West & West syndrome – A historical sketch about the eponymous doctor, his work and his family

The British surgeon William James West has not left a tremendous literary or scientific work as many of his contemporaries did. For this reason only a little has been known about him and the fate of his family for decades, even though the eponym was created in the 1960s. Only in 1990 was a first bio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain & development (Tokyo. 1979) 2003-03, Vol.25 (2), p.84-101
Hauptverfasser: Pies, Norbert J., Beardsmore, Clive W.
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description The British surgeon William James West has not left a tremendous literary or scientific work as many of his contemporaries did. For this reason only a little has been known about him and the fate of his family for decades, even though the eponym was created in the 1960s. Only in 1990 was a first biography published and later on supplemented. If his son had not suffered from the syndrome, which later on was named after him, he would not have published the first description of the West syndrome in The Lancet in 1841. Possibly we would be talking about Newnham's syndrome, because 8 years later he published a detailed report on this subject. There is, however, a second aspect concerning the pioneering activity of West, i.e. his advocating of ovariotomy in its early days. To judge the importance of this feat correctly, it is necessary to keep in mind that his former pupil and practice-partner Gorham in 1874 obviously tried to exaggerate the role of West in ovariotomy. Nevertheless, it is worth keeping the memory of William James West and his son James Edwin alive, as happened at the International Symposium on West Syndrome and Other Infantile Epileptic Encephalopathies at Tokyo, 9–11 February in 2001, and by other occasions.
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Facial pains. Syncopes. Epilepsia. Intracranial hypertension. Brain oedema. 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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals Complete
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Child neurology
England
Epilepsy
Eponyms
Female
General Surgery - history
Headache. Facial pains. Syncopes. Epilepsia. Intracranial hypertension. Brain oedema. Cerebral palsy
History, 19th Century
Hospitals, Psychiatric - history
Humans
Infant, Newborn
Infantile spasm
Langdon-Down
Medical history
Medical sciences
Nervous system (semeiology, syndromes)
Neurology
Newnham
Ovariotomy
Ovary - surgery
Spasms, Infantile - history
West
West syndrome
title West & West syndrome – A historical sketch about the eponymous doctor, his work and his family
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