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On Aphasia or Loss of Speech in Cerebral Disease

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Frederic Bateman*
Affiliation:
Norfolk and Norwich Hospital

Extract

From the brief summary I have given of the labours of the pathologists of the French school, it will be observed that the evidence deducible therefrom is of such a conflicting character as to leave quite unsettled the complex question of the localisation of the faculty of speech. The history of the continental contributions to the literature of aphasia would, however, be very incomplete, without a brief glance at the researches of the German and Dutch physiologists.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1868 

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References

On the Minute Structure and Functions of the Spinal Cord and Medulla Oblongata. Translated by Dr. W. D. Moore, p. 140.Google Scholar

On the Nervous Diseases of Man. Translated by Dr. Sieveking, p. 810.Google Scholar

Ibid, p. 407.Google Scholar

Einige Bemerkungen über Störungen des Gedächtniss und der Sprache Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie, 1849, S. 657.Google Scholar

Allgemeine Zeitschrift für Psychiatrie, 1852, 8. 262.Google Scholar

Ibid, 1863, 8.625.Google Scholar

Canstatts Jahresbericht, 1865; Dritter Band, S. 31.Google Scholar

On Diseases of the Brain and Spinal Cord, pp. 176, 273, 431.Google Scholar

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I presume Dr. Bastian means the postarior or ascending frontal.Google Scholar

Since the above lines were written I have been favoured with a private communication from Dr. Sanders, in which he tells me that his later dissections tend to show that in speech palsy it U the island of Keil that is at fault rather than Broca's convolution. Por the details of cases published by Dr. Sanders in support of this view, see Lancet for June 16th, 1866, and Edinburgh MedioaL Journal for August, 1866.Google Scholar

Edinburgh Medical Journal, February, 1867.Google Scholar

Glasgow Medical Journal, May, 1866.Google Scholar

The above very meagre report of this remarkable case is taken from the British Medical Journal of September 28th, 1867; it is to be hoped, however, that Dr. Lyons will eventually favour us with a detailed account of this most interesting and exceptional case.Google Scholar

American Journal of Medical Soiences, February, 1829, p. 272.Google Scholar

American Journal of Insanity, April, 1851.Google Scholar

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