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Unitary psychosis

Unitary psychosis (Einheitspsychose) refers to the 19th-century belief prevalent in German psychiatry until the era of Emil Kraepelin that all forms of psychosis were surface variations of a single underlying disease process.[1] According to this model, there were no distinct disease entities in psychiatry but only varieties of a single universal madness and the boundaries between these variants were fluid.[2] The prevalence of the concept in Germany during the mid-19th century can be understood in terms of a general resistance to Cartesian dualism and faculty psychology as expressed in Naturphilosophie and other Romantic doctrines that emphasised the unity of body, mind and spirit.[3]

19th-century proponents edit

Joseph Guislain edit

 
Statue of Joseph Guislain (1797–1860)

The concept of unitary psychosis is ultimately derived from the work of the Belgian psychiatrist Joseph Guislain (1797–1860). In 1833 he published Traité Des Phrénopathies ou Doctrine Nouvelle des Maladies Mentales in which he proposed a complex system of psychiatric classification encompassing almost a hundred different mental states.[4] He conceptualised this mosaic of symptoms as arising from any of four consecutive stages in mental disease.[5] These were: "(1) exaltation of the brain's activity, (2) aberration of the brain's structures, (3) oppression of the brain's structures, and (4) exhaustion of psychic energy."[6] For Guislain, what he termed phrénalgie, or mental pain, formed the basis of all mental illness where the "psychic reaction" engendered by "worry, annoyance, pain" or other mental "irritants" brought "physical reactions along with it."[7] Mental illness would then unfold along seven successive stages of progressive deterioration, which he detailed as: hyperphrénie (mania); paraphrénie (folie); hyperplexie (stupidity); hyperspasmie (epilepsy); ideosynchysie (hallucinations); analcouthie (confusion); and noasthénie (dementia).[8]

Ernst Albrecht von Zeller edit

 
Ernst Albrecht von Zeller (1804–1877)

Guislain's thesis was taken up by the German psychiatrist Ernst Albrecht von Zeller (1804–1877), who translated his text into German in 1837.[5] Zeller was the medical director of a private asylum at Winnenthal in Württemberg.[9] He would become perhaps the figure most associated with the concept of unitary psychosis in German psychiatry.[5] In 1834 he had already declared that the different varieties of mental illness were simply differing stages in a common morbid process and that "in the course of one case all the main forms of mental disorder may occur".[10] His adoption of the concept of unitary madness was predicated on his belief in the unity of the human soul or character and that man was at once composed of both material and spiritual elements.[11] Deriving this belief in part from Naturphilosophie and the influence of anthropology on German psychiatric concepts, he held that it was this fundamental spiritual self that was afflicted in madness.[12] For Zeller, both organic and moral (or psychological) causes combined to produce mental illness.[13] The organic causes of mental illness were, he argued, observable in the physical illnesses that preceded its onset. He reasoned, however, that "cases are rare in which the mental disorder is caused by purely organic problems of the central nervous system".[14] Instead, he held that the psychological pain occasioned by remorse, guilt, poverty and social reversal was the universal causal factor in all forms of mental morbidity.[13] Somatic and moral factors and the pain attendant on the latter combined variously to produce the four stages of a universal disease: melancholia (the fundamental form of mental disorder which led to the other stages), mania, paranoia and, finally, dementia.[15]

Wilhelm Griesinger edit

 
Wilhelm Griesinger (1817–1868)

For a period of two years from 1840 Wilhelm Griesinger (1817–1868) worked as a medical assistant to Zeller at the Winnental Asylum.[5] While there, he adopted and adapted his senior colleague's model of a unitary psychosis.[5] He did not, however, shares Zeller's conviction regarding the nature of the human soul or character and its role in madness.[12] A convinced somaticist and commonly considered one of the founders of materialist psychiatry,[16] in the 1845 text which established him as one of the leading scientific psychiatrists of his era, Pathologie and Therapie der psychischen Krankheiten, he conceived of character, or "psychological tonus", as derived from the action of a postulated "psychic reflex action" (psychische Reflexaktion) produced by the stimulus of the accumulated representations (Vorstellungen) of the individual's life experience.[17] The concept of psychic reflex action was drawn by analogy from the physiological reflex action of the nervous system in response to a stimulus and he argued that both forms of reflex had the same mode of action and obeyed the same physical laws.[9] Mental illnesses occurred, he posited, when the system of psychic reflex action failed to function correctly and were either diminished, leading to melancholia, or accelerated, leading to mania.[9] His belief was that mental illness was a disease of the brain but that this in turn was caused by psychological factors.[18] His emphasis on the brain as the central site of mental illness has led to his association with the so-called Somatiker (somaticists) who had argued that the causes of mental illness were entirely physical whereas their opponents, the Psychiker, insisted that mental disorders were the result of psychological perversions, moral failings, or diseases of the soul (Seelenkrankheit).[17] As with Zeller, he postulated that melancholia constituted the primary form of mental illness which then passed to mania before terminating in dementia.[19] In his 1861 text Mental Pathology and Therapeutics Griesinger proposed a classificatory division of types of mental anomalies between those characterised by emotional disturbances and those characterised by disturbances in the intellectual and volitional functions.[1] He argued, based on his observation of cases, that the former condition preceded the latter where disorders of the intellect and will appeared "only as consequences and terminations" of disturbances of the emotions if "the cerebral affliction has not been cured".[20] These two categories thus constituted, for Griesigner, "the different forms [and] the different stages of one morbid process".[21] The general trajectory of this mental pathology tended towards "a constant progressive course, which may even proceed to complete destruction of the mental life".[22] Greisinger maintained his belief in unitary psychosis until the 1860s.[12]

Heinrich Neumann edit

The greatest defender and the most radical proponent of the concept of unitary psychosis in the 19th century was the German psychiatrist Heinrich Neumann (1814–88).[23] Switching from general medicine to psychiatry in the 1850s, he became the owner of a private psychiatric clinic and from 1874 to 1884 he attained the post of medical director at a university-based clinical ward in the Breslau city hospital (now Wroclaw in Poland).[24] He was succeeded by his former medical assistant, Carl Wernicke, a noted neuropsychiatrist.[25] In his Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie (Textbook of Psychiatry) of 1859 he rejected any attempt at psychiatric classification as "artificial".[26] He asserted that, "There is only one type of mental disorder. We call it madness (Irresein). Insanity does not possess different forms but different stages; they are called insanity (Wahnsinn), confusion (Verwirrheit), and dementia (Blödsinn)."[27] Neumann exceeded the position of previous adherents of the unitarian concept by propounding not simply a continuum among diseases but also between disease and health.[5] Thus, he argued that, "sleeplessness, illusions, exaggerated sensitivity ... cause illness, then madness, confusion, and dementia".[28] The proposed mechanism underlying this process was what Neumann termed "metamorphosis" which referred to a disturbance in consciousness that led to errors in the interpretation of sensations.[5] For Neumann an overabundance of stimulation produced mental irritation and mania. As this depleted mental energy it could then result in hallucinations.[29] The medical historian Eric Engstrom has argued that Neumann's proposal to subsume the entire range of diverse psychiatric symptomatology into the concept of Einheitspsychose had the virtue of flexibility in its capacity to absorb any system of psychiatric classification.[30] Engstom has also noted that the concept supported calls for the early committal to asylums of all potential patients as it did not link the likelihood of remission to disease classification but rather argued for early intervention to prevent the onset of chronic mental disability.[30] Its wider support among asylum-based alienists (as medical practitioners in mental hospitals were then known) as opposed to academic psychiatrists was due to the fact that it was more applicable to the unhurried tempo of asylum routine where, unlike in university clinics, there was no perceived need for rapid diagnosis.[30] Equally, medical formation in the asylum setting was focused on protracted clinical observation rather than the formal pedagogy of a standardised university curriculum.[30]

19th-century critics edit

Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum edit

 
Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum (1828–1899)

From the 1860s the concept of unitary psychosis and its advocates came under increasing criticism. Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum (1829–1899), a German psychiatrist of seminal importance in the development of the modern nosology and a formative influence on the work of Emil Kraepelin,[31] had taken issue with Neumann's assertion in his 1859 text that mental illness could not be categorised into discrete disease entities.[32] Kahlbaum fashioned a response in 1863 with the publication of his Die Gruppierung der psychischen Krankheiten (The Classification of Psychiatric Diseases).[33] This text delineated four distinct types of mental illness (vesania): vesania acuta, vesania typica, vesania progressiva and vesania catatonica.[31] He asserted that the unitarian position signalled the "end to all diagnosis in the field of psychopathology."[34] For Kahlbaum, Neumann's failure to engage in any attempt at disease classification, his rejection of diagnosis as abstraction and his focus only upon the individual manifestation of mental illness constituted an enterprise without any scientific validity.[35] In the absence of meaningful and acute diagnostic categories in psychiatry Kahlbaum believed that both the development of effective therapeutic practices and the knowledge of mental illness would run stagnant.[35]

Emil Kraepelin edit

During his inaugural lecture following his appointment to the chair of psychiatry in Dorpat University in 1887, Kraepelin contended that Zeller's notion of unitary psychosis had led to the calcification of clinical research in Germany until as late as the 1860s. The revival of a more objective clinical approach built upon observation, he contended, had had to await the contribution of researchers such as Ludwig Snell who wrote on monomania as a distinct disease entity in the 1870s.[36] Kraepelin's approach to classification of mental illness was based on longitudinal studies of symptoms, course and outcome. He concluded from his studies that there were only two major forms of serious mental illness: dementia praecox and manic depression. This division of the psychoses, currently enshrined in modern classification systems as that between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and referred to as the Kraepelinian dichotomy, has remained in place for more than a hundred years.[37]

20th-century revivals edit

 
Klaus Conrad (1905–1961)

Variations of the unitary psychosis thesis have been revived occasionally during the 20th century. These have generally taken the form of statistical analyses that purport to demonstrate that the Kraeplinian division is unstable.[38] In the modern era the concept of schizoaffective psychosis, which straddles the Kraepelinian divide, when delineated as a condition sharing a common causal pathway as both schizophrenia and affective psychosis, shares aspects of the more radical notion of unitary psychosis in regarding the individual psychoses as points on a continuum.[39]

Klaus Conrad edit

Klaus Conrad (1905–1961), a German neuropsychiatrist and a member of the Nazi party from 1940,[40] became convinced that there was only one endogenous psychosis based partly upon his observation that cyclothymic patients, or those suffering from affective psychosis, often sired schizophrenic children.[41] He also held the belief, derived from his clinical experience, that symptoms associated with particular diagnostic categories were fluid and that a patient could, for instance, exhibit signs of mania or depression which might then reappear periodically and subsequently develop delusions and undergo a deterioration in personality.[42] Likewise, symptoms thought to be characteristic of schizophrenia, such as delusions, hallucinations and catatonia, were, he alleged, also found in depression and mania.[41] Conrad also contested the then established classificatory division between the endogenous and exogenous psychoses or, respectively, psychoses of internal or external origin, as whether the disease causing agent was "physical exhaustion or heightened emotion" it "attacked the same structure, physiological mechanism, biological metabolism".[43] Conrad, a proponent of Gestalt psychology,[44] is typically characterised as having expounded a view of psychosis that is commensurate with the mid-19th century psychiatric concept of unitary psychosis.[45]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Noll 2007, p. 145.
  2. ^ Jaspers 1997, p. 564.
  3. ^ Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 21.
  4. ^ Angst 2002, p. 5-6.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Beer 1996, p. 281.
  6. ^ Guislain quoted in Beer 1996, p. 281
  7. ^ Guislain quoted in Beer 1996, p. 281
  8. ^ Beer 1996, p. 281; Guislain 1835, p. 339
  9. ^ a b c Engstrom 2003, p. 58.
  10. ^ Zeller quoted in Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 23
  11. ^ Engstrom 2003, p. 59; Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 23
  12. ^ a b c Engstrom 2003, p. 59.
  13. ^ a b Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 23.
  14. ^ Zeller quoted in Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 23
  15. ^ Berrios & Beer 1994, pp. 23, 24.
  16. ^ Beer 1996, p. 276.
  17. ^ a b Engstrom 2003, p. 58-9.
  18. ^ Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 24.
  19. ^ Berrios & Berrio 1994, p. 24-5.
  20. ^ Griesinger quoted in Noll 2007, p. 145
  21. ^ Griesinger quoted in Noll 2007, p. 145
  22. ^ Griesinger quoted in Noll 2007, p. 145
  23. ^ Kraam 2004, p. 348.
  24. ^ Shorter 1997, p. 355;Engstrom 2003, p. 27
  25. ^ Shorter 1997, p. 355; Beer 1996, p. 281
  26. ^ Beer 1996, p. 282.
  27. ^ Neumann quoted in Kraam 2004, p. 351
  28. ^ Neumann quoted in Beer 1996, p. 281
  29. ^ Berrios & Beer 1995, p. 321;Beer 1996, p. 282
  30. ^ a b c d Engstrom 2003, p. 27.
  31. ^ a b Berrios & Beer 1995, p. 322.
  32. ^ Shorter 1997, p. 103-4.
  33. ^ Engstrom 2003, p. 263; Pillmann & Marneros 2003, p. 163; Kahlbaum 1863
  34. ^ Kahlbaum quoted in Engstrom 2003, p. 28
  35. ^ a b Engstrom 2003, p. 28.
  36. ^ Engstrom 2003, p. 125.
  37. ^ Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 30.
  38. ^ Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 14.
  39. ^ Möller 2008, p. 60.
  40. ^ Klee 2005, pp. 95–96.
  41. ^ a b Beer 1996, p. 284.
  42. ^ Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 32; Beer 1996, p. 284
  43. ^ Conrad quoted in Beer 1996, p. 284
  44. ^ Hoff 2009, p. 11.
  45. ^ Berrios & Beer 1994, p. 32; Beer 1996, p. 284

Bibliography edit

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  • Beer, M.D. (1996). "Psychosis: A history of the concept". Comprehensive Psychiatry. 37 (4): 273–91. doi:10.1016/S0010-440X(96)90007-3. PMID 8826692.
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unitary, psychosis, einheitspsychose, refers, 19th, century, belief, prevalent, german, psychiatry, until, emil, kraepelin, that, forms, psychosis, were, surface, variations, single, underlying, disease, process, according, this, model, there, were, distinct, . Unitary psychosis Einheitspsychose refers to the 19th century belief prevalent in German psychiatry until the era of Emil Kraepelin that all forms of psychosis were surface variations of a single underlying disease process 1 According to this model there were no distinct disease entities in psychiatry but only varieties of a single universal madness and the boundaries between these variants were fluid 2 The prevalence of the concept in Germany during the mid 19th century can be understood in terms of a general resistance to Cartesian dualism and faculty psychology as expressed in Naturphilosophie and other Romantic doctrines that emphasised the unity of body mind and spirit 3 Contents 1 19th century proponents 1 1 Joseph Guislain 1 2 Ernst Albrecht von Zeller 1 3 Wilhelm Griesinger 1 4 Heinrich Neumann 2 19th century critics 2 1 Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum 2 2 Emil Kraepelin 3 20th century revivals 3 1 Klaus Conrad 4 Notes 5 Bibliography19th century proponents editJoseph Guislain edit nbsp Statue of Joseph Guislain 1797 1860 The concept of unitary psychosis is ultimately derived from the work of the Belgian psychiatrist Joseph Guislain 1797 1860 In 1833 he published Traite Des Phrenopathies ou Doctrine Nouvelle des Maladies Mentales in which he proposed a complex system of psychiatric classification encompassing almost a hundred different mental states 4 He conceptualised this mosaic of symptoms as arising from any of four consecutive stages in mental disease 5 These were 1 exaltation of the brain s activity 2 aberration of the brain s structures 3 oppression of the brain s structures and 4 exhaustion of psychic energy 6 For Guislain what he termed phrenalgie or mental pain formed the basis of all mental illness where the psychic reaction engendered by worry annoyance pain or other mental irritants brought physical reactions along with it 7 Mental illness would then unfold along seven successive stages of progressive deterioration which he detailed as hyperphrenie mania paraphrenie folie hyperplexie stupidity hyperspasmie epilepsy ideosynchysie hallucinations analcouthie confusion and noasthenie dementia 8 Ernst Albrecht von Zeller edit nbsp Ernst Albrecht von Zeller 1804 1877 Guislain s thesis was taken up by the German psychiatrist Ernst Albrecht von Zeller 1804 1877 who translated his text into German in 1837 5 Zeller was the medical director of a private asylum at Winnenthal in Wurttemberg 9 He would become perhaps the figure most associated with the concept of unitary psychosis in German psychiatry 5 In 1834 he had already declared that the different varieties of mental illness were simply differing stages in a common morbid process and that in the course of one case all the main forms of mental disorder may occur 10 His adoption of the concept of unitary madness was predicated on his belief in the unity of the human soul or character and that man was at once composed of both material and spiritual elements 11 Deriving this belief in part from Naturphilosophie and the influence of anthropology on German psychiatric concepts he held that it was this fundamental spiritual self that was afflicted in madness 12 For Zeller both organic and moral or psychological causes combined to produce mental illness 13 The organic causes of mental illness were he argued observable in the physical illnesses that preceded its onset He reasoned however that cases are rare in which the mental disorder is caused by purely organic problems of the central nervous system 14 Instead he held that the psychological pain occasioned by remorse guilt poverty and social reversal was the universal causal factor in all forms of mental morbidity 13 Somatic and moral factors and the pain attendant on the latter combined variously to produce the four stages of a universal disease melancholia the fundamental form of mental disorder which led to the other stages mania paranoia and finally dementia 15 Wilhelm Griesinger edit nbsp Wilhelm Griesinger 1817 1868 For a period of two years from 1840 Wilhelm Griesinger 1817 1868 worked as a medical assistant to Zeller at the Winnental Asylum 5 While there he adopted and adapted his senior colleague s model of a unitary psychosis 5 He did not however shares Zeller s conviction regarding the nature of the human soul or character and its role in madness 12 A convinced somaticist and commonly considered one of the founders of materialist psychiatry 16 in the 1845 text which established him as one of the leading scientific psychiatrists of his era Pathologie and Therapie der psychischen Krankheiten he conceived of character or psychological tonus as derived from the action of a postulated psychic reflex action psychische Reflexaktion produced by the stimulus of the accumulated representations Vorstellungen of the individual s life experience 17 The concept of psychic reflex action was drawn by analogy from the physiological reflex action of the nervous system in response to a stimulus and he argued that both forms of reflex had the same mode of action and obeyed the same physical laws 9 Mental illnesses occurred he posited when the system of psychic reflex action failed to function correctly and were either diminished leading to melancholia or accelerated leading to mania 9 His belief was that mental illness was a disease of the brain but that this in turn was caused by psychological factors 18 His emphasis on the brain as the central site of mental illness has led to his association with the so called Somatiker somaticists who had argued that the causes of mental illness were entirely physical whereas their opponents the Psychiker insisted that mental disorders were the result of psychological perversions moral failings or diseases of the soul Seelenkrankheit 17 As with Zeller he postulated that melancholia constituted the primary form of mental illness which then passed to mania before terminating in dementia 19 In his 1861 text Mental Pathology and Therapeutics Griesinger proposed a classificatory division of types of mental anomalies between those characterised by emotional disturbances and those characterised by disturbances in the intellectual and volitional functions 1 He argued based on his observation of cases that the former condition preceded the latter where disorders of the intellect and will appeared only as consequences and terminations of disturbances of the emotions if the cerebral affliction has not been cured 20 These two categories thus constituted for Griesigner the different forms and the different stages of one morbid process 21 The general trajectory of this mental pathology tended towards a constant progressive course which may even proceed to complete destruction of the mental life 22 Greisinger maintained his belief in unitary psychosis until the 1860s 12 Heinrich Neumann edit The greatest defender and the most radical proponent of the concept of unitary psychosis in the 19th century was the German psychiatrist Heinrich Neumann 1814 88 23 Switching from general medicine to psychiatry in the 1850s he became the owner of a private psychiatric clinic and from 1874 to 1884 he attained the post of medical director at a university based clinical ward in the Breslau city hospital now Wroclaw in Poland 24 He was succeeded by his former medical assistant Carl Wernicke a noted neuropsychiatrist 25 In his Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie Textbook of Psychiatry of 1859 he rejected any attempt at psychiatric classification as artificial 26 He asserted that There is only one type of mental disorder We call it madness Irresein Insanity does not possess different forms but different stages they are called insanity Wahnsinn confusion Verwirrheit and dementia Blodsinn 27 Neumann exceeded the position of previous adherents of the unitarian concept by propounding not simply a continuum among diseases but also between disease and health 5 Thus he argued that sleeplessness illusions exaggerated sensitivity cause illness then madness confusion and dementia 28 The proposed mechanism underlying this process was what Neumann termed metamorphosis which referred to a disturbance in consciousness that led to errors in the interpretation of sensations 5 For Neumann an overabundance of stimulation produced mental irritation and mania As this depleted mental energy it could then result in hallucinations 29 The medical historian Eric Engstrom has argued that Neumann s proposal to subsume the entire range of diverse psychiatric symptomatology into the concept of Einheitspsychose had the virtue of flexibility in its capacity to absorb any system of psychiatric classification 30 Engstom has also noted that the concept supported calls for the early committal to asylums of all potential patients as it did not link the likelihood of remission to disease classification but rather argued for early intervention to prevent the onset of chronic mental disability 30 Its wider support among asylum based alienists as medical practitioners in mental hospitals were then known as opposed to academic psychiatrists was due to the fact that it was more applicable to the unhurried tempo of asylum routine where unlike in university clinics there was no perceived need for rapid diagnosis 30 Equally medical formation in the asylum setting was focused on protracted clinical observation rather than the formal pedagogy of a standardised university curriculum 30 19th century critics editKarl Ludwig Kahlbaum edit nbsp Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum 1828 1899 From the 1860s the concept of unitary psychosis and its advocates came under increasing criticism Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum 1829 1899 a German psychiatrist of seminal importance in the development of the modern nosology and a formative influence on the work of Emil Kraepelin 31 had taken issue with Neumann s assertion in his 1859 text that mental illness could not be categorised into discrete disease entities 32 Kahlbaum fashioned a response in 1863 with the publication of his Die Gruppierung der psychischen Krankheiten The Classification of Psychiatric Diseases 33 This text delineated four distinct types of mental illness vesania vesania acuta vesania typica vesania progressiva and vesania catatonica 31 He asserted that the unitarian position signalled the end to all diagnosis in the field of psychopathology 34 For Kahlbaum Neumann s failure to engage in any attempt at disease classification his rejection of diagnosis as abstraction and his focus only upon the individual manifestation of mental illness constituted an enterprise without any scientific validity 35 In the absence of meaningful and acute diagnostic categories in psychiatry Kahlbaum believed that both the development of effective therapeutic practices and the knowledge of mental illness would run stagnant 35 Emil Kraepelin edit During his inaugural lecture following his appointment to the chair of psychiatry in Dorpat University in 1887 Kraepelin contended that Zeller s notion of unitary psychosis had led to the calcification of clinical research in Germany until as late as the 1860s The revival of a more objective clinical approach built upon observation he contended had had to await the contribution of researchers such as Ludwig Snell who wrote on monomania as a distinct disease entity in the 1870s 36 Kraepelin s approach to classification of mental illness was based on longitudinal studies of symptoms course and outcome He concluded from his studies that there were only two major forms of serious mental illness dementia praecox and manic depression This division of the psychoses currently enshrined in modern classification systems as that between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and referred to as the Kraepelinian dichotomy has remained in place for more than a hundred years 37 20th century revivals edit nbsp Klaus Conrad 1905 1961 Variations of the unitary psychosis thesis have been revived occasionally during the 20th century These have generally taken the form of statistical analyses that purport to demonstrate that the Kraeplinian division is unstable 38 In the modern era the concept of schizoaffective psychosis which straddles the Kraepelinian divide when delineated as a condition sharing a common causal pathway as both schizophrenia and affective psychosis shares aspects of the more radical notion of unitary psychosis in regarding the individual psychoses as points on a continuum 39 Klaus Conrad edit Klaus Conrad 1905 1961 a German neuropsychiatrist and a member of the Nazi party from 1940 40 became convinced that there was only one endogenous psychosis based partly upon his observation that cyclothymic patients or those suffering from affective psychosis often sired schizophrenic children 41 He also held the belief derived from his clinical experience that symptoms associated with particular diagnostic categories were fluid and that a patient could for instance exhibit signs of mania or depression which might then reappear periodically and subsequently develop delusions and undergo a deterioration in personality 42 Likewise symptoms thought to be characteristic of schizophrenia such as delusions hallucinations and catatonia were he alleged also found in depression and mania 41 Conrad also contested the then established classificatory division between the endogenous and exogenous psychoses or respectively psychoses of internal or external origin as whether the disease causing agent was physical exhaustion or heightened emotion it attacked the same structure physiological mechanism biological metabolism 43 Conrad a proponent of Gestalt psychology 44 is typically characterised as having expounded a view of psychosis that is commensurate with the mid 19th century psychiatric concept of unitary psychosis 45 Notes edit a b Noll 2007 p 145 Jaspers 1997 p 564 Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 21 Angst 2002 p 5 6 a b c d e f g Beer 1996 p 281 Guislain quoted in Beer 1996 p 281 Guislain quoted in Beer 1996 p 281 Beer 1996 p 281 Guislain 1835 p 339 a b c Engstrom 2003 p 58 Zeller quoted in Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 23 Engstrom 2003 p 59 Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 23 a b c Engstrom 2003 p 59 a b Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 23 Zeller quoted in Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 23 Berrios amp Beer 1994 pp 23 24 Beer 1996 p 276 a b Engstrom 2003 p 58 9 Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 24 Berrios amp Berrio 1994 p 24 5 sfn error no target CITEREFBerriosBerrio1994 help Griesinger quoted in Noll 2007 p 145 Griesinger quoted in Noll 2007 p 145 Griesinger quoted in Noll 2007 p 145 Kraam 2004 p 348 Shorter 1997 p 355 Engstrom 2003 p 27 Shorter 1997 p 355 Beer 1996 p 281 Beer 1996 p 282 Neumann quoted in Kraam 2004 p 351 Neumann quoted in Beer 1996 p 281 Berrios amp Beer 1995 p 321 Beer 1996 p 282 a b c d Engstrom 2003 p 27 a b Berrios amp Beer 1995 p 322 Shorter 1997 p 103 4 Engstrom 2003 p 263 Pillmann amp Marneros 2003 p 163 Kahlbaum 1863 Kahlbaum quoted in Engstrom 2003 p 28 a b Engstrom 2003 p 28 Engstrom 2003 p 125 Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 30 Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 14 Moller 2008 p 60 Klee 2005 pp 95 96 a b Beer 1996 p 284 Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 32 Beer 1996 p 284 Conrad quoted in Beer 1996 p 284 Hoff 2009 p 11 Berrios amp Beer 1994 p 32 Beer 1996 p 284Bibliography editAngst Jules 2002 Historical aspects of the dichotomy between manic depressive disorders and schizophrenia Schizophrenia Research 57 1 5 13 doi 10 1016 S0920 9964 02 00328 6 PMID 12165371 S2CID 33585559 Beer M D 1996 Psychosis A history of the concept Comprehensive Psychiatry 37 4 273 91 doi 10 1016 S0010 440X 96 90007 3 PMID 8826692 Berrios German E Beer M D 1994 The notion of unitary psychosis a conceptual history PDF Journal of the History of Psychiatry 5 17 13 36 doi 10 1177 0957154X9400501702 ISSN 0957 154X PMID 11639278 S2CID 21417530 Berrios German E Beer M D 1995 Unitary psychosis concept clinical section In German E Berrios and Roy Porter ed A History of Clinical Psychiatry The Origin and History of Psychiatric Disorders London Athlone pp 313 35 ISBN 978 0 485 24011 5 Bruijnzeel Dawn Tandon Rajiv 2011 The Concept of Schizophrenia From the 1850s to the DSM 5 Psychiatric Annals 41 5 289 95 doi 10 3928 00485713 20110425 08 Burgy Martin 2008 The Concept of Psychosis Historical and Phenomenological Aspects Schizophrenia Bulletin 34 6 1200 10 doi 10 1093 schbul sbm136 PMC 2632489 PMID 18174608 Engstrom Eric J 2003 Clinical Psychiatry in Imperial Germany a History of Psychiatric Practice New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4195 0 Guislain Joseph 1835 Traite sur les phrenopathies ou doctrine nouvelle des maladies mentales 2 ed Brussels Etablissement encyclographique Hoff Paul 2009 Historical roots of the concept of mental illness PDF In I M Salloum and J E Mezzich ed Psychiatric Diagnosis Challenges and Prospects Chichester John Wiley and Sons pp 1 14 doi 10 1002 9780470743485 ch1 ISBN 9780470743485 Jaspers Karl 1997 1963 General Psychopathology Allgemeine Psychopathologie Vol 2 Trans J Hoenig amp Marian W Hamilton Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5775 1 Kahlbaum Karl Ludwig 1863 Die Gruppierung der psychischen Krankheiten und die Eintheilung der Seelenstorungen Entwurf einer historisch kritischen Darstellung der bisherigen Eintheilungen und Versuch zur Anbahnung einer empirisch wissenschaftlichen Grundlage der Psychiatrie als klinischer Disciplin Danzig Kafemann Klee Ernst 2005 Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich Wer war was vor und nach 1945 2nd ed Frankfurt am Main S Fischer ISBN 978 3 596 16048 8 Kraam Abdullah 2004 On the Origin of the Clinical Standpoint in Psychiatry By Dr Ewald Hecker in Gorlitz History of Psychiatry 15 3 345 60 doi 10 1177 0957154X04044598 PMID 15386867 S2CID 34933823 Kraam Abdullah 2009 Classic Text No 77 Hebephrenia A contribution to clinical psychiatry by Dr Ewald Hecker in Gorlitz 1871 History of Psychiatry 20 1 87 106 doi 10 1177 0957154X08099416 PMID 20617643 S2CID 43185310 Lanczik M 1992 Karl Kahlbaum 1828 1899 and the Emergence of Psychopathological and Nosological Research in German psychiatry History of Psychiatry 3 9 53 8 doi 10 1177 0957154x9200300905 PMID 11612668 S2CID 22921829 Lanczik Mario Horst Beckmann Helmut Keil Gundolf 1995 Wernicke clinical section In German E Berrios and Roy Porter ed A History of Clinical Psychiatry The Origin and History of Psychiatric Disorders London Athlone pp 302 12 ISBN 978 0 485 24011 5 Moller Hans Jurgen 2008 Systematic of psychiatric approaches between categorical and dimensional approaches Kraepelin s dichotomy and beyond European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 258 Suppl 2 48 73 doi 10 1007 s00406 008 2004 3 PMID 18516518 S2CID 35482134 Noll Richard 2007 The Encyclopedia of Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders 3rd ed New York Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 6405 2 Pillmann F Marneros A 2003 Brief and acute psychoses the development of concepts History of Psychiatry 14 2 161 77 doi 10 1177 0957154X030142002 PMID 14518487 S2CID 36206200 Shorter Edward 1997 A History of Psychiatry New York John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 15749 6 nbsp Psychiatry portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Unitary psychosis amp oldid 1165259509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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