Fr. 85.00

A History of Multiple Sclerosis

English · Hardback

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Description

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While we now recognize that MS is a common neurological disease, as late as the early twentieth century it was considered a relatively rare condition in Europe and the United States. It was only in the late 1860s that MS came to be generally recognized as a distinct disease apart from other paraplegic maladies. One of the important historical questions about MS is whether it was a new disease of the nineteenth century or one that had simply gone unrecognized for a long time. Answering this question is complicated by the different frames or ways physicians understood and explained disease in previous centuries. The way we now conceive, categorize, and explain disease is a relatively recent formulation in the long view of medical history.

This work aims to answer some of the fundamental questions of the history of MS. How and why did MS emerge when and where it did, first in a book of pathological anatomy in early nineteenth-century France, then as a distinct disease category in France by 1868? How and why did the perception of MS as a rare disease in the early twentieth century change so that by the middle of that century it was considered a common affliction of the nervous system? How did local conditions shape research on MS? Why did MS emerge as a popular crusade and research priority, rather suddenly, in the late 1940s and early 1950s? How has the experience of people with MS changed from the nineteenth to the twentieth centuries? Since there was no consensus about the merits of any treatment until very recently, how does one explain the sometimes aggressive treatment of disease from the late nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century? This book focuses in part on how sociocultural factors allowed MS to emerge into medical awareness and later popular consciousness and how the different scientific and sociocultural frames of disease affected the experience of people with MS. These factors were important in particular ways because of the peculiar disease process of MS, especially its tendency to wax and wane in many patients and in clinical symptoms.

List of contents










Introduction
1. From Paraplegia to Multiple Sclerosis, 1820-1890
2. The Emergence of MS 1870-1950: from a Rare to Common Disease
3. Research on the Cause of MS, 1870-1935
4. Treatment of MS in the United States, 1870-1960
5. The Emergence of Multiple Sclerosis Movements in North America and Europe, 1946 to 1976
6. The Illness Experience of MS, 1957-2006
7. The Emergence of the Autoimmunity Paradigm, 1933-2007
Conclusion: Autoimmunity, Paradigm Change, and Politics


About the author

COLIN L. TALLEY is Assistant Professor of Behavioral Science and Health Education at Emory University. He has authored a number of articles in peer-reviewed journals.

Product details

Authors Colin Talley, Colin L. Talley
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation ages 7 to 17
Product format Hardback
Released 30.04.2008
 
EAN 9780275997885
ISBN 978-0-275-99788-5
No. of pages 224
Weight 482 g
Series Healing Society: Disease, Medicine, and History
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > General

MEDICAL / History, MEDICAL / Neurology, Neurology & clinical neurophysiology, History of Medicine, Neurology and clinical neurophysiology, Health and Wellness: Diseases and Conditions

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