The main objective of this paper is to present the importance of hysteria on Babinski's oeuvre, and the conceptions of pithiatism from Babinski until the one of conversion disorder. Babinski gave a mental basis for hysteria in the place of Charcot's encephalopatic one, and several important semiotic tools to differentiate organic from hysterical manifestations based on studies from 1893-1917/8. His teachings were spread worldwide, and in Brazil they were also appreciated in the work on hysteria by Antonio Austregesilo, the first Brazilian neurology chairman. The neurobiological basis of hysteria conceived by Charcot is nowadays reappraised, and Babinski's neurosemiological contribution is everlasting. The patients believed to be hysterical,...
Professor Jean-Martin Charcot was the founder of clinical neurology and one of the prominent researc...
In addition to the famous sign described by Joseph Babinski, which is also known as Babinski's refle...
Conversion disorder ('hysteria') was largely considered to be a neurological problem in the 19th cen...
The main objective of this paper is to present the importance of hysteria on Babinski's oeuvre, and ...
contributions Histeria aos transtornos de conversão: contribuições de Babinski Marleide da Mota Gome...
The Present article summarises the changing concepts about hysteria from Egyptian papyrus to early 2...
In the scholarship on the history of hysteria, the career of the French neurologist Jean-Martin Char...
Patients with striking physical symptoms suggestive of a neurological disease, but no evidence of ne...
It has been suggested that hysteria had waned and was an old-fashioned, stigmatizing and false conce...
Background: In 1890 four cases of headache associated with visual symptoms and hysterical disorder w...
There is controversy as to whether conversion disorders such as hysterical blindness should be treat...
The concepts of disease and health change over time according to standards set for each period of ti...
The authors summarise the concepts of hysteria, emphasizing the seminal contribution of Charcot to i...
Hysteria still exists, even if this stigmatizing term has been abandoned in favor of more descriptiv...
[About the book] Patients with striking physical symptoms suggestive of a neurological disease, b...
Professor Jean-Martin Charcot was the founder of clinical neurology and one of the prominent researc...
In addition to the famous sign described by Joseph Babinski, which is also known as Babinski's refle...
Conversion disorder ('hysteria') was largely considered to be a neurological problem in the 19th cen...
The main objective of this paper is to present the importance of hysteria on Babinski's oeuvre, and ...
contributions Histeria aos transtornos de conversão: contribuições de Babinski Marleide da Mota Gome...
The Present article summarises the changing concepts about hysteria from Egyptian papyrus to early 2...
In the scholarship on the history of hysteria, the career of the French neurologist Jean-Martin Char...
Patients with striking physical symptoms suggestive of a neurological disease, but no evidence of ne...
It has been suggested that hysteria had waned and was an old-fashioned, stigmatizing and false conce...
Background: In 1890 four cases of headache associated with visual symptoms and hysterical disorder w...
There is controversy as to whether conversion disorders such as hysterical blindness should be treat...
The concepts of disease and health change over time according to standards set for each period of ti...
The authors summarise the concepts of hysteria, emphasizing the seminal contribution of Charcot to i...
Hysteria still exists, even if this stigmatizing term has been abandoned in favor of more descriptiv...
[About the book] Patients with striking physical symptoms suggestive of a neurological disease, b...
Professor Jean-Martin Charcot was the founder of clinical neurology and one of the prominent researc...
In addition to the famous sign described by Joseph Babinski, which is also known as Babinski's refle...
Conversion disorder ('hysteria') was largely considered to be a neurological problem in the 19th cen...