Today I want to tell you
a story about how it has changed the conception of the brain from so many
students since centuries ago.
How is assumed, the
study of the personal computer of the human being is not new, the beginning of
his study are given with the observation, so evidenced a papyrus written in
century XVII BC that contains the first references to this body to which
already named you brain, in fact
repeated seven times in this document describing symptoms, diagnosis and
expectations of recovery of two patients with skull fractures (Kandel,
Schwartz, Jessell, 2000).
This is known as the first
medical treatise and this is 1000 years before Hippocrates. The Papyrus contains 48 clinical
histories and includes details of how make sutures, examine the visual and
auditory perception and how to treat fractures in the skull of the patients
(Tanzi, 2012).
After that, during the
second half of the 1st century BC, in ancient Greece were developed different
observations about the brain in terms of the functions of this and it was
Alcmaeon of Croton of the Pitagoriana school between the VI and V BC who was
considered the first time that brain as the place where the mind was located, but not was not until
the century IV BC when Hippocrates, based of course on works of Alcmaeon, who postulated
that the brain was the organ where the intelligence
was based. While Aristotle during the same century, speculated that while
the heart was the organ of the intelligence, brain chilled the blood system,
this explained it based on the idea that humans are more rational than the
beasts because, among other reasons, had the most large brain to cool the hot
blood (Bear, Connors and Paradiso, 2001).
Thus, the brain aroused
curiosity and motivated cultural practices, for example, Egyptians drew the
brain to their dead because they had the belief that would not serve them in
the other world, other cultures believed that spinal fluid (which bathes the
brain) was where the soul is housed.
During the Hellenic period, Herophilus of Chalcedon and Erasistratus of
Ceos, made contributions that were essential not only to understand the anatomy
and physiology of the nervous system, as many other fields of life sciences,
his works are now almost forgotten and only known by studies that take them and
who rediscovered their findings more than one millennium after. His works consisted in
the systematic dissection ofdead bodies, recognizing the brain as the center of
the nervous system, and also differentiated the motor nerve of the sensory, and
described in detail the eyes, brain, liver and pancreas as well as the salivary
and genital organs.
Thanks to his studies,
Herophilus was the first to recognize that the arteries contained blood and not
air. While Erasistratus described the heart valves and concluded that the heart
was the center of the sensations, but was a valve and was the first to make a
clear distinction of the veins and arteries. He believed that the arteries were
filled with air and that they drove the animal
spirit (pneuma). It was considered that the atoms were an essential part of
the body and believed that these revitalizaban the pneuma was circulating
through the nerves. But I also thought the nerves moved a frenetic spirit from
brain. Observations allowed him to differentiate between the functions of
sensory and motor nerves and related them to the brain. Both are known as the
founders of the great medical school of Alexandria (Kandel, Schwartz, Jessell,
2000).
This
findings, open the knowledge to see neural functions are currently known to
detail it is possible to classify them from their duties.
Years later, during the
Roman Empire, the Greek anatomist Galen dissected the brains of sheep, monkeys,
dogs and other mammals, and concluded that the cerebellum was an important part
of the brain, which was more dense than this, and that was in charge of the
muscle control, while the brain was soft and was in charge of the sensory
process, and theorized that the brain works by the movement of the animal spirits
through the ventricles.
In the
middle ages and far from Western science, Najab ud-din Muhammad, was the first
to describe in detail a number of neurological and psychiatric, disorders
including depression, neurosis, impotence, psychosis and mania (Ibrahim, 2002).
For his part, Haly Abbas
described the neuroanatomy, Neurobiology and neurophysiology brain and
described other disorders such as sleep, memory loss, hypochondriasis, the
State of coma, meningitis, epilepsy by vertigo and hemiplegia, and some of the
symptoms of schizophrenia were reported during the medieval in Arabic medical
literature (Hanafy and
Fatma)1996; Khaleefa, 1999).
Away
from the science of the West, in the 11th century, Alhazen who can be
considered the forerunner of experimental psychology and pioneer of the
psychology of visual perception due to the contributions of its Loptics ibro, described for the first
time that vision occurs in the brain and not in the eyes, he pointed out that
personal experience has an effect on what people see and how looks it,
therefore it is possible to say that vision and perception are generally
subjective.
Moreover,
Avicenna’s works of Brain Anatomy were described in the Canon of medicine where
explained varied neurological disorders associated with certain psychiatric
conditions sometimes including hallucinations, mania, nightmares, melancholy,
dementia, epilepsy, paralysis, vertigo and the confusion (Safavi-Abbasi,
Brasiliense and Workman, 2007).
In
the West, especially in Europe are surprised with contributions from Versalio,
which was an anatomist and physician, considered the founder of modern human
anatomy and author of one of the most influential in the history of Anatomy
books De Humani Corporis Fabrica (on
the structure of the human body). His works attained many contributions to
Anatomy in general, but his greatest contribution to neuroanatomy was the
definition of the system of nerves as: transmission
of feelings and movement mode. He believed that nerves are not originating
in the heart as described by Aristotle but that settled the nerves in the
brain.
But in Mexico,
also there is evidence of trepanation among the Aztecs, the mixtecs and
Zapotecs the, albeit in fewer than the European prehistoric skulls or the
incas. An important aspect in the history of the study of the brain in Mexico
is that when Spain conquered the
new continent, brought with it the
great corpus medico antiguedad
cthesica and age media, which was formed basically by the writings of Hippocrates of
Cos and Galen of Pergamon.
So are en the city of Mexico, as heirs to the ancient Greco-Roman, three authors:
the first is Pedro Arias de Benavides (1521-1570?), Spanish surgeon originally
from Toro, Zamora, who practiced in Mexico, between 1554 and 1564, and on his
return to Spain in Valladolid, in 1567, in the book Secrets of Chirurgia,
published the case of cranial trauma serious which required surgery in 1561 in
the city of Mexico, by a depressed fracture, causing the patient, coma and
brain mass, all with a satisfactory evolution exhibition. In his writings,
reported that the patient was a 13-year-old boy surnamed Vergara (boy - Ponce
León, 1999, 2009).
After Arias
is to Alonso López de Hinojosos, also Spanish, born in Los Hinojosos
(1525-1579), province of Cuenca. López de Hinojosos was a surgeon who also has
the merit of having published the first book of surgery of America in 1578,
left Antonio Ricardo Piamontés presses; In his texts, Summa and Chirurgia
collection. Lopez describes carefully, galenic trepanation methods, with
their respective indications (boy - Ponce León, 2000).
However, the
most cultivated of physicians who published on the subject in Mexico was the
father Agustín Farfán (1532-1604), originally from Seville, Spain. Its first
publication called Tratado de Anatomia y Cirugia, also printed by
Antonio Ricardo Piamontés, dates back to 1579, a year after the Lopez. Within
the anatomical aspects this publication is the first detailed description of
the anatomy of the brain, of merely drug court, and their techniques for
trepanation and the treatment of fractures of the skull are also dose, similar
to those of Arias and Lopez (Chico - Ponce de León, 2004).
Should be
noted that publications from the 17th and 18th have also high quality,
especially The Medical Encyclopedia, posted
in the 17th century and 18th century by Juan
de Barrios, that opens in Mexico and at the continental level the publication
of medical journals, with Mercury flywheel, José I. Bartolache, but
without references of surgery of skull (Chico - Ponce de Leon, 2008).
On the other hand,
another important character in this story is Descartes; what could be said
about Descartes? Philosopher French, scientific, recognized as the father of
modern philosophy, influenced the math with its Cartesian coordinates system which allowed geometric shapes could
be expressed in algebraic form, work for which it is known as the father of
analytic geometry. But his contribution to the history of the studies of the
brain due to his famous phrase, "I
think therefore I am" which sums up all a principle of thinking based
on the idea that thought can not be separated from the mind, but that it is
possible to develop it based on the information that comes through the senses,
and defined thought as the process by which is aware of the information from
the senses and based on them He formulated the research method based on
perception and the following sentence summarizes his stance on the perception,
thought and consciousness: "if what I think was seen with my eyes and this
was possible only by the Faculty of judgement which is on my mind".
However, was the
microscope which allowed a breakthrough in studies of the brain, of course we
are talking about at the end of the 19th century, and this device allowed
Camillo Golgi during the 1890s, use chromate
silver to
reveal the intricate structures of a single neuron.
Golgi’s technique was used by Santiago Ramón y Cajal and
allowed him to formulate the hypothesis that the neuron was the functional unit
of the brain, which Ramón Cajal and Golgi shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or medicine in 1906, for their exhaustive
observation, description and categorization of neurons throughout the brain.
Eventually with all
these observations, Golgi began to draw their findings and
the idea of the neuron as anatomical Unit continued to work on the electrical
excitability of neurons that developed Galvani, and studies of DuBois-Reymond,
Müller and Von Helmholtz showed neurons were electrically excitable and that
their activity was predictably affected the electrical state of adjacent
neurons.
But in the year 1860, a
man makes history: known with the name of Kevin and diagnosed with epilepsy, this person is treated by
neurologist Guillaume Duchenne.
Long ago, while trying to find an answer to your medical condition, was
involved, they sectioned you Corpus Callosum, that is the nervous tissue that
connects the hemispheres of the brain. Kevin not only did not improve their
status, but it worsened markedly. I just listened for the left ear, and although
the right ear seemed to be in perfect condition, was not receptive at all.
In case outside little,
vision, also on the right side, had lost it. Thanks to Kevin practiced studies,
Duchenne began to understand how they behave hemispheres of our brain which, as
it is known, have an opposite form of acting. Our muscles on one side of the
body, move when they follow orders sent by the opposite side of the brain. So,
if we move the left hand is as a result of an order sent from the right
hemisphere. As a result of this discovery began to get to know some data of
certain brain activity correspond to the right hemisphere, as the memory of
sounds or the recognition of faces, while the logic or the ability to
understand the language, are generally to the left hemisphere functions.
In Mexico,
at the same time, Rafael Lavista in 1896 founded the Journal of Pathology and
in a work of 1899, it refers to the nervous system and included 150 microscopic
studies and some samples of the central nervous system with tumors of the
brain, the cerebellum and brain parasites, among others.In this volume, is
exhibited an illustration of a cut of left hemisphere, with a tumor at the
level of the second frontal gyrus, while another illustration, shows a
microscopic preparation of such injury, and both are beautiful lithographs
and the first published images of this type in Mexico (Chico - Ponce de Leon,
2008).
In
parallel with this work, waiting can be recognized this as a small tribute will
provide major contributions, who is the time to mention to Paul Broca. Paul Broca was surgeon, neurologist and anthropologist,
one of the most prominent figures of medicine and anthropology in the 19th
century. He carried out important work in the field of Oncology and the
treatment of aneurysms, as well as its contribution to the understanding of the
origins of aphasia, name which refers all impairment of the ability to
articulate ideas. Bit was a man of brilliant and passionate with a fervent
dedication to the medical treatment of the poorest social strata.
Broca also carried out
important research into the limbic region, known initially as the
rhinencephalon (olfactory brain),
area that is closely linked to human emotions. But perhaps his work more in our
days is the discovery of a small region located in the third circovolution of the
left frontal lobe of the cerebral cortex, which is called Broca's Area in his honor.
Taking as starting point
a small number of experimental tests, bit laid bare that that area of the brain
controlling articulated language issue and stands as a fundamental
characteristic of human activity headquarters.
Broca's
area was one of the first discoveries that showed the separation of functions
existing between both cerebral hemispheres, but more importantly, was one of
the first strong evidence of the existence of specific brain functions in very
precise areas of the brain, that there is a connection between brain anatomy
and their different specific activities, activities which sometimes tend to be
categorized as mental.
Of
course, Broca defined the are which has
his name thanks to his study made to a patient that he knows in 1861, who had
been the victim of a stroke and gave him the name Tan, since it was the single syllable which was able to pronounce
for 21 years. When he died, the autopsy revealed that a portion of the left
frontal lobe the size of a golf ball had been affected because of the stroke
(Shreeve, 2005).
Paul Broca died in 1880,
perhaps because of an aneurysm that is very similar to he who had so
brilliantly studied. When he surprised the death was working on a detailed
study of Brain Anatomy that could not be completed by him, but his student Karl
Wernicke continued their investigations (Sagan, 1981; Kandel, Schwartz &
Jessel, 2000).
Therefore encountered
next to the name of Paul Broca, Karl
Wernicke, known for his studies on aphasia (alterations of the expression
and/or understanding caused by neural disorders). Together with drill bit,
described what would later be called sensory aphasia (inability to understand
the meaning of spoken or written language), distinguishing it from the motor
aphasia (difficulty to remember the articulatory movements of speech and
writing), described by Broca (Shreeve, 2005).
Although both types of
aphasia are the result of a brain injury, Wernicke found that the location of
it was different. Sensory aphasia is due to a lesion in the temporal lobe. On
the other hand motor aphasia is caused by a lesion in the area of drill bit,
located in the frontal lobe.
Wernicke employed
different clinical features to formulate a general theory of the neurological
bases of language. Also described, in collaboration with the Russian
psychiatrist Sergei Korsakoff, a type
of brain disease due to a deficiency of vitamin B1 or thiamine, called
alcoholic encephalopathy Wernicke or Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome.
It is worth mentioning
the case of another patient, who opened the door to research on inter
hemispheric relations of the brain:
"On September 13, 1848 Phineas was working on
the outskirts of Cavendish; Vermont in the construction of a railway line. His
post was foreman and he was generally described as a capable and efficient man".
One of its functions was
to place explosives in holes drilled in the rock; so he filled the hole of
gunpowder, placed a detonator, and finally covered it with sand and crushed
sand with a heavy metal bar. That day Phineas inadvertently forgot to pour the
sand before pressing with bar, so by doing so there was a spark that made it
exploded the gunpowder. This explosion in turn caused the metal bar out
triggered through Gage's skull and landing almost 30 metres away.
The bar, which was a
meter long and less than 3 cm in diameter and weighed 6 pounds he entered his
skull through the left cheek and came out on top after passing through the
anterior cerebral cortex.
Surprisingly not only
Gage did not die instantly, but it was conscious at all times. The Chronicle of
the time tells even that spoke a few minutes. After the accident led him on a
cart several kilometers up to the consultation of Dr. Harlow; one of the
doctors of the people who would be who would leave us proof of its evolution.
Survive an explosion, a
wound like that, and the rudimentary medicine of the time and still be able to
walk and speak rationally is surprising; no less surprising is that two months
later Dr. Harlow would consider that Gage was fully recovered, giving
discharge.
Apparently the physical
recovery of Gage was complete; However in the words of the own Harlow: "the
equilibrium or balance among his intellectual ability and his animal
propensities had destroyed". After the acute phase, Gage became
irregular, irreverent, blasphemous and impatient. At times he was stubborn when
carried it the opposite, but on the other hand despite the fact that I was
continually thinking about future plans "abandoned them much before
preparing them"; and it was very good when it comes to "find
always something that you should not be". All this despite the fact
that prior to the accident was a responsible man. His marriage ended, since his
wife considered that he was no longer the same as before and was much more
aggressive (Macmillan, 2008).
The case of Gage is
regarded as one of the first scientific evidence suggesting that the frontal
lobes lesion could alter aspects of personality, emotion and social
interaction. Prior to this case (and quite some time after) the frontal lobes
were silent structures (without function), and unrelated to human behavior.
Antonio and Hanna
Damasio neurologists studied to depth the case of Phineas Gage, as well as
other similar cases, and raised the theory of somatic marker, which suggest that there is a relationship between
the frontal lobes, the emotions and the way in which human beings make
decisions. Because of this the case Gage is considered as historical, since the
remains of the skull and the bar used to do a simulation by computer of the
possible trajectory, concluding that the bar had affected the medial area of
both frontal lobes, so it is considered as the beginning of the study of the
biological basis of behavior, and was also key to the deepening of the
knowledge of the possible location of brain lesions (Damásio, Grabowski, Frank,
Galaburda, Damasio, 1994).
Some years later, at the
beginning of the 20th century, the Russian psychologist Alexander Luria,
perfected several techniques to study the behavior of people who suffered some
kind of injury in the central nervous system and completed a battery of
psychological tests designed to establish difficulties in psychological
processes such as attention, memory, language, executive functions, perception
and motor skills calculation, etc., even though at the time there were no
methods for diagnosis by the image, the application of this extensive battery
offered and continues to offer to the neurologist sufficient data so that it
would be able to locate the place and the extension of the injured area, as
well as offer a detailed summary of all the difficulties, especially cognitive
psychologist of the subject affected by neurological injury (Rufus-Campos,
2006).
Note: Images were taken from different Internet sites except the image of Broca's area. All Images have Copyright.
References:
Bear, M., Connors, B.W and Paradiso, M.A. (2001) Neuroscience:
Exploring the Brain. Baltimore: Lippincott.
Chico-Ponce de León, F.
(2008) Historia de la cirugía de tumores cerebrales. En Aguirre-Cruz, Ma.
Lucinda y Julio Sotelo Morales, eds. Tumores Cerebrales. Editorial
Médica Panamericana, México.
Chico-Ponce de León, F.
(2009) Historia de la cirugía de
cráneo, de los tumores cerebrales y de la epilepsia en México. Neurocirugía. 20. 388-399.
Chico-Ponce de León,
F.(2004) El doctor Rafael Lavista y las
primeras intervenciones sobre tumores cerebrales y cirugía de la epilepsia en
México 1892. Arch Neurocien. 9. 226- 232.
Chico-Ponce
de León, F., Goodrich, J.T., Tutino, M., Gordon, C. (2000) First published record of a neurosurgical
procedure in the North American Continent, Mexico City, By Pedro Arias de
Benavides, 1561: Secretos de Chirurgia, Valladolid, Spain, 1567. Neurosurgery. 47: 216-222.
Chico-Ponce de León,
F.,Valadés, D (1999) el funcionamiento del cerebro a las luces de la doctrina
cavitaria. Primera imagen hecha por un americano. “Rhetorica christiana”, Roma-Perugia, 1576. Salud Mental. 22: 29-36.
Damasio
H., Grabowski T., Frank R., Galaburda AM., Damasio AR (1994) The return of
Phineas Gage: clues about the brain from the skull of a famous patient. Science 264 (5162): 1102-5.
Gross, CG. (2009) A
hole in the head: More tales in the history of neuroscience. The MIT Press.
Cambridge, Mass. USA.
Ibrahim, B. (2002), Islamic Medicine: 1000 years
ahead of its times, Journal of the Islamic Medical Association. (2), p.
2-9 [7].
Kandel, E.; Schwartz J.H, Jessell, T.M (2000) Principles
of Neural Science. New York: McGraw-Hill.
McMillan, M. (2008) Phineas Gage – Unravelling the
myth The Psychologist. British
psychological Society. 21(9):
828-83.
Rufo-Campos, M.
(2006) La neuropsicología: historia,
conceptos básicos y aplicaciones. Rev.
Neurol. 2006; 43 (Supl 1): S57-S58
Safavi-Abbasi, S., Brasiliense,
SL., & Workman, RK. (2007), The fate of medical knowledge and the
neurosciences during the time of Genghis Khan and the Mongolian Empire, Neurosurgical
Focus 23 (1), E13.
Sagan, C. (1981) El cerebro de Broca: referencias sobre el
apasionante mundo de la ciencia. España. Grijalbo.
Shreeve, J. (2005) Cornina’s brain: all she is… is
here. National Geographic. Vol. 207.
num. 3. 6-12.
Tanzi, R. (2012) Neurosurgery before Neurosurgery.
At Dana Foundation Blog. Available at:
http://danapress.typepad.com/weblog/2012/12/neurosurgery-before-neurosurgery.html
No comments:
Post a Comment