This research, based on a study of King George III’s medical records and of contemporary diaries of his courtiers and equerries, further confirms the considerable doubt on the claim of Richard Hunter and Ida Macalpine that the King suffered from recurrent attacks of acute porphyria. The present study examines the above records from a psychiatric viewpoint, together with some additional reports, to re-assess the nature of the King’s maladies. It concludes that he suffered from recurrent mania (four episodes), with chronic mania and possibly a degree of fatuity during the last decade of his life. This is in agreement with previous reports that he suffered from manic-depressive psychosis
International audienceOn April 7, 1498, Charles VIII, King of France, attended a game of palm in the...
Wewere intrigued by the cover im-age for the November 2011 issue of Clinical Chemistry, which showed...
Mood is the changing expression of emotion and can be described as a spectrum. The outermost ends of...
We used a computational linguistic approach, exploiting machine learning techniques, to examine the ...
In 1969 it was proposed that the episodic madness suffered by King George III (1738-1820) resulted f...
We used a computational linguistic approach, exploiting machine learning techniques, to examine the ...
ill. This has been well documented, in contrast to the sudden influx of mentally distressed patients...
In 1886, Bernhard von Gudden and three other expert psychiatrists diagnosed the Bavarian King Ludwig...
BACKGROUND - Bipolar disorder has been postulated as an explanation for King John's inconsistencies ...
Bernhard von Gudden was a psychiatrist in Prussia and he was summoned in March 1886 to examine King ...
Doubts about the sanity of the German Emperor Wilhelm II emerged soon after his accession to the thr...
underactive and overactive melancholy and mania, for example, were distinguished from the often gend...
Sir, We read with interest the paper by Jinnah et al. (2010) in the March 2010 issue of Brain, descr...
Between 1380 and 1422, in the reign of the mad king Charles VI, France suffered rebellion and the c...
Felip V d’Espanya va presentar, des de la joventut, símptomes que avui dia la psiquiatria reconeix c...
International audienceOn April 7, 1498, Charles VIII, King of France, attended a game of palm in the...
Wewere intrigued by the cover im-age for the November 2011 issue of Clinical Chemistry, which showed...
Mood is the changing expression of emotion and can be described as a spectrum. The outermost ends of...
We used a computational linguistic approach, exploiting machine learning techniques, to examine the ...
In 1969 it was proposed that the episodic madness suffered by King George III (1738-1820) resulted f...
We used a computational linguistic approach, exploiting machine learning techniques, to examine the ...
ill. This has been well documented, in contrast to the sudden influx of mentally distressed patients...
In 1886, Bernhard von Gudden and three other expert psychiatrists diagnosed the Bavarian King Ludwig...
BACKGROUND - Bipolar disorder has been postulated as an explanation for King John's inconsistencies ...
Bernhard von Gudden was a psychiatrist in Prussia and he was summoned in March 1886 to examine King ...
Doubts about the sanity of the German Emperor Wilhelm II emerged soon after his accession to the thr...
underactive and overactive melancholy and mania, for example, were distinguished from the often gend...
Sir, We read with interest the paper by Jinnah et al. (2010) in the March 2010 issue of Brain, descr...
Between 1380 and 1422, in the reign of the mad king Charles VI, France suffered rebellion and the c...
Felip V d’Espanya va presentar, des de la joventut, símptomes que avui dia la psiquiatria reconeix c...
International audienceOn April 7, 1498, Charles VIII, King of France, attended a game of palm in the...
Wewere intrigued by the cover im-age for the November 2011 issue of Clinical Chemistry, which showed...
Mood is the changing expression of emotion and can be described as a spectrum. The outermost ends of...