Vagotonia; a clinical study in vegetative neurology / by Hans Eppinger and Leo Hess. Authorized translation by Walter Max Kraus and Smith Ely Jelliffe.
- Eppinger, Hans, 1846-1916.
- Date:
- 1917
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Vagotonia; a clinical study in vegetative neurology / by Hans Eppinger and Leo Hess. Authorized translation by Walter Max Kraus and Smith Ely Jelliffe. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![VAGOTONIA’ CONTENTS . INTRODUCTION. ro) . THE VEGETATIVE NERVOUS SYSTEM AND ITS RELATIONS TO DRUGS. . TONUS AND THE DEFINITION OF THE CONCEPTION OF VAGOTONIA., . PHYSIOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS. . THE DIAGNOSIS OF VAGOTONIA IN MAN. nan & WwW WN . CLINICAL PICTURE OF GENERAL VAGOTONIA., [a] THE VAGOTONIC DISPOSITION. [b] PATHOLOGICALLY INCREASED VAGOTONIA. 7. LOCAL VAGOTONIA. 8. THE COMBINATION OF VAGOTONIA WITH OTHER DISEASES. 9g. RELATIONS OF THE GLANDS OF INTERNAL SECRETION TO VAGOTONIA. 10. THERAPEUTIC OBSERVATIONS. 11. CONCLUDING OBSERVATIONS. 1. INTRODUCTION It is often unsatisfactory for the physician, when investigating a disease dependent upon long standing disturbance of internal organs, to find that he must be content to make a diagnosis of “‘Neurosis.”” The symptomatology and the impossibility of estab- lishing any anatomical basis for the disease always remain the most conspicuous points in formulating the diagnosis of a neu- rosis of an internal organ. It is true that one would be in- clined to correlate these disturbances with nerve abnormalities were it possible to form any clear picture of the significance of 1Sammlung klinischer Abhandlungen iiber Pathologie und Therapie der Stoffwechsel und Ernahrungstérungen. Herausgegeben von Prof. Dr.. Carl von Noorden. Heft 9 u. 10, August Hirschwald, Berlin. Ig1o.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b32770157_0009.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)