Clinical Neuroscience - 1964;17(02)

Clinical Neuroscience

FEBRUARY 01, 1964

[Pathologies of neurosis in rural patients]

DR JUHÁSZ Pál

[Of the 629 inhabitants of the village surveyed, 162 were diagnosed with neurosis, representing 25% of the total village population and 43% of the 19-40 age group. Somatogenous factors were found in 78 neurotics, of which 23 had hormonal dysregulation, 15 vascular diseases and 18 spondylosis. Psychotrauma was identified in 146 neurotics: learning and educational problems, family history of alcoholism and other chronic illnesses, family conflict, overwork, dissatisfaction with the village environment and, separately, a multifaceted problem of the productive movement. The author analyses each of these pathologies in detail, but the problems of the cooperative movement are dealt with in a separate paper in a separate paper.]

Clinical Neuroscience

FEBRUARY 01, 1964

Clinical Neuroscience

FEBRUARY 01, 1964

[The relationship between cerebral circulation and cerebro-vascular neurological deficits]

DR PÉTER Ágnes, DR SOLTI Ferenc, DR ISKUM Miklós

[Authors in 5 post-apoplectic and ictus-free vascular encephalopathies found cerebral circulatory impairment to be parallel to the severity of neurological function loss.]

Clinical Neuroscience

FEBRUARY 01, 1964

[Depressio Archaic with a cultural-social tinge]

DR VARGA Ervin

[The author describes the depressive psychosis of a Sudanese university student on a scholarship, where the picture is coloured by a peculiar, primitive, magical mystical pathological key-valuation. Experientially, it is the latter that represents the patient's redemption. The pathoplastic role of primitive traditions and the sociopsychiatric analysis of conventions are discussed in the context of this case. He concludes pseudo-natural experiences, which are personality-defining only in a stable milieu.]

Clinical Neuroscience

FEBRUARY 01, 1964

[Organisation of the VI International Congress on Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology]

[At the Fifth International Congress in Rome, the General Assembly voted to hold the International EEG Congress in conjunction with the next International Neurological Congress in Vienna in 1965. Professor Hans Hoff will be President of both Congresses.]