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قراءة كتاب A Statistical Inquiry Into the Nature and Treatment of Epilepsy
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A Statistical Inquiry Into the Nature and Treatment of Epilepsy
A STATISTICAL INQUIRY
INTO
THE NATURE AND TREATMENT
OF
EPILEPSY
BY
A. HUGHES BENNETT, M.D.,
Physician to the Hospital for Epilepsy and Paralysis, and Assistant Physician to the Westminster Hospital.
LONDON
H. K. LEWIS, 136, GOWER STREET, W.C.
1884.
These three papers have already appeared in the Medical Journals, at different dates, during the past few years. They are now republished together, so as to form a connected inquiry. Since the production of the first and second of them, increased experience has greatly augmented the clinical material which might have been utilised in their investigation: but, as the essential facts have only thus been confirmed, and the general conclusions arrived at have remained the same, it has been thought best, with the exception of certain verbal alterations, to preserve the text of the articles as they originally appeared.
A. H. B.
38, Queen Anne Street, W.
May, 1884
CONTENTS.
I.
AN ENQUIRY
INTO THE
ETIOLOGY AND SYMPTOMATOLOGY
OF EPILEPSY.[A]
The science of medicine is to be advanced by the careful collection of well-recorded facts, rather than by general statements or unsupported assertions. No inquiry thus conducted with scientific precision can fail to be without value, and to add a mite to that store of positive knowledge from which must emanate all hopes of progress for the healing art. Our acquaintance with the nature of epilepsy is as yet in its infancy, and although much valuable practical information has been put on record regarding this disease, it is believed that the following contribution may not be useless in either confirming or questioning previous conclusions.
The clinical aspects of epilepsy are especially difficult to investigate with exactitude. The physician, as a rule, is not himself a witness to the chief phenomena characteristic of the disease. He is therefore compelled, in most cases, to trust to the statements of the patient and his friends for their description, and even when the cross-examination is conducted with the greatest care, there are many points impossible to ascertain with certainty. In the following cases of epilepsy, which have been under my own care, those only are included in which loss of consciousness formed the chief feature of the attack; and in the succeeding