Localisation in nervous system disorders: examining the treatise written by Dr Xercavins in the late 19th century

nahv4n2 3M. Balcells
Neurosciences and History 2016;4(2):61-71
 
Description

Type of article: ORIGINAL

AUTHOR

M. Balcells
Department of Neurology. Hospital Universitari del Sagrat Cor, Barcelona, Spain.

ABSTRACT

In 1889, Dr Francisco de Paula Xercavins Rius (Sabadell, 1855 - Barcelona, 1937) published De la localización de las enfermedades del sistema nervioso, a painstaking review of the functions and localisations of the nervous system according to physiological knowledge at the time. Here, he examined sensitivity, motor function, and coordination at the levels of the spinal cord and brainstem, referring to the latter as the ‘spinal sub-apparatus’. The second part of the study, titled ‘the cortical sub-apparatus’, examined the function of the grey matter and its involvement in sensitivity, motor impulse, and intelligence.
Xercavins showcased an exquisite knowledge of anatomy, especially that of the sensory and motor tracts of the central nervous system. He also included his own hypotheses and speculations regarding the seat of the higher functions.

KEYWORDS

Francisco de Paula Xercavins, history of neuroanatomy, nervous tracts, cerebral localisation, cerebral functions, 19th century

Neurosciences and History 2016;4(2):61-71