Abstract
Important historical anchors for the study of the disease of Parkinson concern the first descriptions of the disease, its separation from other neurological conditions, and the evolution of therapy from empirical observations rational treatment designs based on the growing knowledge of anatomy, biochemistry and physiology of the basal ganglia. While the rest of the collection will focus on current and future directions of these issues, this article provides a history of Parkinson's disease, mainly emphasizing the people and the discoveries of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Other early descriptions
Before the description of Parkinson tremor references to be found in the writings of Hippocrates, Silvius of Boe (1663, 1680) and Sauvages (1768). A possible description of Parkinson's disease in Sanskrit is registered under the name Kampavata in ancient Indian medical text, Basavarajiyam (1400).
Gowers also contributed additional seminal observations based on personal experience with 80 patients in their practice London. Your Manual Nervous System Diseases (1888) emphasizes the emergence of middle age and male predominance.
The first autobiographical notes of a famous Parkinson's patient found in the writings of Wilhelm von Humboldt, the German reformer academic, humanist and statesman. His letters from 1828 until his death in 1835 to document resting tremor, micrograph, a sense of inner turmoil, coordination difficulties, and frustration of supporting progressive motor decline. A statue of von Humboldt by Friedrich Drake (1834) captured the typical parkinsonian posture year before the most famous statues of Paul Richer doctors.
The first film documents by Marinescu, Van Gehuchten and later, Putnam and Herz, capture the characteristics of Parkinson's disease and allowed for frame by frame analysis. The difficulties in the balance of propulsion and retropulsive Parkinson's disease are especially captured untreated. Film Documents post-encephalitic parkinsonism contrasts serve.
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