introduced the concept of crossed aphasia (CA) as a deviation from the preva...
In the 19th century, descriptions of patients with disorders of higher cerebral functions were typic...
BY acquired aphasia in children we mean the language disorganizations resulting from focal cerebral ...
In the second half of the 19th century, the newly emerging concept of an acquired disorder of expres...
Background: According to many aphasiologists the scientific study of aphasia dates back to the secon...
First paragraph: The earliest references to developmental speech and language disorders (Wylie 1894;...
The ideas and concepts regarding language and its disorders have a longstanding history. However, it...
Contains fulltext : 55485.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Background: Ap...
Although the eponym "West syndrome" is used widely for infantile spasms, the originators of the term...
People in the early modern period had long been fascinated by ‘monstrous births’ as portents, prodig...
Dr Charles West was the founder (1852) of the first paediatric hospital in the English-speaking worl...
In 1889, William Osler published an important contribution to paediatric neurology, his monograph on...
In 1877, Barlow described a ten-year-old boy with right hemiplegia and aphasia, quick recovery of la...
The 21st century has seen an upsurge in interest in the speech of young children. Government reports...
There are few disorders in child neurology, even in medi-cine, about which thinking has changed more...
In 1899, Byrom Bramwell introduced the concept of crossed aphasia (CA) as a deviation from the preva...
In the 19th century, descriptions of patients with disorders of higher cerebral functions were typic...
BY acquired aphasia in children we mean the language disorganizations resulting from focal cerebral ...
In the second half of the 19th century, the newly emerging concept of an acquired disorder of expres...
Background: According to many aphasiologists the scientific study of aphasia dates back to the secon...
First paragraph: The earliest references to developmental speech and language disorders (Wylie 1894;...
The ideas and concepts regarding language and its disorders have a longstanding history. However, it...
Contains fulltext : 55485.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Background: Ap...
Although the eponym "West syndrome" is used widely for infantile spasms, the originators of the term...
People in the early modern period had long been fascinated by ‘monstrous births’ as portents, prodig...