[Skip to Navigation]
Other
October 1952

FRONTAL LOBOTOMY IN A SCHIZOPHRENIC PATIENT WITH ADVANCED HYDROCEPHALUS

Author Affiliations

SAN FRANCISCO

From the Divisions of Psychiatry and Neurosurgery, University of California School of Medicine, and the Langley Porter Clinic, Department of Mental Hygiene, State of California.

AMA Arch NeurPsych. 1952;68(4):460-465. doi:10.1001/archneurpsyc.1952.02320220037003
Abstract

IT IS THE purpose of this report to describe a case of severe schizophrenia in which certain psychotic manifestations were greatly reduced by prefrontal lobotomy, despite the presence of advanced hydrocephalus. A search of the literature reveals no instance in which a patient with such extreme hydrocephalus has been subjected to lobotomy, and for this reason the case is believed to be unique.

The Boston Psychopathic Hospital Group,1 on the basis of their review of the literature, concluded that, except for mental derangements appearing with epilepsy, psychoses associated with organic cerebral changes have generally not profited from lobotomy. These investigators described three of their own cases in which obsessive-compulsive features were relieved by the operation, although each patient had evidence of organic damage, as indicated by preoperative psychometric studies and by gross "cortical atrophy" noted at operation. Pneumoencephalographic studies were not performed. Their series also included 13 cases with

Add or change institution
×