Diseases of the nervous system : a text-book of neurology and psychiatry . involved. Thus the most frequent syndromes are the combined palsies,arm and leg; arm, leg, and face; arm, leg, face, with sensory symptomsand aphasic complexes. Cortical hemorrhages are probably much more frequent than isusually supposed since many occur without the death of the result in more limited syndromes, such as apraxias, arm mono-plegias (anterior cerebral syndrome). Monoplegias of the leg, isolated aphasias, lower quadrant hemianop-sias, and the thalamic syndrome belong more especially to the mid


Diseases of the nervous system : a text-book of neurology and psychiatry . involved. Thus the most frequent syndromes are the combined palsies,arm and leg; arm, leg, and face; arm, leg, face, with sensory symptomsand aphasic complexes. Cortical hemorrhages are probably much more frequent than isusually supposed since many occur without the death of the result in more limited syndromes, such as apraxias, arm mono-plegias (anterior cerebral syndrome). Monoplegias of the leg, isolated aphasias, lower quadrant hemianop-sias, and the thalamic syndrome belong more especially to the middlecerebral syndrome, while mind-blindness, and homonymous hemianop-sias are the chief features of the isolated posterior cerebral syndromes. Midbrain, pontine, medullary, and cerebellar hemorrhages arecomparatively infrequent, and have a special syndromy describedelsewhere. 1 See 995 cases collected by Jones, Brain, 1905. APOPLEXY 471 The Apoplectic Attack.—Nausea and vomiting are the most frequentprecursors of the apoplectic attack. In thrombosis or emboKc occlud-. FiG. 231.—Traumatic supradural hemorrhage. (Larkin.)


Size: 1543px × 1619px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., book, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmentaldisorders