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MENTAL CHANGES FOLLOWING HEAD TRAUMA IN CHILDREN
78
Citations
34
References
1936
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryNeurological DisorderClinical NeurologyNeuropsychiatryHead InjuryFacial TraumaMental DiseaseMental ConditionsMedical HistoryMental ChangesBrain InjuryNeurologyNeuropathologyMotor DisorderHealth SciencesPsychiatryNeuroepidemiologyPediatric Traumatic Brain InjuryRehabilitationNeurological SurgeryClinical DisordersPediatricsChildhood TraumaConcussionCommunicative DisordersMedicineChild PsychiatryTrauma In ChildPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Mental disease in relation to head injury has engaged the interest of neuropsychiatrists for many years. The first references to this condition in modern literature are found in the writings of Esquirol<sup>1</sup>(1837), in France, Prichard<sup>2</sup>(1837), in the United States, Schlager<sup>3</sup>(1857), in Austria, and Skae<sup>4</sup>(1866), in Scotland. Since then an extensive literature has appeared, to which von Krafft-Ebing<sup>5</sup>(1868), Hartmann<sup>6</sup>(1884), Guder<sup>7</sup>(1886), Bailey<sup>8</sup>(1903), Meyer<sup>9</sup>(1903), Trömner<sup>10</sup>(1910), Berger<sup>11</sup>(1915), Hadley<sup>12</sup>(1922), Pfeifer<sup>13</sup>(1928), Strauss and Savitsky<sup>14</sup>(1934) and Schilder<sup>15</sup>(1934) have contributed. At first, the primary problem was nosologic. It was soon recognized that a certain group of these mental changes bore only an indirect relationship to the trauma which acted as a precipitant on a preexisting psychopathic personality, rather than as a direct etiologic agent. These mental conditions were
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