Title: Psychotherapy
Author: James J. Walsh
Release date: June 17, 2011 [eBook #36450]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Don Kostuch
[Transcriber's Notes]
This book is derived from a copy on the Internet Archive:
psychotherapy00walsgoog/psychotherapy00walsgoog_djvu.txt>
A publication contemporary to this book is "Mother's Remedies"
by Thomas Jefferson Ritter. It contains hundreds of suggestions
that hindsight shows to be purely "mental" in their effect.
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/17439
One of the author's favorite terms is "over-solicitous". The patient
literally "worrys themselves sick" over trivial symptoms and makes
serious cases worse than necessary. Most of his use of psychotherapy
consists of informing, diverting and cheering the patient so that
worry and its consequences are not piled on top of real or imagined
disease.
This book illustrates the general state of medicine in 1910.
Psychotherapy was more important to medical care because so little
was known of the complex physical mechanisms of the body. I
particularly reacted to the discussion of hay fever because it
plagued me for thirty years until experimental desensitization
therapy successfully cured my case. Nonetheless, much of value has
been lost with the decline of psychotherapy by the family physician.
A personal relationship with the physician is often replaced with
expensive impersonal technology that mostly tells what is not wrong.
When clicking on links to other sections, scroll down the page; the
targets are page numbers and the referenced section may be at the
bottom of the page.
Many paragraphs have bold or italic titles. These are rendered
by a extra blank line—a total of two blank lines.
Obvious spelling or typographical errors have been corrected.
Inconsistent spelling of names and inventive and alternative
spelling is left as printed.
The outline format of the book uses these conventions:
During the transcription of this book Dr. Michael Stewart of the Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL., diagnosed me with a retinal condition that had deprived me of the ability to read with my left eye. His skilled surgery corrected the condition. I dedicate this transcription to Dr. Stewart and the skilled and thoughtful staff of Mayo.
[End Transcriber's Notes]
INCLUDING THE HISTORY OF THE USE OF MENTAL INFLUENCE, DIRECTLY AND
INDIRECTLY, IN HEALING AND THE PRINCIPLES FOR THE APPLICATION OF
ENERGIES DERIVED FROM THE MIND TO THE TREATMENT OF DISEASE.
BY
JAMES J. WALSH, M.D.. Ph.D.
DEAN AND PROFESSOR OF FUNCTIONAL NERVOUS DISEASE AND OF THE HISTORY OF
MEDICINE AT FORDHAM UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, AND OF
PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY AT CATHEDRAL COLLEGE, NEW YORK; FELLOW OF NEW
YORK ACADEMY OF MEDICINE; MEMBER A.M.A., A.A.A.S., NEW YORK STATE
MEDICAL SOCIETY, GERMAN SOCIETY FOR THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND THE
PHYSICAL SCIENCES, NEW ORLEANS PARISH MEDICAL SOCIETY, ST. LOUIS
MEDICAL HISTORY CLUB, ETC.
NEW YORK AND LONDON
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
1912
COPYRIGHT, 1912, BY
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
Printed in
New York, U. S. A.
TO THE JESUITS
TO WHOM THE AUTHOR OWES A HAPPY INTRODUCTION TO THE INTELLECTUAL LIFE
AND CONSTANTLY RENEWED INSPIRATION IN HIS WORK
THIS BOOK IS RESPECTFULLY AND AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED
"Prefaces are a great waste of time," said Francis Bacon, "and, though they seem to proceed of modesty, they are bravery." In spite of this deterring expression of the Lord Chancellor, the author ventures to write a short apologia pro libro suo. Five years ago he began at Fordham University School of Medicine a series of lectures on Psychotherapy. This book consists of material gathered for these lectures. It will be found in many ways to partake more of the nature of a course of lectures than a true text-book. In this it follows French rather than English or American precedent. Its relation to lectures makes it more diffuse than the author would have wished, but this is offered as an explanation, not an excuse. Addressed to medical students and not specialists the language employed is as untechnical as possible, and, indeed, was meant as a rule to be such as young physicians might use to their patients for suggestion purposes.
The historical portion is probably longer than some may deem necessary. The place of psychotherapy in the past seemed so important, however, and psychotherapeutics masqueraded under so many forms that an historical résumé of its many phases appeared the best kind of an introduction to a book which pleads for more extensive and more deliberate use of psychotherapy in our time. The historical portion was developed for the lectures on the history of medicine at Fordham and perhaps that fact helps to account for the space allotted to this section of the book.
So far as the author knows, this is the first time in the history of medicine that an attempt has been made to write a text-book of the whole subject of psychotherapy. We have had many applications of psychotherapeutics to functional and organic nervous and mental disease and also indirectly to nutritional diseases; but no one apparently has attempted to systematize the application of psychotherapeutic principles, not only to functional diseases, but specifically to all the organic diseases. A chapter on the use of mental influence in anesthesia was, during the course of the preparation of this volume, written for Dr. Taylor Gwathmey's text-book on Anesthesia, which is to appear shortly (Appletons).
No one knows better than the author how difficult is the subject and how liable to misunderstanding and abuse. He appreciates well, too, how almost hopeless it would be to make a perfectly satisfactory text-book of so large a subject at the first attempt. The present volume is founded, however, on considerable experience, on wide reading in the subject, and on much reflection on its problems. It is offered to those who are interested in the old new department of psychotherapy until a better one is available. The author's principal idea in the book has been to help students and practitioners of {viii} medicine to care for (curare) suffering men and women and not cases, to treat individual human beings, not compounds in which various chemical, physical and biological qualities have been observed, diligently enough and with noteworthy success, but incompletely as yet, and quite without the satisfying adequacy which it is to be hoped will result from future investigations.
James J. Walsh.
110 West Seventy-fourth Street,
New York City.
| PAGE | ||
| Introduction | 1 |
HISTORY OF PSYCHOTHERAPEUTICS
SECTION I
Psychotherapy in the History of Medicine
| I. | Great Physicians in Psychotherapy | 7 |
| II. | Unconscious Psychotherapeutics | 19 |
| III. | Genuine Remedies and Suggestive Exaggeration | 25 |
| IV. | Signatures And Psychotherapy | 35 |
| V. | Pseudo-science and Mental Healing | 38 |
| VI. | Quackery and Mind Cures | 46 |
| VII. | Nostrums and the Healing Power of Suggestion | 53 |
| VIII. | Amulets, Talismans, Charms | 60 |
| IX. | Deterrent Therapeutics | 63 |
| X. | Influence of the Personality in Therapeutics | 69 |
| XI. | Faith Cures | 77 |
GENERAL PSYCHOTHERAPEUTICS
SECTION II
General Considerations
| I. | Influence of Mind on Body | 84 |
| II. | Unfavorable Mental Influence | 93 |
| III. | The Influence of Body on Mind | 100 |
| IV. | The Mechanism of the Influence of Mind on Body | 108 |
| V. | Brain Cells and Mental Operations | 124 |
| VI. | Unconscious Cerebration | 134 |
| VII. | Distant Mental Influence | 140 |
| VIII. | Secondary Personality | 147 |
| IX. | Hypnotism | 151 |
SECTION III
The Individual Patient
| I. | Psychotherapy and the Individual Patient | 163 |
| II. | The Morning Hours | 165 |
| III. | The Day's Work | 171 |
| IV. | The Middle of the Day | 179 |
| V. | The Leisure Hours | 181 |
SECTION IV
General Psychotherapeutics
| I. | General Principles of Psychotherapy | 186 |
SECTION V
Adjuvants and Disturbing Factors
| I. | Suggestion | 194 |
| II. | Exercise | 198 |
| III. | Position | 207 |
| IV. | Training | 213 |
| V. | Occupation of Mind | 218 |
| VI. | Diversion of Mind—Hobbies | 224 |
| VII. | Habit | 229 |
| VIII. | Pain | 235 |
SPECIAL PSYCHOTHERAPY
SECTION VI
The Digestive Tract
| I. | Influence of Mind on Food Digestion | 242 |
| II. | Indigestion and Unfavorable States of Mind | 250 |
| III. | Psychic Treatment of Digestive Conditions | 254 |
| IV. | Appetite | 262 |
| V. | Constipation | 268 |
| VI. | Neurotic Intestinal Affections | 278 |
| VII. | Muco-Membranous Colitis | 286 |
| VIII. | Obesity | 290 |
| IX. | Weight and Good Feeling | 297 |
| X | Vague Abdominal Discomforts—Loose Kidney | 302 |
SECTION VII
Cardiotherapy
| I. | The Heart and Mental Influence | 310 |
| II. | Diagnosis and Prognosis in Heart Disease | 316 |
| III. | Cardiac Neuroses | 321 |
| IV. | Cardiac Palpitation and Gastro-Intestinal Disturbance | 328 |
| V. | Angina Pectoris | 335 |
| VI. | Tachycardia | 340 |
| VII. | Bradycardia | 342 |
SECTION VIII
Respiratory Diseases
| I. | Coughs and Colds | 345 |
| II. | Tuberculosis | 350 |
| III. | Neurotic Asthma and Cognate Conditions | 364 |
| IV. | Dust Asthma—Seasonal Catarrh, Hay Fever | 368 |
| V. | Dyspnea—Cat and Horse Asthma | 373 |
SECTION IX
Psychotherapy in the Joint and Muscular System
| I. | Painful Joint Conditions—Pseudo-Rheumatism | 379 |
| II. | Old Injuries and So-called Rheumatism | 387 |
| III. | Muscular Pains and Aches | 389 |
| IV. | Occupation Muscle and Joint Pains | 395 |
| V. | Painful Arm and Trunk Conditions | 400 |
| VI. | Lumbago and Sciatica | 402 |
| VII. | Painful Knee Conditions | 409 |
| VIII. | Foot Troubles | 413 |
| IX. | Arthritis Deformans | 421 |
| X. | Coccygodynia | 428 |
SECTION X
Gynecological Psychotherapy
| I. | Mental Healing in Gynecology | 430 |
| II. | Psychic States in Menstruation | 434 |
| III. | Amenorrhea | 437 |
| IV. | Dysmenorrhea | 440 |
| V. | Menorrhagia | 447 |
| VI. | The Menopause | 450 |
SECTION XI
Psychotherapy in Obstetrics
| I. | Suggestion in Obstetrics | 453 |
| II. | Maternal Impressions | 461 |
SECTION XII
Genito-Urinary Diseases
| I. | Prostatism | 468 |
| II. | Sexual Neuroses | 472 |
| III. | Sexual Habits | 482 |
SECTION XIII
Skin Diseases
| I. | Psychotherapy in Skin Diseases | 491 |
SECTION XIV
Diseases of Ductless Glands
| I. | Diabetes | 496 |
| II. | Graves' Disease | 500 |
SECTION XV
Organic Nervous Diseases
| I. | Psychotherapy of Organic Nervous Diseases | 508 |
| II. | Cerebral Apoplexy | 513 |
| III. | Locomotor Ataxia | 524 |
| IV. | Paresis | 530 |
| V. | Epilepsy and Pseudo-Epilepsy | 534 |
| VI. | Paralysis Agitans | 542 |
| VII. | Headache | 546 |
SECTION XVI
Neuroses
| I. | Nervous Weakness (Neurasthenia) | 555 |
| II. | Chorea | 561 |
| III. | Tics | 564 |
| IV. | Stuttering, Ataxia in Talking, Walking, Writing, Etc. | 570 |
| V. | Tremors | 580 |
DISORDERS OF THE PSYCHE
SECTION XVII
Psycho-Neuroses
| I. | Psycho-Neuroses (Hysteria) | 585 |
SECTION XVIII
Disorders of Mind
| I. | Mental Incapacity (Psychasthenia) | 597 |
| II. | Hallucinations | 603 |
| III. | Dreads | 612 |
| IV. | Heredity | 627 |
| V. | Premonitions | 634 |
| VI. | Periodical Depression | 641 |
| VII. | Insomnia | 651 |
| VIII. | Some Troubles of Sleep | 663 |
| IX. | Dreams | 669 |
| X. | Disorders of Memory | 678 |
| XI. | Psychic Contagion | 688 |
SECTION XIX
Disorders of Will
| I. | Alcoholism | 694 |
| II. | Drug Addictions | 707 |
| III. | Suicide | 713 |
| IV. | Grief | 727 |
| V. | Doubting | 732 |
| VI. | Responsibility and Will Power | 738 |
SECTION XX
Psychotherapy in Surgery
| I. | Psychotherapy in Old-Time Surgery | 746 |
| II. | Mental Influence Before Operation | 749 |
| III. | Mental Influence and Anesthesia | 753 |
| IV. | Mental Influence After Operation | 759 |
APPENDICES
| I. | Illusions | 766 |
| II. | Religion and Psychotherapy | 776 |
| INDEX | 781 |
| FIG. | | PAGE |
| The Temple of Epidaurus as a health resort | Facing page 9 | |
| 1. | Expressions of the mouth | 102 |
| 2. | Cortex of human brain illustrating complexity of the systems and plexuses of nerve fibers | 109 |
| 3. | Small and medium-sized pyramidal cells of the visual cortex of a child twenty days old | 110 |
| 4. | Series of sections showing the fine nerve endings and branchings of the first and second layer of the visual cortex of a child fifteen days old. | 111 |
| 5. | First, second and third layer of the anterior central convolution of the brain of a child one month old | 112 |
| 6. | Layers of the posterior central or ascending parietal convolution of a new-born child | 112 |
| 7. | Diagram of cells of cerebral cortex | 113 |
| 8. | Scheme of lower motor neuron | 114 |
| 9. | Scheme of the visual conduction paths | 115 |
| 10. | Schematic frontal section through the occipital lobe illustrating manifold connections in a single lobe | 116 |
| 11. | Isolated cell from human spinal cord | 117 |
| 12. | Neuron from the optic lobe of the embryo chick | 118 |
| 13. | Deep layer of giant pyramidal cells of the posterior central or ascending parietal convolution of a child thirty days old | 119 |
| 14. | Pyramidal cell of cerebral cortex of mouse | 119 |
| 15. | Neuroglia cells of the fascia dentata, in the new-born rabbit | 121 |
| 16. | Neuroglia cell from the subcortical layer of the cerebrum from which two processes go to a blood vessel | 122 |
| 17. | Neuroglia cells from the spinal cord | 122 |
| 18. | An artery from the cerebral cortex | 125 |
| 19. | Neuroglia cells of the superficial layers of the brain from an infant aged two months | 126 |
| 20. | Complexity of cell of the central nervous system | 131 |
| 21. | Section through the cortex of the gyrus occipitalis superior | 132 |
| 22. | Motor cell of ventral horn of spinal cord from the human fetus | 133 |
| 23. | Normal diaphragm curve in normal breathing | 577 |
| 24. | Curve in diaphragm before and during talking by a stutterer | 577 |
| 25. | Illusion of dual vision | 615 |
| 26. | Illusion of dual vision | 767 |
| 27. | Binocular vision | 767 |
| 28. | Binocular vision | 767 |
| 29. | The Müller-Lyer lines | 768 |
| 30. | Illusions of size | 769 |
| 31. | Illusion of filled space (interrupted vision) | 769 |
| 32. | Illusions of size and linear continuity | 770 |
| 33. | Poggendorf's displacement of oblique lines | 771 |
| 34. | Zöllner's distortion of parallel lines | 771 |
To physicians who are students not alone of the manifestations of disease but also of the workings of human nature, there are few chapters in the history of medicine more interesting than those which record the welcome by each generation of the supposed advances in the treatment of disease. Each generation announced its cures for diseases, provided its remedies to relieve symptoms, and invented methods of treatment that seemed to put off the inevitable tendency toward dissolution. Yet few of these inventions and discoveries maintain their early reputations, and succeeding generations invariably abandon most of this supposed medical progress in favor of ideas of their own, which later suffer a like fate. Plausible theories have not been lacking to support the successive remedies and methods of treatment, but the general acceptance of them was always founded far less upon theory than upon actual observation of their supposed efficacy. Certain remedies were given and the patients began to improve. Patients who did not have the remedies continued to suffer, and sometimes the course of their disease led to a fatal termination. Even with the best remedies death sometimes took place, but that was easily accounted for on the ground that the disease had secured so firm a hold that it could not be dislodged, even by a good remedy. The connection of cause and effect between the administration of the remedy and the improvement and eventual cure of the patient seemed to be demonstrated.
The archives of old-time medicine disprove the notion that clinical learning and teaching—that is, observation and demonstration at the bedside—were not part of medical education until quite modern times. The medical books of the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth centuries are full of descriptions of actual cases, while, over a millenium before, one of Martial's epigrams tells of a patient who dreaded the coming of his physician because he brought with him so many students, whose cold hands gave chills to the poor victim.
Coincidence and Consequence.—In spite of the opportunities for careful observation thus afforded and the facilities for training clinical observers in medicine, many remedies came into vogue, were enthusiastically applied, and then, after a time, went out of use and were heard of no more. Sometimes they were subsequently revived and had even a greater vogue than when originally brought out. But most of these remedies eventually went forever into the lumber room of disused treatments. Of the many thousands of remedies which had the approval and the praise of past generations, two score at most hold a place in the pharmacopeia of to-day.
There are many reasons for this initial success and eventual failure; but the most important explanation lies not so much in reason as in coincidence. In the majority of human ills there is a definite tendency to get better, and almost anything that is given to the patient will be followed by relief and {2} improvement. The recovery is not, however, on account of the remedy, but occurs only after a definite succession of events that would have taken place either with or without the remedy.