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Explosive Rage Following Head Injury

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

R. S. Hooper
Affiliation:
(From a Military Hospital, Head Injuries.)
J. M. McGregor
Affiliation:
(From a Military Hospital, Head Injuries.)
P. W. Nathan
Affiliation:
(From a Military Hospital, Head Injuries.)

Extract

In 1899 Kaplan described the “explosive diathesis” as follows: “Following the most trivial and impersonal causes, there is the effect of rage with its motor accompaniments. There may be the most grotesque gesticulation, excessive movements of the face, and a quick, sharp explosiveness of speech; there may be cursing and outbreaks of violence, which are often directed towards things; there may or may not be an amnesia for these afterwards. These outbursts may terminate in an epileptic fit. There is an excess in the reaction, with inadequate adaptation to the situation so remote from a well-considered purposeful act that it approaches a pure psychic reflex act in the shape of an almost or entirely unmodified explosion not unlike a convulsion. The explosive diathesis is not characteristic of head injuries, but is also found in hereditary degeneration, in alcoholic degeneration, etc.”

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1945 

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References

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