Explore the science of paralysis, from nerves to the brain, in a rigorous historical and botanical study.
This classic work investigates how the nervous system controls movement and sensation, and how disease disrupts this link. It blends anatomical detail with clinical insight to explain direct and reflex forms of paralysis, backed by early experiments and careful observations.
This edition surveys the minute structure of the nervous centers, focusing on the spinal cord, its columns, horns, and the network of nerve cells that drive all movement and feeling. It also discusses foundational ideas about how brain and spinal cord communicate, how lesions produce symptoms, and how reflex actions help us understand paralysis in disease. The author situates these ideas in the work of Bell and Hall, showing how anatomical science informs medical practice.
- Learn how the spinal cord is organized into anterior and posterior columns and how nerves connect to form voluntary and sensory pathways
- See how early researchers explained reflex paralysis and the deep link between structure and function in disease
- Understand the role of nervous tissue, nerve fibers, and ganglionic cells in producing and transmitting symptoms
- Discover how anatomy and pathology converge to explain clinical cases and the progression of paralysis
Ideal for readers of medical history and foundational neuroanatomy, this book offers clear, patient explanations and relevance to clinical observation.