Lobotomy
Lobotomy is a neurosurgical procedure and form of psychosurgery. A lobotomy involves scraping away most connections to the prefrontal cortex.[1] Ever since the inception of the procedure, it has been controversial, but for decades it was commonly used to "treat" manic depression, schizophrenia, and other mental illnesses. The procedure has come under fire for having ill effects, and occasionally for failing to treat mental illnesses.[2] The demand for lobotomies has fallen sharply since the 1950's thanks to the availability of various medicines that treat mental illnesses. However, while rare, the surgery is not unheard of today. Lobotomies are still used as a "last resort."
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History
In 1890, German scientist Freiderich Golz
The lobotomy was hardly seen as a wise method in treating mental illnesses until Portuguese neurologist António Egas Moniz and American psychiatrist Walter Freeman
In 1967, Freeman was banned from practicing medicine after one of his patients died of a brain hemorrhage. Since then, the popularity and demand for lobotomies has sharply declined, and the procedure is seldom used today.
Methods
A typical prefrontal/transorbital lobotomy used an orbitoclast, which resembles an ice pick. However, Freeman's first lobotomies were performed using actual ice picks. To reach the prefrontal cortex, the doctor would tap through the patient's eye socket. After this, the doctor would typically be able to enter the brain just by tapping lightly on the orbitoclast with a hammer. This would allow the doctor to break through a thin layer of bone without damaging the rest of the skull.[6]
Effectiveness
While the lobotomy was regarded as a successful procedure in the 1940's and 1950s, many medical professionals deem the lobotomy to have been a mistake. Ironically, the lobotomy failed to cure schizophrenia, as it's not a disorder of mood, but a disorder of thought.[7] Many patients, notably Rosemary Kennedy
See also
References
- Lobotomy: Definition, Procedure & History Live Science 29 August 2014
- Soul Surgery: Successes and Failures in Lobotomy Patients HowStuffWorks 27 October 2008
- A Brief History of the Lobotomy Dr. C. George Boeree
- The Surprising History of the Lobotomy PsychCentral 21 March 2011
- The Lobotomist The Washington Post 4 February 2001
- The Way of the Ice Pick HowStuffWorks 27 October 2008
- Augustus S. Rose & Harry C. Solomon. Prefrontal lobotomy: A consideration of unsuccessful cases. Failures in psychiatric treatment: The proceedings of the thirty-seventh annual meeting of the American Psychopathological Association, held in New York City, June 1947, Grune & Stratton. 1948