A treatise on the diseases of the nervous system . imited to the right side of thebody, a right facial paralysis, flaccid paralysis of the limbs of the left1 Gazette Hebdomadaire, 18*78, p. 475. SYMPTOMATOLOGY OF CEREBRAL LESIONS. 355 side, with deviation of the head and of the eyes toward the same the autopsy there were found cortical lesions, involving the supe-rior parietal lobe, with the exception of the ascending parietal con-volution and the two upper thirds of the angular convolution of theparacentral lobule, the outer wall and the convolution which lies be-tween it and the call
A treatise on the diseases of the nervous system . imited to the right side of thebody, a right facial paralysis, flaccid paralysis of the limbs of the left1 Gazette Hebdomadaire, 18*78, p. 475. SYMPTOMATOLOGY OF CEREBRAL LESIONS. 355 side, with deviation of the head and of the eyes toward the same the autopsy there were found cortical lesions, involving the supe-rior parietal lobe, with the exception of the ascending parietal con-volution and the two upper thirds of the angular convolution of theparacentral lobule, the outer wall and the convolution which lies be-tween it and the calloso-marginal fissure, and the convolution of thecorpus callosum in that portion comprised between the parieto-occip-ital fissure and the calloso-marginal fissure. This case presents, according to MM. Charcot and Pitres, some ob-scure points, so far as the anatomico-pathological description is con-cerned, and hence it is difficult to determine the precise seat of the ce-rebral lesion. But it is, they continue, open to the reproach of cm Fig. 29. e. The lesion is shown by the shaded portion. It was a gliomatus tumor, and gave rise to left hemi-plegic epileptic seizures and paretic troubles on the left side. On one occasion the head was rotatedto the left (case thesis of Landouzy). The lesion shown by the circle at the summit of the par-allel fissure (meningitis case xii. of M. Grasset, thesis of M. Landouzy) caused ptosis of the leftupper eyelid. No other paralytic trouble was noticed. F, frontal lobe; P, parietal lobe; O, occipital lobe; Pj. P2. P3, first, second, and third temporal convo-lutions; t}, t2, first acd second parietal fissures ; C. sulcus or fissure of Kolando; A, anterior fron-tal or central convolution; B, posterior central or ascending parietal convolution ; F1: F2, F3, supe-rior, middle, and inferior frontal convolutions; ,/i,/2, superior and inferior frontal fissures; /3, parietalfissure; ^.interparietal fissure ; cm. end of the calloso-marginal fissure
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectnervoussystem, bookye