Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T11:23:58.968Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Further Review of the Results of Stereotactic Subcaudate Tractotomy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

E. O. Göktepe*
Affiliation:
The Geoffrey Knight Psychosurgical Unit, Brook General Hospital, Shooters Hill Road, London, SE18 4LW
Lucy B. Young
Affiliation:
The Geoffrey Knight Psychosurgical Unit, Brook General Hospital, Shooters Hill Road, London, SE18 4LW
P. K. Bridges
Affiliation:
The Geoffrey Knight Psychosurgical Unit, Brook General Hospital, Shooters Hill Road, London, SE18 4LW
*
Now Senior Registrar, Holloway Sanatorium, Virginia Water, Surrey.

Extract

There is accumulating evidence of the clinical effectiveness of selective stereotactic psychosurgery in some severely disabled psychiatric patients who have not responded to other forms of treatment (Ström-Olsen and Carlisle, 1971; Bridges, Göktepe and Maratos, 1973; Kelly et al., 1973). The risks of adverse effects resulting from operation are now small, and their significance is further diminished when related to the distress over long periods of those patients who are suitable for psychosurgery. The criteria for selection have been considered by Bridges and Bartlett (1973).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1975 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bridges, P. K. & Bartlett, J. R. (1973) The work of a psychosurgical unit. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 49, 855–9.Google Scholar
Bridges, P. K., Göktepe, E. O. & Maratos, J. (1973) A comparative review of patients with obsessional neurosis and with depression treated by psychosurgery. British Journal of Psychiatry, 123, 663–74.Google Scholar
Corsellis, J. A. N. & Jack, A. B. (1973) Neuropathologies observations on yttrium implants and on undercutting in the orbito-frontal areas of the brain. In Surgical Approaches in Psychiatry (eds. Laitinen, L. V. & Livingston, K. E.), Chap. 12. Lancaster: Medical and Technical Publishing Co. Ltd.Google Scholar
Guze, S. B. & Robins, E. (1970) Suicide and primary affective disorders. British Journal of Psychiatry, 117, 437–8.Google Scholar
Kelly, D., Richardson, A., Mitchell-Heggs, N., Greenup, J., Chen, D. & Hafner, R. J. (1973) Stereotactic limbic leucotomy. British Journal of Psychiatry, 123, 141–8.Google Scholar
Kerr, T. A., Roth, M., Schapira, K. & Gurney, C. (1972) The assessment and prediction of outcome in affective disorders. British Journal of Psychiatry, 121, 167–74.Google Scholar
Knight, G. (1969) Bi-frontal stereotactic tractotomy. British Journal of Psychiatry, 115, 257–66.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Knight, G. (1973) Further observations from an experience of 660 cases of stereotactic tractotomy. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 49, 845–54.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Newcombe, R. L. (1975) The lesion in stereotactic sub-caudate tractotomy. British Journal of Psychiatry, (In the press).Google Scholar
Snaith, R. P., Ahmed, S. N., Mehta, S. & Hamilton, M. (1971) Assessment of the severity of primary depressive illness. Psychological Medicine, 1, 143–9.Google Scholar
Ström-Olsen, R. & Carlisle, S. (1971) Bi-frontal stereotactic tractotomy. British Journal of Psychiatry, 118, 141–54.Google Scholar
Taylor, J. A. (1955) A personality scale of manifest anxiety. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychiatry, 48, 285290.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.