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A Hypothesis of the Mechanism of the Functional Psychoses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

L. C. F. Chevens*
Affiliation:
Manchester University; Second Senior A.M.O., Cheshire County Mental Hospital, Parkside, Macclesfield

Extract

In the organic and toxic psychoses in which a symptom syndrome is known to be associated with gross brain changes or a definite toxin, it is hard enough to correlate the physical and mental. As McCurdy writes (i): “To find what cell change corresponds to the delusion of having a ship full of rubies is much more of a task than that of looking for a needle in a haystack.” In the case of the so-called functional psychoses—schizophrenia, the manic-depressive psychosis and paranoia—this difficulty is enhanced. It is only possible to treat the matter in the broadest manner, by considering the reaction between the organism and the environment.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1927 

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References

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