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S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
ness until the 19th century. Mental
hospitals began using
hot mineral-water baths to relax anxious patients and cold
baths to invigorate depressed ones. But we’re not talking
about an evening alone with champagne and Mr. Bubble. Th
e
“water cure,” as it was known, often involved hours-long
baths at frigid or near-scalding temperatures. Still, it was
better than getting, say, malaria.
✖ ✖ ✖
Before the advent of antibiotics,
syphilis was basically un-
treatable, and late-stage syphilitics often suff ered from a
neurological condition somewhere between bipolar disease
and schizophrenia. So how
to cure it? Why, with ma-
laria, of course. Beginning
in 1917, Austrian neurolo-
gist Julius von Jauregg in-
jected his syphilitic patients
with malaria (how he got the
idea to do this we can only imagine). After a series of terri-
ble
fevers (which seemed to eradicate the syphilis), the
treatment managed to calm patients down. Malarial ther-
apy spread like—well, like malaria—and in 1927,
von Jau-
regg received a Nobel Prize.
For intentionally giving crazy
people malaria
. Remarkably, malarial fever therapy remained
in use until the late 1960s.
✖ ✖ ✖
In 1927, Polish psychologist
Manfred Sakel observed that
people in insulin comas tended to be a lot less agitated than
schizophrenics. Why, he wondered, don’t we inject massive
doses of insulin into schizophrenic people? And so he did.
Some scholars have argued that
everyone
from Abraham Lincoln
(unlikely) to Ivan the Terrible (very
possible) to Al Capone (defi nitely
died of it) suffered from syphilis.
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Indeed, insulin shock therapy calmed the schizophrenics
down considerably—and only killed them about 1 percent of
the time—but its long-term effi
cacy was questionable. Sakel’s
therapy is still used in parts of Eastern Europe, but it was re-
placed in the United States by the now rarely used (yet equally
questionable) electric shock therapy.
Trepanation
It’s a surgery you quite literally need like a hole in your head.
Trepanation (which sounds like
trepidation
for a reason)
is a form
of surgery that drills a hole in the skull without (hopefully!) piercing
the brain’s membrane. Evidence of trepanation has been found
everywhere from ancient Greece to pre-European South America.
Modern psychosurgery got its start with it in 1935, when Egas
Moniz invented the prefrontal lobotomy. Although the surgery had
a death rate of 6 percent and a brain damage rate of 100 per-
cent, Moniz somehow managed to
win the Nobel Prize in Medi-
cine for it in 1949. Perhaps he gave prefrontal lobotomies to
members of the nominating committee.
But Moniz was a veritable Dr. Salk compared to Walter Freeman,
an American whose no-frills lobotomy led to the lobotomization of
almost 50,000 people (including John F. Kennedy’s sister Rosemary).
Freeman’s lobotomy involved exactly two tools:
an ice pick and a
mallet. He would pound the ice pick into the skull above the tear duct
and wiggle it around until the brain damage was done. Frankly, it’s
enough to give us tomophobia (i.e., a morbid fear of surgical opera-
tions). And speaking of long words ending in
phobia . . .
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