Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 76
Filtrar
1.
Acta Neurochir (Wien) ; 161(8): 1491-1495, 2019 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31069532

RESUMO

In April 1988, Peter Schurr delivered the twelfth Sir Hugh Cairns Memorial Lecture to the Society of British Neurological Surgeons. In his lecture, The Cairns Tradition, Schurr extolled the personal virtues of Cairns. He encouraged his colleagues to draw inspiration from Cairns' renowned determination, organisation, drive for perfection, compassion, and commitment to the training of those around him. Indeed, Cairns' own personality has come to define the specialty which he established in Britain. Today's neurosurgeons are, whether knowingly or not, formed in his image. But there is a side to Hugh Cairns that has been lost in the telling of his remarkable story, and yet it played a central role in his greatest achievements. This is the side of himself which he turned towards others. Throughout his career, Cairns received an inordinate number of personal accolades. His tutelage under Cushing during a formative trip to America and the impact of his role in caring for T. E. Lawrence are well known to many. But, more than thirty years after Peter Schurr's memorial lecture, and following the eightieth anniversary of the department of neurosurgery founded by Cairns in Oxford, it is his work as a pioneering collaborator which defines his legacy today, and which calls us to learn yet another lesson from his remarkable life. In this legacy article, we review the origins of Cairns' collaborative spirit and uncover the achievements he shared with Charles Hallpike, Howard Florey, Derek Denny-Brown, William Ritchie Russell, Ludwig Guttman, and Peter Medawar, among many others.


Assuntos
Medicina Militar/história , Neurocirurgiões/história , Neurocirurgia/história , Traumatismos Craniocerebrais/cirurgia , História do Século XX , Humanos , Doença de Meniere/história , Doença de Meniere/fisiopatologia
3.
Cephalalgia ; 37(4): 385-390, 2017 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27129480

RESUMO

Background Vestibular migraine and Menière's disease are two types of episodic vertigo syndromes that were already observed in Greek and Chinese antiquity. Descriptions first appeared in the work of the classical Greek physician Aretaeus of Cappadocia, who lived in the 2nd century AD, and in Huangdi Neijing, a seminal medical source in the Chinese Medical Classics, written between the 2nd century BC and the 2nd century AD. Aim The aim of this paper is to search in Aretaeus' book De causis et signis acutorum et chronicorum morborum and in Huangdi Neijing for descriptions of vertigo co-occurring with headache or ear symptoms that resemble current classifications of vestibular migraine or Menière's disease. Results Aretaeus describes a syndrome combining headache, vertigo, visual disturbance, oculomotor phenomena, and nausea that resembles the symptoms of vestibular migraine. In the Chinese book Huangdi Neijing the Yellow Thearch mentions the co-occurrence of episodic dizziness and a ringing noise of the ears that recalls an attack of Menière's disease. Conclusions The descriptions of these two conditions in Greek and Chinese antiquity are similar to the vertigo syndromes currently classified as vestibular migraine and Menière's disease. In clinical practice it may be difficult to clearly differentiate between them, and they may also co-occur.


Assuntos
Medicina Tradicional Chinesa/história , Doença de Meniere/história , Transtornos de Enxaqueca/história , Doenças Vestibulares/história , Livros Ilustrados/história , China , Grécia Antiga , História Antiga , Humanos , Ilustração Médica/história
4.
Otol Neurotol ; 37(8): 1199-203, 2016 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27362737

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: In evaluating the historical context of the first description of Menière's disease, its association with migraine headaches is compelling. We have outlined the events and observations of Prosper Menière, which led him to establish a link between migraine headaches and his eponymous disease. STUDY DESIGN: Prosper Menière's original French writings were translated by our group and used to recount his observations and thoughts. Miles Atkinson's English translations were used as a reference. Additional otological texts of the era were also reviewed as it relates to Menière's disease. METHODS: Prosper Menière wrote a series of four articles 1 year before his death. In one of these articles, he makes references to migraine headaches on several occasions. These original writings were analyzed, and the physical findings he described were interpreted based on their relation to migraine headaches. RESULTS: The passages in his published articles provide historical insight into Menière's observations. His writings describe in detail symptoms of migraine headaches uniquely evident in his patient population. Through his observations, he recognized that in addition to exhibiting symptoms of tinnitus, hearing loss and vertigo his patients also suffered from migraine headaches. CONCLUSIONS: Although his colleagues discounted Menière's theory concerning migraine headaches, he continued to make deductive inferences and publish his findings, leading to the association of migraine headaches and Menière's disease. Today, this association continues to be debated, adding to Prosper Menière's legacy.


Assuntos
Doença de Meniere/história , Transtornos de Enxaqueca/história , Feminino , História do Século XIX , Humanos , Masculino
8.
Rev Med Suisse ; 8(356): 1872-5, 2012 Oct 03.
Artigo em Francês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23133889

RESUMO

The cause of Meniere's disease is unknown. The postmortem examination of the temporal bone reveals an "endolymphatic hydrops" of the inner ear. Classically, patients describe episodes of vertigo, fluctuations of hearing and tinnitus. But some report "strange stories" that deserve doctor's attention. This article explains why their history (as those suffering from any other vestibular disorder) is often particular, to recall the few knowledge of the disease, how the endolymphatic hydrops was considered as the cause of the disorder, while it is rather an epiphenomenon, and to show how one can believe, wrongly, that a therapy is efficient after a study that seems however at first correctly performed.


Assuntos
Doença de Meniere/diagnóstico , Relações Médico-Paciente , Comunicação , Drenagem/métodos , Hidropisia Endolinfática/etiologia , Hidropisia Endolinfática/terapia , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Doença de Meniere/história , Doença de Meniere/fisiopatologia , Doença de Meniere/terapia , Modelos Biológicos , Percepção Espacial/fisiologia
9.
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd ; 155(52): A4156, 2011.
Artigo em Holandês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22217244

RESUMO

Prosper Menière (1799-1862) was born in Angers, where his father was a merchant. He finished his medical studies in Paris and subsequently became an assistant at the Hôtel Dieu, first to the surgeon Dupuytren and later to the internist Chomel. Meanwhile he helped to combat an epidemic of cholera in the south of France, and he was personal physician to the imprisoned Duchess de Berry, who had returned from exile to reclaim the throne for the Bourbon dynasty. In 1838 he specialised in otology after he had been made head of the Institute for Deaf Mutes in Paris. In 1861 he described a group of patients who suffered recurrent attacks of vertigo as well as abnormal sounds and whose hearing deteriorated over the years. He attributed this condition to a disorder of the inner ear; this went against the prevailing opinion, which attributed most vertiginous attacks to cerebral congestion.


Assuntos
Academias e Institutos/história , Doença de Meniere/história , Médicos/história , França , História do Século XIX , Humanos
10.
Can Bull Med Hist ; 26(1): 179-202, 2009.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19831303

RESUMO

La Mettrie's materialist and monistic philosophy is that of a military doctor, knowing what dysentery did to his own mind, watching his regiment destroyed at Fontenoy, running French field hospitals in Flanders. He learned brain science in the injuries of his fellows. He knew pain and that man's main positive drive was sex. He despised the prudish hypocrisies of feeble materialists like Diderot and Voltaire. His brutal military life and his hedonism made him the most coherent monist against Cartesian dualism. His study of vertigo is sound clinical medicine, which well accords with one trend in today's medical practice.


Assuntos
Saúde Holística/história , Literatura Moderna/história , Doença de Meniere/história , Vertigem/história , Encéfalo , Disenteria/história , França , História do Século XVIII , Humanos , Medicina Militar/história , Filosofia/história , Guerra
12.
HNO ; 56(5): 553-64; quiz 565-6, 2008 May.
Artigo em Alemão | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18418565

RESUMO

After P. Menière's first description of the typical symptoms in 1861 it took more than 40 years before the first otosurgical procedures were performed to cure Menière's disease. Various surgical methods were established during the twentieth century, which still are employed in the treatment of intractable Menière's disease, especially saccotomy and vestibular neurectomy but also intoxication of the labyrinth by intratympanic application of gentamicin. Despite the good results of such therapeutic regimens the basic pathological mechanism is still not fully understood. Since the description of an endolymphatic hydrops by Hallpike und Cairns in 1938 as a typical feature, there have been some observations of a possible infectious, allergic and autoimmunological (co)pathogenesis without enough proof to explain the disease in every case. This article aims to present the current scientific data, diagnostics and therapy of Menière's disease with special emphasis on surgical treatment options.


Assuntos
Doença de Meniere/diagnóstico , Doença de Meniere/cirurgia , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Otorrinolaringológicos/métodos , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Otorrinolaringológicos/tendências , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Internacionalidade , Doença de Meniere/história , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Otorrinolaringológicos/história
16.
Rev Neurol ; 37(10): 983-4, 2003.
Artigo em Espanhol | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14634931

RESUMO

AIMS AND DEVELOPMENT: Our aim is to attempt to create a chronologically ordered and coherent corpus of the apparently scarce information that exists about the history of the vestibular organ, a component of the inner ear situated on both sides of the head in the petrous temporal bone. Its job, at least in humans, is to transmit sensory information about movements of the head to components of the central nervous system. Some of its more common disorders lead to syndromes that implicitly entail balance disorders, such as the case of the syndrome described by Prosper Meni re in the 19th century. Without ruling out the possible ancestral knowledge of the vertiginous processes associated with the inner ear, our objective is to review some of the aspects that anatomists, physiologists and prominent physicists have been involved in throughout history, i.e. elements that appeared between the 18th and mid 20th century and which have led to a fuller understanding of the morphological and functional aspects of the fundamental apparatus involved in the detection of gravity and inertia, shared by vertebrates: the vestibular organ.


Assuntos
Otolaringologia/história , Vestíbulo do Labirinto , História do Século XVIII , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Humanos , Doença de Meniere/história
18.
Otolaryngol Clin North Am ; 35(2): 227-38, 2002 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12391615

RESUMO

I realize I practiced otology and neuro-otology during a golden era, but I have to admit that I didn't appreciate how important it was until I sat down to outline this article. How fortunate I was to have lived and practiced during these developing years of neuro-otology. How fortunate to have worked with the likes of Howard and William House, James Sheehy, James Crabtree, David Austin, and John Shea. How fortunate to have had the opportunity to teach residents and fellows in association with my private practice. So I envy the young otologist-neuro-otologist and the future you have. You stand on the brink of great discoveries. And like my generation, you stand on the shoulders of giants. Good luck.


Assuntos
Otolaringologia/história , Audiometria/história , Audiometria/instrumentação , Perda Auditiva Neurossensorial/história , Perda Auditiva Neurossensorial/cirurgia , História do Século XX , Doença de Meniere/história , Doença de Meniere/cirurgia , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Otológicos/história , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Otológicos/instrumentação , Estados Unidos , Vertigem/história , Vertigem/cirurgia
19.
Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital ; 21(3 Suppl 66): 1-7, 2001 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11677834

RESUMO

A short profile of betahistine and its activity in treatment of Menière's disease and other forms of peripheral vertigo is presented. The clinical efficacy of betahistine is documented by a series of more than twenty controlled clinical studies, performed in the years 1966-2000. Basic researches initially proved that bethaistine acts trough a vasodilating action on inner ear and cerebral blood flow (Suga and Snow, 1969; Martinez, 1972). In the following years this activity was confirmed using the modern laser doppler flowmetry technique (Laurikainen et al, 1998). Further recent studies proved that betahistine acts on the central vestibular histaminergic system as a weak H1 agonist and a strong H3 antagonist (Arrang et al., 1985), improving the process of vestibular compensation (Tighilet et al., 1995) as well as on peripheral labyrinthine receptors, reducing the spontaneous firing rate but not the activity induced by thermal or mechanical stimulation (Botta et al., 1998). More than forty years after its discovery, this series of studies carried out in the second half of the 90s leads to the conclusion that betahistine is a drug which maintains its scientific interest and its pharmacological potential in the treatment of vertigo.


Assuntos
beta-Histina/história , Vasodilatadores/história , Vertigem/história , beta-Histina/uso terapêutico , História do Século XX , Doença de Meniere/tratamento farmacológico , Doença de Meniere/história , Pesquisa , Vasodilatadores/uso terapêutico , Vertigem/tratamento farmacológico
20.
Arch Neurol ; 58(7): 1151-6, 2001 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11448308

RESUMO

In 1861, Prosper Ménière presented a paper before the French Academy of Medicine in which he described a series of patients with episodic vertigo and hearing loss. He also mentioned the postmortem examination of a young girl who experienced vertigo after a hemorrhage into the inner ear. Prior to that time, vertigo was thought to be a cerebral symptom similar to epileptic seizures. Ménière pointed out that vertigo frequently had a benign course and that common treatments, such as bleeding, often did more harm than good. He was not attempting to define a disease or syndrome but rather to emphasize that vertigo could originate from damage to the inner ear. Confusion regarding the clinical and pathologic features of Ménière disease persisted well into the 20th century.


Assuntos
Doença de Meniere/história , Médicos/história , Academias e Institutos/história , França , História do Século XIX , Humanos
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA
...