Epilepsy, Hysteria, and 
Neurasthenia 
 
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Title: Epilepsy, Hysteria, and Neurasthenia 
Author: Isaac G. Briggs 
Release Date: February 4, 2005 [EBook #14901] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EPILEPSY, 
HYSTERIA, AND NEURASTHENIA *** 
 
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EPILEPSY, HYSTERIA, AND NEURASTHENIA 
THEIR CAUSES, SYMPTOMS, & TREATMENT 
BY ISAAC G. BRIGGS A.R.S.I. 
METHUEN & CO. LTD. 36 ESSEX STREET W.C. LONDON 
_First Published in 1921_ 
* * * * *
TO ALBERT E. WOODRUFF OF STOKE PRIOR NR. 
BROMSGROVE MY OLD SCHOOLMASTER 
* * * * * 
CONTENTS 
 
CHAPTER PAGE 
PREFACE ix 
I. MAJOR AND MINOR EPILEPSY 1 
II. RARER TYPES OF EPILEPSY 7 
III. GENERAL REMARKS 15 
IV. CAUSES OF EPILEPSY 20 
V. PREVENTION OF ATTACKS 25 
VI. FIRST-AID TO VICTIMS 28 
VII. NEURASTHENIA 30 
VIII. HYSTERIA 39 
IX. ADVICE TO NEUROPATHS 46 
X. FIRST STEPS TOWARD HEALTH 53 
XI. DIGESTION 56 
XII. INDIGESTION 60 
XIII. DIETING 63 
XIV. CONSTIPATION 67 
XV. GENERAL HYGIENE 71
XVI. SLEEPLESSNESS 76 
XVII. THE EFFECTS OF IMAGINATION 79 
XVIII. SUGGESTION TREATMENT 82 
XIX. MEDICINES 86 
XX. PATENT MEDICINES 90 
XXI. TRAINING THE NERVOUS CHILD 98 
XXII. DANGERS AT AND AFTER PUBERTY 109 
XXIII. WORK AND PLAY 115 
XXIV. HEREDITY 118 
XXV. CHARACTER 123 
XXVI. MARRIAGE 131 
XXVII. SUMMARY 140 
BIBLIOGRAPHY 142 
INDEX 145 
* * * * * 
PREFACE 
I hope this book will meet a real need, for when one considers how 
prevalent epilepsy, hysteria and neurasthenia are, among all ranks and 
ages of both sexes, it seems remarkable some such popular book was 
not written long ago. 
I add nothing to our knowledge of these ills, my object being to put 
what we know into simple words, and to insist on the necessity for
personal discipline being allied to expert aid. The book aims at helping, 
not ousting, the doctor, who may find it of use in getting his patient to 
see--and to act on--the obvious. 
"Nervous Disease", as here used, includes only the three diseases 
treated of; "Neuropath"--victims of them. 
"Advice" to a neuropath is usually a very depressing decalogue of 
"Thou Shalt Nots!" If it be made clear why he must not do so-and-so, 
the patient endeavours to obey; peremptorily ordered to obey, he rebels. 
Much sound advice is wasted for lack of an interesting, convincing, 
"Reason Why!" which would ensure the hearty and very helpful 
co-operation of a patient who had been taught that writing prescriptions 
is not the limit of a doctor's activities. 
Many folk, with touching belief in his own claims, regard the quack as 
a hoary-headed sage, who from disinterested motives devotes his life to 
curing ailments, by methods of which he alone has the secret, at low 
fees. To fight this dangerous idea I have tried to show in an interesting 
way how science deals with nerve ills, and to prove that qualified aid is 
needed. Suggestions and criticisms will be welcomed. 
I. G. BRIGGS THE UNIVERSITY, BIRMINGHAM, June, 1921 
* * * * * 
"Lette than clerkes enditen in Latin, for they have the propertie of 
science, and the knowing in that facultie: and lette Frenchmen in their 
Frenche also enditen their queinte termes, for it is kyndely to their 
mouthes; and let us showe our fantasies in soche wordes as we lerneden 
of our dames tongue." 
--Chaucer. 
* * * * * 
EPILEPSY, HYSTERIA, AND NEURASTHENIA
* * * * * 
 
CHAPTER I 
MAJOR AND MINOR EPILEPSY 
(_Grand and Petit Mal_) 
"My son is sore vexed, for ofttimes he falleth into the fire, and ofttimes 
into the water."--Matthew xvii, 15. 
"Oft, too, some wretch before our startled sight, Struck as with 
lightning with some keen disease, Drops sudden: By the dread attack 
o'erpowered He foams, he groans, he trembles, and he faints; Now rigid, 
now convuls'd, his labouring lungs Heave quick, and quivers each 
exhausted limb. 
* * * * * 
"He raves, since Soul and Spirit are alike Disturbed throughout, and 
severed each from each As urged above, distracted by the bane; But 
when at length the morbid cause declines, And the fermenting humours 
from the heart Flow back--with staggering foot first treads Led gradual 
on to intellect and strength."--Lucretius. 
Epilepsy, or "Falling Sickness", is a chronic abnormality of the nervous 
system, evinced by attacks of alteration of consciousness, usually 
accompanied by convulsions. 
It attacks men of every race, as well as domesticated animals, and has 
been known since the earliest times, the    
    
		
	
	
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