Van Gogh had Menière's disease and not epilepsy.
نویسندگان
چکیده
We intend to correct the historical error that Vincent Van Gogh's medical problems resulted from epilepsy plus madness, a diagnosis made during his life but for which no rigid criteria are apparent. Review of 796 personal letters to family and friends written between 1884 and his suicide in 1890 reveals a man constantly in control of his reason and suffering from severe repeated attacks of disabling vertigo, not a seizure disorder. His own diagnosis of epilepsy was made from the written diagnosis by Dr Peyron, the physician at the asylum of St Remy (France), wherein on May 9, 1889, Van Gogh voluntarily committed himself to the asylum for epileptics and lunatics. However, the clinical descriptions in his letters are those of a person suffering from Meniere's disease, not epilepsy. The authors point out that Prosper Meniere's description of his syndrome (an inner-ear disorder) was not well known when Van Gogh died and that it often was misdiagnosed as epilepsy well into the 20th century.
منابع مشابه
Vincent van Gogh's epilepsy.
Whether Van Gogh (1853–1890) had epilepsy has been subject to doubt and conjecture in the fields of art and medicine. Even epileptologists have had divergent views. Gastaut admitted that Van Gogh had epilepsy, but considered that his seizures were triggered by alcohol [1–3], whereas according to Hughes, Van Gogh more likely suffered from fainting fits [4]. The recent edition of Van Gogh's corre...
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During his short, stormy, and tragic life, Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) seriously suffered from ep‑ isodes of depression, anxiety, seizures, and pain. He had probably a bipolar (manic‑depressive) dis‑ ease but epilepsy, schizophrenia, chemical intoxi‑ cation, Ménière's disease, and porphyria are con‑ sidered as other possible diagnoses. Van Gogh portrayed his last physician, Dr Paul Gachet, wit...
متن کاملVincent's violent vertigo. An analysis of the original diagnosis of epilepsy vs. the current diagnosis of Meniére's disease.
The authors propose to correct the historical misimpression that Vincent van Gogh's medical problems resulted from epilepsy. Rather, the authors propose his main medical problem was Meniére's disease. The authors have reviewed the 796 personal letters written by van Gogh. The symptoms of his Vertigo attacks, their presentation and duration as described in these letters, taken as a whole, are co...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- JAMA
دوره 264 4 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1990