The Wounded Brain Healed

The Golden Age of the Montreal Neurological Institute, 1934-1984

By William Feindel & Richard Leblanc
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773546370, 648 pages, May 2016
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773598164, April 2016

Description

In 1934 Wilder Penfield's vision of an establishment dedicated to the relief of sickness and pain and the study of neurology led to the creation of the Montreal Neurological Institute. Setting the standard for neurological research and care for patients disabled by neurological illnesses, Penfield's institute became a beacon of light in a largely unexplored field of medicine. The Wounded Brain Healed describes the pioneering research that took place during the MNI's first fifty years. During the institute's golden age, Penfield and his colleagues designed the EEG test for the study of epileptic patients, discovered some of the causes of epilepsy, and developed new treatments that have since been adopted worldwide. Additionally, they delineated the sensory and motor representation in the cerebral cortex and localized the major areas of the brain related to speech. The institute also boasts the discoveries of two types of memory - one serving immediate recall, the other long term - as well as the discovery of the localization of short-term memory to the inner structures of the temporal lobe. Physicians and scientists who trained at the MNI went on to establish renowned neurology and neurosurgery departments throughout Canada, the United States, Europe, Asia, and Latin America. Recounting the story of one of Canada’s greatest contributions to international medical science through archival research, personal interviews, photographs, illustrations, and paintings, The Wounded Brain Healed provides fascinating insight into the institution that had a global and lasting impact.

Reviews

“The strength of the book is the sense it conveys of the MNI as having been a creative home for all of the neurosciences - not just neurosurgery - as a centre for interdisciplinary and bench to bedside research, and as a school for the training of generations of talented neuroscientists who came to staff other institutions in Canada and around the world.” Michael Bliss, University of Toronto

"The Wounded Brain Healed is as much a valuable primary source as it is a wonderful synthetic effort at crafting an institutional history of a hallowed institution. For the historian of neurology and neurosurgery, the volume will make a suitable addition