Contemporary Approaches to the Study of Hysteria
Contemporary Approaches to the Study of Hysteria
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Abstract
Patients with striking physical symptoms suggestive of a neurological disease, but no evidence of nervous system damage are typically labelled as suffering from “hysterical conversion”. Despite claims that conversion disorders have disappeared from clinical practice, patients with conversion symptoms continue to present diagnostic conundrums to clinicians. The disorder accounts for 4% of all referrals to neurology services. This book covers aspects neglected by previous works on this controversial condition, moving away from traditional historico-sociological accounts towards neuroscientific theories about the causes and categorization of hysteria. Recent investigations using functional imaging and hypnosis are covered, as are the neuropsychological accounts inspired by them, alongside more traditional psychodynamic accounts. A section on medico-legal aspects is innovative and timely. The key causal role of life events is also addressed, along with the influence of military conflict and culture in shaping and modifying clinical presentations, and changes in physical manifestations of hysteria through the centuries. With contributions from a distinguished international team, representative of all interested specialty groups, this books aims to demonstrate that hysterical conversion remains clinically important, with potential for empirical research in both social and medical sciences, as well as offering a fertile source for advancing neuroscience.
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Front Matter
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1
All in the mind? The history of hysterical conversion as a clinical concept
Chris Mace
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2
War-based hysteria—the military perspective
Ian P Palmer
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3
Recovering hysteria from history: Herodotus and the first case of ‘shell-shock’
Heen King
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4
The origins of DSM and ICD criteria for conversion and somatization disorders
C Robert Cloninger
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5
Discrepancies between diagnostic criteria and clinical practice
Simon Wessely
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6
The epidemiology of hysterical conversion
Hiroko Akagi andAllan House
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7
Life events: meanings and precursors
Tom K J Craig
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8
Hysterical conversion—a view from clinical neurology
Jon Stone andAdam Zeman
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9
Factitious disorders and malingering
Christopher Bass
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10
Non-epileptic seizures
Michael R Trimble
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11
Conversion hysteria: a legal diagnosis
Michael A Jones Alan Sprince
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12
Conversion, dissociation, or doxomorphic disorder
Harold Merskey
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13
Pyschodynamic theories in conversion hysteria
P J Shoenberg
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14
Conversion hysteria: the relevance of attentional awareness
Mauricio Sierra andGerman E Berrios
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15
Hysteria and hypnosis: cognitive and social influences
Kevin M Mcconkey
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16
Imaging hysterical paralysis
B S Athwal and others
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17
Disorders of willed action
Sean A Spence
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18
The anthropology of hysteria
Laurence J Kirmayer andRadhika Santhanam
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19
The prognosis of hysteria/somatization disorder
Maria A Ron
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20
Psychodynamic psychotherapy in the treatment of conversion hysteria
Nick Temple
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21
Cognitive behavioural therapy as a treatment for conversion disorders
Trudie Chalder
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22
Hypnosis and suggestion in the treatment of hysteria
David A Oakley
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23
Rehabilitation for hysterical conversion states
Derick T Wade
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