Related Results

Ref No

DEP/ABJ/4/1/53

Letter from Jas [James] Sym, Kilmarnock, Scotland to John Abercrombie

Case of Alexander Moodie [Moody] with epilepsy.

12 Oct 1821

DEP/ABJ/4/1/54

Letter from Jas [James] Sym, Kilmarnock, Scotland to John Abercrombie

Case of Alexander Moodie [Moody] with epilepsy.

8 Nov 1821

DEP/ABJ/4/1/87

Letter from John Couper, Glasgow, Scotland to John Abercrombie

Case of Mr Moncrieff Mitchell with epileptic attacks. John Couper [Cooper] was the son of the doctor at ABJ/1/4/51.

28 Jun 1823

DEP/ABJ/4/1/198

Letter from Lord Elgin, Broomhall, Scotland to John Abercrombie

He encloses a newspaper cutting from the Morning Post on a remedy for epilepsy discovered by Weitz, a German physician, and using St Ignatio's bean.

12 Aug 1824

DEP/ABJ/4/1/256

Letter from James Stenhouse, Broomhall, Scotland to John Abercrombie

He sends a report of a case of epilepsy treated by Dr Nimmo in Dundee, Scotland (not included) which may relate to Lord Bruce [Elgin].

26 Mar 1825

DEP/ABJ/4/1/277

Letter from James Stenhouse, Dunfermline, Scotland to John Abercrombie

He thanks Abercrombie for his comments on Dr Nimmo's cure for epilepsy and reports on his own trials. He went to see Dr Nimmo with Lord Elgin to discuss Lord Bruce's case.

21 May 1825

DEP/ABJ/4/1/324

Correspondence of John Abercrombie: case note

Case of Robert [Lunn?], 31, with epilepsy. Case note includes a table of the amount of nitrate of silver prescribed from May 1835 to May 1836 and the effect on the number of fits. Correspondent unknown.

May 1836

DEP/ABJ/4/1/346

Letter from C Locock, Hanover Square, London, England to John Abercrombie

Case of Lord Sandon's daughter, 17, with epileptic seizures. He includes an unfinished letter to him from her mother which outlines her daughter's case.

10 Jul 1842

DEP/ABJ/4/3/40

Testimonial for John Abercrombie: Letter from J Cooke, [London, England]

Addressed to Dr Abercrombie. He thanks Abercrombie for his letter and his communication on epilepsy. The testimonial was written on the occasion of Abercrombie's application for the Chair of the Practice of Medicine following the death of Dr James Gregory (in which he was unsuccessful).

7 May 1821

DEP/ANO/9

Volume of paintings of patients at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital

Volume with the title 'Bruised Reeds 1882' on the front cover. Contains twelve water colour paintings of patients at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital. Each small painting is captioned with the patient's name and details of his case (all are male). There is also a painting on the first page of a pond in moonlight with reeds and a crow in a tree. The original manuscripts catalogue states that this is a copy of a volume held by the Lothian Health Services Archive amongst the Thomas Clouston papers. That volume is by John Myles (also known as Miles).


The additional information provided below about this volume and the portraits it contains was provided by Allan Beveridge in January 2020, based on his research in the Royal Edinburgh Asylum records held by the Lothian Health Services Archive (LHSA).


The LHSA has in its collections seven coloured drawings which are signed ‘JM’, and which give the patient’s name, their diagnosis, their patient number and their case book reference. The clinical information is written in pen, most probably by a clinician, and quite possibly by the Medical Superintendent of the Royal Edinburgh Asylum, Dr Thomas Clouston.


This volume which the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh holds contains twelve painted portraits, six of the same patients as those in the LHSA series and six further patients. These paintings are unsigned and are much cruder in their execution, suggesting they were done by another artist. They have an accompanying hand-written text, which gives the patient’s name and provides a brief clinical vignette. The hand-writing is different from that of the LHSA series though they may have also been written by a clinician. They would appear to be copies of the original John Miles’s portraits as they are much less detailed and they are less refined in rendering the patient’s facial features and clothing.


John Miles was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on the 21 May 1881. He was 59 years old, married and described as a ‘Portrait Painter’. He was a pauper patient from Saint Cuthbert’s and he had been admitted via the Royal Infirmary. On 16 October 16 he was discharged ‘Recovered’.


The portraits:


Andrew Simpson was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 5 March, 1880. He was a 55 year-old married baker. He lived at 53 Bristo Street, Edinburgh and was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s. He was diagnosed with melancholia. He died in the asylum on 7 July 1883. His cause of death was given as: ‘Phthisis Pulmonalis’, ‘Kidney Disease’ and ‘Brain Disease’.


George Lumsden was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 22 July 22 1867. He was single and of no occupation. No age was given. His diagnosis was ‘Epileptic Imbecility’. He died in 1893 of ‘Epilepsy – 34 years. Pneumonia 3 days’. The accompanying text appears to be inaccurate, at least in terms of what the case notes state. He is called ‘James’, rather than ‘George’ and is said to have been blind since birth. This was not mentioned in the case notes and surely would have been if true. He was described as playing the violin not particularly well and to have a bad temper, though the case notes described him as good-natured.


George Dickson was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on the 6 May 1870. He was 60 years old, and had been admitted previously in 1852. He was widowed and a joiner. He lived at 3 North Saint James Street, Edinburgh. The existing attack had lasted 6 months. He was not epileptic, suicidal or dangerous.


James Laurie was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 20 January 1877. He was 13 years old. He had no education and was a pauper patient who was transferred from St Cuthbert’s Poorhouse. The predisposing factor was ‘Congenital’. On physical examination, James was found to be paralysed on the left side and his left foot was clubbed. He was epileptic. The diagnosis was ‘Idiocy’. On 7 November 1884, James died. The Cause of Death was Brain Disease and Phthisis Pulmonalis, duration one year. He was 20 years old.


William Archibald was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 1 January 1880. He was 28 years old, married and a cook. He lived at 25 East London Street, Edinburgh and was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s. The diagnosis was ‘General Paralysis’. On 24 January 1890, he died of Bronchopneumonia. The text says he was about 40 years old, though according to the case notes he was 30.


William Beattie was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on the 17 April 1880. He was 45 years old, single, and a tailor. He was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s and had been transferred from Dundee Royal Asylum. His Transfer Certificate recorded: ‘He is deaf, dumb, and in a frail state of bodily health’. The diagnosis was ‘Melancholia’.


William Walls was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 4 April 1879. He was 48 years old and was described as a married shopkeeper or merchant. He was a private patient and lived at 148 Links, Kirkcaldy. The diagnosis was ‘Melancholia’. In the text that accompanies his portrait, William Walls’s surname is misspelt as ‘Wells’. It also states that he was ‘ill through loose living’, though there is no mention of this in the case notes.


Thomas Shuster was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 20 September 1878. He was 23 years old, single and described as a labourer. He lived at 5 St John’s Hill, Edinburgh and was a pauper patient from St Cuthbert’s. The diagnosis was ‘Mania’. On 23 October 1878, Shuster was discharged recovered. Between 1879 and 1885 Shuster had four further admissions, all with the diagnosis of ‘Mania’. Shuster was eventually discharged relieved on 20 October 1890. His name is spelt wrongly and he is said to have suffered a shock through disappointment in love, whereas the case notes stated that the cause of insanity was ‘fright’.


David Thomson was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 1 April 1882. He was 24 years old, single and described as a mason. He was from St Cuthbert’s Parish. He was said to have a hereditary predisposition and was considered to be suicidal and dangerous. In November 1899, he was transferred to Craiglockhart, ‘Not Improved’.


Charles Young was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 8 March 1880. He was 36 years old, single and described as a journeyman and upholsterer. He lived at 204 Rose Street and was a pauper patient from the City Parish. The diagnosis was ‘General Paralysis’ and he died of ‘General Paralysis of the Insane’ on 3 December 1882.


James McNeil was admitted to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum on 1 June 1882. He was 66 years old, single and described as a labourer. He was a pauper patient from Inveresk Combination Poorhouse. The diagnosis was ‘Melancholia’. On 12 December, he died of heart disease and softening of the brain.


1882

DEP/ANO/11

Volume of [medical lecture notes], author unknown

Notes on fevers in general and specific types of fever; belching and flatulence; phrenitis; angina; gangrene; peripneumonia; pleuritis; paraphrenitis; hepatitis and icterus; inflammed intestine; aphthae; nephritis; apoplexia; catalepsis; carus; and 'de morbis chronicis'. Notes are in Latin or English or a mixture of both. The paragraphs are numbered 47-809 then starting again at 6-347 although not consecutively. Undated.

18th century

DEP/AUA/1

Student notes of Adam Austin from clinical lectures of John Rutherford at the Royal Infirmary of...

The flyleaf is signed 'Dr Adam Austin 5th July 1759' and contains a note of a book lent in 1755. The volume starts with lists of books in folio, quarto and octavo, with place and year of publication and in some cases cost, and a list of manuscripts. The lists may be Austin's library. The library catalogue is followed by 'Rules to be observed by the Apprentices in regard to the Shop and Patients' which relate to the operation of a pharmacy, Mr Smyth and Dr Austin being named as those issuing prescriptions.


Dr Rutherford's clinical lectures start after the rules and give case studies for three patients, giving the patient's name, complaint and treatment. At p16 there is a new heading 'Clinical Lectures delivered in Edinburgh Royal Infirmary by John Rutherford Professor of the Practice of Physic in the College of Edinburgh begun 1749' although this might indicate the year Rutherford started lecturing rather than when the notes were taken. These also include case studies. The dating here is unclear although some of the case studies include dates of admission to the Royal Infirmary. From p192 a letter from John Pringle has been copied into the volume on the case of Mrs Dowal, giving prescriptions and suggested treatment. On p206 an item from 'The Pennsylvanian Gazette' has been copied into the volume on inoculation against small pox. After this are other letters from James Bales (1758) and James Aikman (1762) interspersed with further case studies. At the end is a case of 'gravelish complaints' which includes a page headed 'Dr Austin's opinion in regard to Mr Elliot's Case'. There is an index at the rear giving the patient's name and condition.


There are also lectures on specific subjects rather than case studies. These are: inoculation, epilepsy, scrophula, venereal disease, scurvy, headache, ague and measles.


Throughout the volume it is not clear whether the first person used is Rutherford or Austin. Austin had started working at the Royal Infirmary by at least 1763 although many of the cases do pre-date that. There is also more than one hand used in the volume so authorship of specific parts is not clear.

4 Jan 1753 - 7 Apr 1765

DEP/AWP/5/1/160

Untitled essay on epilepsy, apoplexy and palsy by William Pulteney Alison

Draft copy.

1820s - 1850s

DEP/AWP/5/3/7

Notes on various subjects by William Pulteney Alison

Includes plethora, gout, epilepsy and pneumonia.

1820s - 1850s

DEP/AWP/6/17

Letter from J S [Clarswell?], [Rothesay?] to Professor William Pulteney Alison

He thanks Alison for the prescription for his syphilitic swellings and epileptic fits.

25 May 1854

DEP/BRE/3/2/38

Letter from William G Lennox, International League Against Epilepsy, Boston, United States of...

He thanks Bramwell for reprints.

10 Dec 1936

DEP/BRE/6/15

'The Epileptic Fit and the Epilepsies' by Edwin Bramwell

Reprint from the Edinburgh Medical Journal.

1936

DEP/BRO/1

Student notes by unknown individual from lectures of John Brown on elements of medicine

Title as given on volume is 'Lectures on the Elements of Medicine by Dr John Brown'. Subtitled 'The Brunonian System 1785'. The section headings are: 'Method of Cure' (para 85); 'Of the Phlogistic Diathesis' (para 130); 'The Seat of Excitability', 'Of Predisposition', 'Of Different Menstruation', 'Of the Menorrhagia', 'Of the Epistaxis', 'Of the Haemorrhois', 'Of the Asthenic Disease of the Alimentary and Abdominal Viscera taken together', 'Of the Angina', 'Of the Scurvy', 'Of Hysteria', 'Of the Phthisis Senilis or Asthenic', 'Of the Cystirrhea', 'De Podagra validiorum', 'Of the asthma', 'Spasm', 'The Anasarea', 'The Colicodynia', 'The Dyspepsodynia', 'Podagra imbecillinum', 'The Hypochondriasis', 'The Hydrops', 'Epilepsy', 'In Paralysis', 'Apoplexy', 'Trismus', 'Tetanus', 'Of Intermittents', 'Dysentery', 'The Cholera gravior', 'Synochus', 'The Typhus simplicior', 'The Cynanche gangrenosa' and 'The confluent small pox'. It is not known who took the lecture notes.

1785

DEP/COJ

Collection of John Dixon Comrie

 

1841-1939

DEP/CUL/1/2/198

Letter from Ro [Robert] Brisbane, Charles Town [Charleston], South Carolina, United States of...

Case of his slave 'troubled with epileptic fits'. He had already been prescribed powder of tin by Dr Alston but requested 'flowers of zink...the bearer must put it in his chest or pocket as we must not import any packages after 1 December. It may save many a poor negro from ruin in the fire'. Deal ship letter.

26 Nov 1774