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Charcot's Disease in Tabo-Paresis: Illustrative Cases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Gordon F. Peters*
Affiliation:
Horton Mental Hospital, Epsom

Extract

Jean Martin Charcot, Physician to the Salpêtrière, and described by his biographer as the Prince of Neurologists, was an Honorary Member of this Association and lived from 1825 to 1893. Though the centenary of his birth, I believe, passed unnoticed in this country, he was in his day a master in clinical medicine and pathology, and his loss was keenly felt both at home and abroad.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1929 

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References

The Spinal Arthropathies: A Clinical Report on Six Cases of Charcot's Joints, Charcot, 1885.Google Scholar

“Three cases of Tabetic Charcot's Spine,” Herndon, Richard F. Dr., Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, vol. ix, No. 4, October, 1927.Google Scholar

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