| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
Karl Kleist (18791960) A Pioneer of NeuropsychiatryInternational Wernicke-Kleist-Leonhard Society, Chefarzt der DRK Kliniken Westend, Klinik für Kinder- und Jugendpsychiatrie / Psychotherapie, Spandauer Damm 130, 14050 Berlin, Germanyk.-j.neumaerker{at}drk-kliniken-westend.de
Institut für Röntgendiagnostik, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Josef-Schneider-Str. 11, 97080 Würzburg, Germany Karl Kleist (18791960) was instrumental in pioneering German neuro-psychiatry and neuropsychology, including the description of frontal, constructional, limb-kinetic (innervatory) and psychomotor apraxias, frontal akinesia and aspontaneity, as well as object and form blindness. Besides isolating episodic twilight states, involutional paranoia and symptomatic (especially influenza) psychoses, he was particularly involved in applying Wernickes syndromatic and Kraepelins prognostic and aetiological principles to classify neurogenous psychoses by refuting the assumption of mixed entities whenever possible. Thus, his phasophrenias denoted manic-depressive illness, unipolar affective disorders and marginal, i.e., atypical psychoses. The rather benign cycloid psychoses form the most prominent examples of the latter. Schizophrenias, on the other hand, were limited to poor long-term catamnestic outcomes. Kleist conceptualized the core group of schizophrenic illnesses as psychic system diseases hence the origin of the term systematic schizophrenias within the Wernicke-Kleist-Leonhard School. Kleist was mainly influenced by Wernicke and his psychic reflex arc, but Ernst Machs empiriocriticism, Theodor Meynerts cerebral connectionism, and associationism also shaped his outlook. Kleists localization of cerebral functions by lesion analyses was indeed the best available at the time and continues to reveal insights to the interested reader. From his Frankfurt School, which may have been the last of a completely unified neuropsychiatry, came sound representatives of psychiatry, neurology and neurosurgery. His technical mastery and achievements seem indisputable, but his balancing acts during the Third Reich may today be questioned. Despite joining the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) and the local Court of Genealogical Health (Erbgesundheitsgericht), Kleist was, however, one of the few German physicians who continued to treat Jewish patients, to employ Jewish colleagues and to voice evident criticism of the policies of eugenics and euthanasia. This paper attempts to illuminate Kleists biography and lifes work in the relevant historical context.
Key Words: biography brain research history Karl Kleist neuropsychiatry
History of Psychiatry, Vol. 14, No. 4,
411-458 (2003) This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|||||||||||||||
