Silas Weir Mitchell (physician) explained

Silas Weir Mitchell
Birth Date:15 February 1829
Birth Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
Death Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
Relatives:Silas Weir Mitchell (descendant)
Alma Mater:Jefferson Medical College
Known For:neurology research
Spouse:Mary Cadwalader

Silas Weir Mitchell (February 15, 1829 – January 4, 1914) was an American physician, scientist, novelist, and poet. He is considered the father of medical neurology, and he discovered causalgia (complex regional pain syndrome) and erythromelalgia, and pioneered the rest cure.

Early life

Silas Weir Mitchell was born on February 15, 1829, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to prominent physician and writer John Kearsley Mitchell (1792–1858) and Sarah Henry Mitchell (1800–1872) .

He studied at Philadelphia's renowned University of Pennsylvania and later earned the degree of MD at the city's Jefferson Medical College in 1850.

Career

During the Civil War, he was director of treatment of nervous injuries and maladies at Turner's Lane Hospital, Philadelphia, and at the close of the war became a specialist in neurology. In this field Mitchell pioneered the rest cure for diseases now termed "psychiatric", particularly neurasthenia and hysteria, subsequently taken up by the medical world.[1] The treatment consisted primarily in isolation, confinement to bed, dieting, electrotherapy and massage; and was popularly known as 'Dr Diet and Dr Quiet'.[1] Mitchell advocated a high-fat diet to his patients.[2] [3] He believed that a diet rich in fat would "fatten and redden" his patients, leading to a cure. To achieve this, large quantities of milk were prescribed. He requested his patients to consume two quarts or more milk a day.[4]

His medical texts include Injuries of Nerves and Their Consequences (1872) and Fat and Blood (1877). Mitchell's disease (erythromelalgia) is named after him. He also coined the term phantom limb during his study of an amputee.[5] Mitchell discovered and treated causalgia (today known as CRPS/RSD), a condition most often encountered by hand surgeons. Mitchell is considered the father of medical neurology and a pioneer of "evidence-based" or "scientific" medicine. He was a founding member of the American Anthropometric Society whose purpose was to collect the brains of eminent scientists to further brain science.[6] He was also a psychiatrist, toxicologist, author, poet, and celebrity in Europe as well as America. His contemporaries considered him a genius no less than Benjamin Franklin.

In 1866, he published a short story in the Atlantic Monthly resting upon both somatic and psychological insights entitled "The Case of George Dedlow".[7] From that point onward, Mitchell divided his attention between scientific and literary pursuits. In the former field, he produced monographs on rattlesnake venom, intellectual hygiene, injuries to the nerves, neurasthenia, nervous diseases of women, the effects of gunshot wounds upon the nervous system, and relations between nurse, physician, and patient; in the latter, he wrote juvenile stories, several volumes of respectable verse (The Hill of Stones and Other Poems was published in 1883 by Houghton, Mifflin and Co.), and prose fiction of varying merit, which earned him a leading place among American authors at the close of the 19th century. His historical novels in particular, notably Hugh Wynne (1897), The Adventures of François (1898), The Youth of Washington (1904), and The Red City (1909), are among the best of their genre.

Prominent patients

Although Silas Weir Mitchell was considered the most prominent doctor of the time, his female patients often suffered under his care. There was even a death due to his treatment that was not revealed to the public.

He was Charlotte Perkins Gilman's doctor and his use of a rest cure on her provided the idea for "The Yellow Wallpaper", a short story in which the narrator is driven insane by this treatment.

His treatment was also used on Virginia Woolf, who wrote a savage satire of it in her novel Mrs. Dalloway (1925): "you invoke proportion; order rest in bed; rest in solitude; silence and rest; rest without friends, without books, without messages; six months rest; until a man who went in weighing seven stone six comes out weighing twelve".[8]

Influence on Freud

Sigmund Freud reviewed Mitchell's book on The Treatment of Certain Forms of Neurasthenia and Hysteria in 1887;[9] and used electrotherapy in his work into the 1890s.[10]

Freud also adopted Mitchell's use of physical relaxation as an adjunct to therapy, which arguably led to the institutionalization of the psychoanalytic couch.[11]

Honors and recognition

Mitchell's eminence in science and letters was recognized by honorary degrees conferred upon him by several universities at home and abroad and by membership, honorary or active, in many American and foreign learned societies. In 1887 he was president of the Association of American Physicians and in 1908–09 president of the American Neurological Association.

He was a trustee of the Carnegie Institution from 1902 until he died in 1914.[12] In 1912 he was honored by the Guggenheim Honor Cup of the Penn Club of New York.[13]

The American Academy of Neurology award for young researchers, the S. Weir Mitchell Award, is named for him.[14]

Crotalus mitchellii, the speckled rattlesnake, was named after Mitchell.[15]

Personal life

Mitchell was twice married. His first marriage was to Mary Middleton Elwyn (1838–1862), a daughter of Dr. Alfred L. Elwyn of Philadelphia. Before her death, they were the parents of two children:

On June 23, 1875, Mitchell was married to Mary Cadwalader (1835–1914),[20] who was from one of Philadelphia's most prestigious families. She was a daughter of Thomas McCall Cadwalader and Maria Charlotte Gouverneur (niece of Elizabeth Kortright, who had married U.S. President James Monroe). The marriage "propelled him to one of the city's highest social circles and he became a trustee of the University of Pennsylvania the following year."[21] Together, they were the parents of a daughter:

Mitchell died on January 4, 1914, in Philadelphia and is interred at The Woodlands Cemetery.[23] His widow died a week after his funeral.[20]

Cultural Club Founder

Mitchell and 8 other members of the University Club at Penn founded The Franklin Inn Club in 1902.

Art patron

He was a friend and patron of the artist Thomas Eakins, and owned the painting Whistling for Plover.[24] The Philadelphia Chippendale chairs seen in several Eakins paintings – such as William Rush Carving his Allegorical Figure of Schuylkill River (1877) and the bas-relief Knitting (1883) – were borrowed from Mitchell. Following Eakins's 1886 forced resignation from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Mitchell may have recommended the artist's trip to the Badlands of South Dakota.

The artist John Singer Sargent painted two portraits of Mitchell: one is in the collection of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia; the other, commissioned by the Mutual Assurance Company of Philadelphia in 1902, was recently sold (see External Links, below).

The sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens modeled an 1884 bronze portrait plaque of Mitchell.[25] Mitchell commissioned Saint-Gaudens to create a monument to his deceased daughter Maria: The Angel of Purity, a white marble version of the sculptor's Amor Caritas. Originally installed in Saint Stephen's Church, Philadelphia, it is now at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Ghost story

Some time during the late 1800s, a ghost story was published about Dr. Mitchell that he was never able to lay to rest. The story tells how a very young girl in rags and threadbare shawl came to his door in bad weather and begged him to come take care of her sick mother. The girl guided Mitchell to the sick woman, who turned out to be a former house servant of his who was suffering from pneumonia. Mitchell helped the woman, then congratulated her on having such a fine daughter, but the woman told him her daughter died a month earlier. In a cupboard, Mitchell found the shawl the girl had been wearing; it had not been worn out that night.

A 2011 study determined that the ghost story was likely originally told by Mitchell himself as entertainment at a medical meeting, then took on a life of its own. In his 1910 book "Characteristics," Mitchell wrote about a man who told a story "about a little dead child who rang up a doctor one night, and took him to see her dying mother;" the man was then constantly bothered by believers and disbelievers, and unable to stop the story. In context, it seems that Mitchell was referring to himself.[26]

"The Yellow Wallpaper"

Charlotte Perkins Gilman would claim her short story "The Yellow Wallpaper" was directed at Weir Mitchell that he might reconsider the rest cure or change his treatments.[27] Although she has claimed to have sent a copy of the story, Weir Mitchell never acknowledged his connection to the infamous story or that he ever received a copy. Perkins Gilman also claimed that Weir Mitchell altered his Rest Cure treatment after reading "The Yellow Wallpaper," but there is no evidence that Weir Mitchell ever changed or altered the Rest Cure.

Terms

Dorland's Medical Dictionary (1938)

Selected publications

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Henri Ellenberger

    . Ellenberger, Henri F. . Henri Ellenberger . The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry . August 2008 . Basic Books . 978-0-7867-2480-2 . 244.

  2. Morris, David B. (1991). The Culture of Pain. University of California Press. p. 113.
  3. Foxcroft, Louise. (2012). Calories & Corsets: A History of Dieting Over 2, 000 Years. Profile Books. p. 99.
  4. Adams, Henry. (2005). Eakins Revealed: The Secret Life of an American Artist. Oxford University Press. p. 460.
  5. Woodhouse . Annie . Phantom limb sensation . Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology . 32 . 1–2 . 2005 . 132–134 . 0305-1870 . 10.1111/j.1440-1681.2005.04142.x. 15730449. 35696871 . free .
  6. Web site: Herr . Mickey . On The Hunt For Brains, Discovering The Wistar Institute . hiddencityphila.org . Hidden City Philadelphia . 31 December 2023.
  7. Silas Weir . Mitchell . July 1866 . The Case of George Dedlow . 2014-01-21 . Atlantic Monthly.
  8. Book: Hermione Lee

    . Lee, Hermione . Hermione Lee . Virginia Woolf . Chatto & Windus . London . 1996 . 194 . 9780701165079.

  9. Book: Jones, Ernest . Ernest Jones

    . Ernest Jones . The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud . The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud . 1964 . 210.

  10. Book: Gay, Peter . Peter Gay

    . Peter Gay . Freud: A Life for Our Time . 2006. W. W. Norton . 978-0-393-32861-5 . 62.

  11. Ellenberger, p. 518.
  12. Book: Carnegie Institution of Washington. Year Book No. 47, July 1, 1947 – June 30, 1948. 1948. Washington, DC. vi.
  13. Web site: Guggenheim Honor Cup. Penn History, University of Pennsylvania.
  14. http://tools.aan.com/science/awards/?fuseaction=home.info&id=19 American Academy of Neurology: S. Weir Mitchell award
  15. Book: Beolens, Bo. Watkins, Michael. Grayson, Michael. The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. 2011. Baltimore. Johns Hopkins University Press. 978-1-4214-0135-5. 180.
  16. News: Dr. John K. Mitchell . 15 June 2023 . . 11 April 1917.
  17. Book: Andrews . Charles McLean . The Ancestors and Descendants of Ezekiel Williams of Wethersfield 1608-1907 . 1907 . Case, Lockwood & Brainard Company Print] priv. print . 48 . 15 June 2023 . en.
  18. News: ORK 'l'zams . Special to Tx Nw . L. E. MITCHELL, 75, PLAYWRIGHT, DIES; He Dramatized 'Vanity Fair' Under the Name of 'Becky Sharp' for Mrs, Fiske. . 15 June 2023 . . 22 October 1935.
  19. News: MRS. L. E. MITCHELL, FORMER ACTRESS, 83; Widow of Playwright, Poet Is Dead--Played With Langtry . 15 June 2023 . . 9 June 1944.
  20. News: Times . Special to The New York . Mrs. S. Weir Mitchell. . 15 June 2023 . . 16 January 1914.
  21. Web site: Silas Weir Mitchell (1829-1914) Department of Neurology Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania . www.med.upenn.edu . . 15 June 2023.
  22. Book: Cervetti . Nancy . S. Weir Mitchell, 1829–1914: Philadelphia's Literary Physician . 21 August 2015 . . 978-0-271-07387-3 . 101 . 15 June 2023 . en.
  23. News: DR. S. WEIR MITCHELL DEAD.; Neurologist and Author Had Been III With La Grippe. . 15 June 2023 . . 4 January 1914.
  24. Book: Reason, Akela . Thomas Eakins and the Uses of History. 2010. University of Pennsylvania Press. 978-0-8122-4198-3. 200.
  25. http://collections.si.edu/search/results.htm?q=record_ID:siris_jul_128983 Silas Weir Mitchell by Saint-Gaudens
  26. http://anomalyinfo.com/Stories/18481900-dr-s-weir-mitchells-strange-encounter Dr. S. Weir Mitchell's Strange Encounter
  27. Web site: Wayne. Teddy. Vincent. Caitlin. The Yellow Wallpaper Study Guide. Grade Saver. 16 November 2015.