. A treatise on nervous and mental diseases, for students and practitioners of medicine. Drawing ot a section of a case of locomotor ataxia, showing degeneration of thecolumns of GoU and Burdach. Dorsal region. Magnified 10 diameters. and the increase of the connective tissue. This should be contrastedwith a similar drawing of the changes in myelitis upon page 200(Fig. Ill), and of the normal cord, Figs. 138 and 139. Fig. Drawing of a section of a case of locomotor ataxia. Cervical 10 diameters. Diagnosis. The diagnosis is a matter of ease when the fullsymptom-group is p


. A treatise on nervous and mental diseases, for students and practitioners of medicine. Drawing ot a section of a case of locomotor ataxia, showing degeneration of thecolumns of GoU and Burdach. Dorsal region. Magnified 10 diameters. and the increase of the connective tissue. This should be contrastedwith a similar drawing of the changes in myelitis upon page 200(Fig. Ill), and of the normal cord, Figs. 138 and 139. Fig. Drawing of a section of a case of locomotor ataxia. Cervical 10 diameters. Diagnosis. The diagnosis is a matter of ease when the fullsymptom-group is present, viz.: stabbing and fulgurant pains, whichare sudden, vagabond, and atrocious; Argylc-Robertson pupil;absent knee-jerk; motor and static ataxia; optic nerve atrophy ;ptosis, and the so-called crises. But the diagnosis may become 252 NERVOUS DISEASES. difficult when some of these pathognomonic symptoms are may be said to be three cardinal symptoms, one of which mustbe present in order to make a diagnosis of locomotor ataxia, viz. :the peculiar pains, the peculiar ataxia, or an absent knee-jerk. Fig. 137.


Size: 1987px × 1257px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidtreatiseonnervou00gray