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Published Online: September 1946

PREFRONTAL LOBOTOMY : A Preliminary Appraisal of the Behavioral Results

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

In a preliminary investigation, an impairment index scale developed by one of us (W.C.H.) for reflecting impairment of biological intelligence has been applied to 8 carefully selected individuals before and after prefrontal lobotomy and to another individual following lobotomy. Several of these cases were found to exhibit an impairment of biological intelligence prior to lobotomy. This operation did not consistently alter the degree of impairment manifested quantitatively in contrast with high impairment scores obtained for frontal lobectomies. This would seem to point to the cortex of the frontal lobes as the region of the brain in which the functions reflected by the impairment index are maximally represented or localized.
It is concluded that:
1. Impaired biological intelligence, as encountered in some forms of psychopathy, is not relieved by the operation known as prefrontal lobotomy.
2. Lobotomy may not increase the degree of impairment of this function. [See Fig. 2 In Source Pdf].
3. Little is known concerning the behavioral effects of prefrontal lobotomy.

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Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 217 - 228
PubMed: 21001995

History

Published in print: September 1946
Published online: 1 April 2006

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The Division of Psychiatry, Department of Medicine, The University of Chicago.
The Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois College of Medicine.
The Department of Neurology, The Illinois Neuropsychiatric Institute.

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