Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jkksz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T04:58:08.791Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Masked Depressions

The Forty-fifth Maudsley Lecture, delivered before the Royal Medico-Psychological Association, 20 November 1970

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

J. J. López Ibor*
Affiliation:
Institut of Neuropsychiatry, Av. Nueva Zelanda, 78, Madrid-35 (Spain)

Extract

When I received the invitation to deliver this year's Maudsley Lecture, I felt that a great honour had been conferred upon me. The series of the Maudsley Lectures provide a succession of pictures and a measure of the level attained by psychiatry, not only in Great Britain but throughout the world in recent times. Maudsley himself was a great master in the realm of clinical psychiatry. In these days psychiatry is menaced by many diverse and varied interpretations that tend towards bringing about its disintegration. Reading Maudsley's Pathology of Mind, and reading these lectures that have been given under his name since their foundation, constitutes an invaluable lesson that enables present-day psychiatrists to understand what their real situation is, and what is the field of action that is open to them as scientists in contemporary society.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1972 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allison, (1943). Canad. med. Assn. J., 48, 36.Google Scholar
Bastiaans, S. J., vide in Groen, J. J., Bastiaans, S. J., and Valk, J. M. (1957). ‘Psychosomatic aspects of syndrome shift and syndrome suppression.’ In: Booik, I. (ed.) Psychosomatics. Amsterdam: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Beecher, (1948). ‘Pain in men wounded in battle.’ Amer. Surg., 123, 96.Google Scholar
Bernhardt, M. (1895). ‘Über isoliert im Gebiete des N. cutaneus femoris externus vorkommende Parästhesien.’ Neurol. Centralbl., 14, 242.Google Scholar
Billod, E. (1882). Des Maladies Mentales et Nerveuses. Paris: G. Masson.Google Scholar
Bilz, R. (1940). Pars pro Toto. Ein Beitrag zur Pathologic menschlichen Affekte und Organfunktionen. Leipzig: Thieme.Google Scholar
Bing, R. (1923). ‘Über einige bemerkenswerte Begleiterscheinungen der extrapyramidale Rigidität. (Akathisia bei Akinesia paradoxa)'. Schweiz. med. Wschr., 53, 167–71.Google Scholar
Bogaert, , Van, Tombeur, , and De Wandels, (1946). Confinia Neurologica, 3, 148.Google Scholar
Brissaud, E. (1902). Revue Neurologique, ii, 762–3.Google Scholar
Burton, (1621). The Anatomy of Melancholy. New Ed. 1924. London: Chatto and Windus.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cassirer, R. (1906). ‘Neuritis und Polyneuritis.’ In: Leyden, E., and Klemperer, F., Die Deutsche Klinik. Vol. 6, pt. 1, p. 1021. Berlin: Urban and Schwarzenberg.Google Scholar
Cleghorn, , and Curtis, (1959). ‘Psychosomatic accompaniments of latent- and depressive affect’ Canad. psychiatr. Ass. J., 4, 1323. Special Supplement.Google Scholar
Da Fonseca, A. F. (1959). ‘Análise heredo-clinica des pertubaçoes affectivas.’ Dess., Porto.Google Scholar
Déjerine, (1916). ‘Les radiculites.’ Rev. Neur., 29, 321.Google Scholar
Déjerine, and Egger, (1904). ‘Les troubles objectives de la sensibilité dans- l'acroparesthésie et leur topographic radiculaire.’ Rev. Neur., 29, 554.Google Scholar
Ekbom, K. A. (1945). Restless Legs. Stockholm: Ivar Hoeggströms.Google Scholar
Ekbom, K. A. (1950). ‘Restless legs.’ Acta med. Scand., Suppl. 246, 64.Google Scholar
Féré, (1890). Les Épilepsies et les Épileptiques. Paris.Google Scholar
Fernandes, B. (1951). ‘Glossodinia timopatica.’ Actas luso-espah. Neurol. Psiquiat., 10, 272.Google Scholar
Gurney, , Roth, , Kerr, , and Schapira, (1970). ‘The bearing of treatment on the classification of the affective disorders.’ Brit. J. Psychiatry, 117, 251–5.Google Scholar
von Haller, Albert (1754) see Weizsäcker. V.v. Der Gestaltkreis. Thieme, 1960.Google Scholar
Haskoveč, (1904). Wien. klin. Wschr., 17.Google Scholar
Haskoveč, (1901). Rev. Neurol., 107.Google Scholar
Höffding, H. (1893). Psychologie in Umrissen, 2. Aufl. Reisland. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Kalinowsky, L. B., and Hippius, H. (1969). Pharmacological, Convulsive and other Somatic Treatments in Psychiatry. New York: Grune and Stratton.Google Scholar
Leibnitz, Hauptwerke. Stuttgart: Kröner 1949.Google Scholar
Leibnitz, Correspondencia con Arnauld. Buenos Aires: Losada 1949.Google Scholar
Leigh, Denis (1967). ‘The contribution of psychoanalysis and psychiatry to psychosomatic medicine.’ Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 15, 153.Google Scholar
Lewis, A. (1934). ‘Melancholia: a historical review.’ Journal of Mental Science, 80, 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
López-Ibor Aliño, J. J. (1970). ‘Depressive equivalents.’ Doctoral Thesis, Univ. of Madrid Google Scholar
Mapother, E. (1926). Opening paper of discussion on manic-depressive psychoses. Brit. med. Journal, 862–6.Google Scholar
Merskey, H. (1965). ‘The effect of chronic pain upon the response to noxious stimuli by psychiatric patients.’ J. psychosoma. Res., 8, 405–19.Google Scholar
Mitscherlich, (1966). Krankheit als Konflikt. Frankfurt: SuhrKamft.Google Scholar
Monro, (1968). Communication to the Congress of Ontoanalytic Psychotherapy, Malaga.Google Scholar
Rangell, L. (1953). ‘Psychiatric aspect of pain.’ Psychosom. Med., 15, 22.Google Scholar
Rees, L. (1953). ‘Psychosomatic aspects of vagotomy.’ J. ment. Sci., 99, 505.Google Scholar
Roth, W. K. (1895). Meralgia Paraesthetica. Berlin: S. Karger.Google Scholar
Sargant, W., and Slater, E. (1944). An Introduction to Somatic Methods of Treatment in Psychiatry. Edinburgh: Livingstone.Google Scholar
Scheler, Max (1912). ‘Über Ressentiment und moralisches Vorurteil.’ Leipzig.Google Scholar
Scheler, Max (1921). Der Formalismus in der Ethik und die materiale Wertethik. Halle, Niemeyer, 1913 (2 Aufl. Halle, 1921).Google Scholar
Schneider, K. (1968). Klinische Psychopathologie. Stuttgart: 8. Aufl. Thieme Google Scholar
Schulze, (1892). ‘Uber Akroparästhesie.’ Deutsche Zeitsch für Nervenheilk, 3, 1892. S: 300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slater, E. (1936). ‘Inheritance of manic-depressive.’ Proc. Roy, Soc. Med., 29, 981990.Google Scholar
Slater, E. (1938a). ‘Zur Periodik des manisch-depressiven Irreseins.’ Z. ges. Neurol. Psychiat, 162, 794.Google Scholar
Slater, E. (1938b). ‘Zur Erbpathologie des manisch-depressiven Irreseins.’ Z. ges. Neurol. Psychiat., 163, 1.Google Scholar
Spiegelberg, V. (1968). Pharmacotherapy and Psychosomatics. Int. Pharmacopsychiatrics, 1, 87/111.Google Scholar
Spitz, R. (1967). Vom Säugling zum Kleinkind. Stuttgart: Klett.Google Scholar
Stengel, E. (1965). ‘Pain and the psychiatrist.’ Brit. J. Psychiat., 111, 795802.Google Scholar
Stengel, E. (1966). ‘Pain and the psychiatrist.’ (Correspondence.) Brit. J. Psychiat., 112, 329–31.Google Scholar
Stumpf, K. (1928). Gefühl und Gefühlsempefidung. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Trousseau, (1812). ‘Vertigo dyspeptica.’ Gaz. des Hôpit.Google Scholar
v. Uexkull, T. ‘Untersuchungen über das Phänomen der “Stimmung”, mit einer Analyse der Nausea nach Apomorphingaben verschiedene Grosse.’Google Scholar
Walters, Allan (1961). Brain, 84, 11.Google Scholar
Wartemberg, R. (1932). ‘Cheiralgia paraesthetica.’ Ztsch. f. d. Ges. Neurol, u. Psychiat., 144, 145.Google Scholar
Wartemberg, R. (1958). Neuritis, Sensory Neuritis, Neuralgia. New York: Oxford University Press Inc.Google Scholar
Wartemberg, R. (1954). ‘Digitalgia paraesthetica and gonyalgia paraesthetica.’ Neurology, 4, 106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wartemberg, R. (1936). ‘Brachialgia statica paraesthetica—eine Form vom Akroparästhesia.’ Zschr. f. d. ges. Neurol. u. Psychiat., 154, 695.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Westphal, C. (1872). ‘Die Agoraphobie.’ Arch. f. Psych. u. Nervenkrankh, e. 138 and 219.Google Scholar
Wilson, S. A. K. (1925). ‘Some disorders of motility and muscle tone with special reference to the corpus striatum.’ Lancet, i, 110, 53–62, 169–78, 215–19, 268–76.Google Scholar
Wolff, H. G., and Wolf, S. (1948). Pain. Springfield, Ill.: C. Thomas.Google ScholarPubMed
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.