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von Economo Encephalitis
Morris S. Dickman, MD
Arch Neurol. 2001;58:1696-1698.
In April 1917, Dr Constantin von Economo presented his clinical and
pathologic findings of a new diseasesoon to be part of a worldwide
epidemicbefore the Vienna Psychiatric Society. He named it encephalitis lethargica. After years of careful observation, he collected
and analyzed thousands of cases and classified them into 3 clinical syndromes:
somnolent-ophthalmoplegic, hyperkinetic, and amyostatic-akinetic forms. He
described the now legendary postencephalitic Parkinsonism, noting that symptoms
could emerge years after the original infection, often without signs of prodromal
"flu." He emphasized the neuropathologic findings: inflammatory changes in
the tegmentum of the midbrain accounting for the sleep disturbance and ocular
signs. After encountering sporadic cases following the epidemic, he concluded
that the somnolent-ophthalmoplegic syndrome was the primary expression of
encephalitis lethargica. This article outlines the observations and conclusions
of Dr von Economo during and after the epidemic through seminal quotations
primarily from his published works, as well as from more recent reports.
From the Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel.
Corresponding author and reprints: Morris S. Dickman, MD, Hadassah
University Medical Center at Ein Karem, Department of Neurology, Jerusalem,
Israel.
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