对癫痫的认识跨越了三千年。

Clinical and experimental neurology Pub Date : 1994-01-01
M J Eadie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

癫痫现象至少在3000年前就已经为人所知,最早的记录出现在阿卡德语文本Sakikku中(写于公元前1067-1046年左右)。在随后的几乎所有世纪里,人们普遍认为癫痫是一种源于超自然的疾病,在某种程度上,这种观点被带入了医学思想。在西方文明中,长期以来占主导地位的信念是癫痫病是由魔鬼或恶魔附身造成的,这一解释得到了三部对观福音书中记录的治愈癫痫病儿童的奇迹故事的权威支持。然而,也有许多其他的解释,例如癫痫是由于做错事或月亮或魔法的影响。这种想法直到最近200年才开始消失。从希波克拉底(公元前400年)开始,一直有一种观点认为癫痫是由自然原因引起的一种医学疾病。关于其发病机制的假设范围从大脑中过多的痰,通过沸腾的大脑中的生命精神(Paracelsus),在大脑中心的动物精神爆炸(威利斯),在脊髓(马歇尔霍尔)或髓质水平(布朗ssamquard)的反射活动增强,到休林斯杰克逊的概念,“偶尔,过度,无序排放”在大脑皮层的一部分。在有思想的人中间,过去一个世纪的癫痫学被证明主要是探索杰克逊概念的分支。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The understanding of epilepsy across three millennia.

The phenomena of epilepsy have been known for at least 3000 years, the earliest recorded account being in an Akkadian text called the Sakikku (written around 1067-1046 BC). Over nearly all the subsequent centuries the popular belief has been that epilepsy is a disorder of supernatural origin, and to some extent such ideas have carried over into medical thought. In Western civilisation, the long dominant belief was that epilepsy was due to possession by a devil or a demon, an interpretation given authoritative support by the miracle story of the cure of the epileptic child which is recorded in all three synoptic Gospels. However, there have been many other interpretations e.g. epilepsy as a consequence of wrong doing or of lunar or magical influences. Such ideas began to die out only in the past 200 years. From Hippocrates (c. 400 BC) onwards, there has been a continuing line of thought that considered epilepsy a medical condition due to natural causes. The hypotheses concerning its pathogenesis have ranged from excess phlegm in the brain, through boiling up of the vital spirits in the brain (Paracelsus), explosion of the animal spirits in the centre of the brain (Willis), heightened reflex activity at a spinal (Marshall Hall) or medullary level (Brown Séquard), to Hughlings Jackson's notion of an occasional, an excessive, and a disorderly discharge' in part of the cerebral cortex. Among thinking men, epileptology in the past century has proved largely to be a matter of exploring the ramifications of Jackson's concepts.

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