Edward M. Brown M.D.
Presented to the American Association of the History of Medicine, Boston
1980
George
Miller Beard won his place in American psychiatry through his promotion
of neurasthenia as a nervous disorder. Understood vaguely as an inadequate
endowment of nerve force to meet the demands of advanced civilization,
this so-called disease was diagnosed in patients with a vast array of complaints
including fatigue, “nervousness,” indigestion, headaches, impotence, and
neuralgia. Efforts to understand how Beard arrived at this broad conception
have focused on cultural and intellectual influences on his career as a
neurologist.1 The role of his career as an electrotherapist in defining
the concept of neurasthenia has not, however, been emphasized. 2
Beard began
his medical career in 1866 as an electrotherapist and it was while developing
the method he called “general electrization” that he drew together that
vast array of symptoms under the label of neurasthenia. General electrization
was, then, instrumental in the development of Beard’s conception of neurasthenia,
which as he formulated it was virtually identical with the whole field
of functional nervous disorders-- except for hysteria. As such this somatic
therpy can be seen as playing a role in deliniating an area of investigation
that would later be interpreted psychologically.
The treatment itself,
like animal magnetism, involved an elaborate ritual and a belief in a more
or less mysterious fluid--in this case electricity. Whele derived from
a popular American tradition of electrization, it, like neurastheia, was
given an acceptable somatic explanation and became an established component
of late nineteenth century neurological practice. In what follwos I will
describe the development, contexst and influence of this treatment.
George Miller Beard
was born in 1839 in Connecticut, attended Yale, served in a non-specialist
medical capacity during the civil war and received his medical degree from
Columbia University in 1866. Ambitious, often bombastic and open to unorthodox
ideas, he was a controversial figure during his life. Edward Spitzke, a
highly regarded German trained neurologist, refered to him as the “P.T.
Barnum of medicine” and in 1876 his paper 'The Influence of the Mind in
the Causation and Cure of Disease and the Potency of Expectation' was severely
criticized by his fellow neurologists.
Beard’s interest in
the medical application of electricity began while a student at Yale where
he used it to obtain relief from persistent indigestion and nervousness--two
complaints for which his patients would later also find it of value. In
1866, just out of medical school, he began a practice of electrotherapeutics
with his friend A.D. Rockwell.
Electrotherapy was
then undergoing a revival. It had known a great vogue in the late eighteenth
century; even Benjamin Franklin had tried it, though without much
success. In the early nineteenth century, partly due to an association
with animal magnetism and partly due to unreliable techniques, it had fallen
into some disrepute and had been practiced largely by popular healers and
quacks. Beginning in 1849 in Europe, Duchenne, Remak and a number
of other prominent neuroloists had been perfecting a means of applying
electric current to neuralgias, paralyses and other local affections. This
'local electrization' allowed for the more precise study of the effects
of the electrical current and avoided undesirable systemic effects. it
was these developments which had returned the attention of the established
medical community to the healing possibilities of electricity and created
the revival that Beard and Rockwell joined.
By the civil war this
European work had begun to enter the United States. In 1858 Garratt, reporting
on travels to the continent, presented these recent developments in an
enormous and somewhat forbidding manual. By 1869 there was sufficient interest
for William A. Hammond to translate a major German work. Nonetheless in
the United States as in Europe popular electrotherapists had continued
to practice largely uninfluenced by the work of Duchenne and the others.
One of these was William
Miller. A man of seventy at the end of the civil war, he had been practicing
electrotherapy for thirty five years. In 1866 he befriended Beard and Rockwell
and was under his influence that they began their electrotherapy practice.
Called doctor only by courtesy, Miller had developed a thriving practice
in New York City. Impressed by his 'evident honesty,' and good results,
Beard and Rockwell found him to be a 'thorough master of the method he
invariably used.' It is reasonable to assume that they were heavily influenced
by him. During the next two years as they developed their method of general
electrization they practiced in the same building as Miller and treated
a steady stream of patients sent by him.
While we know nothing
of Miller’s ideas and little of his practice, other American electrotherapists
did publish during the period before the civil war. Common to these writers
was an idea of nervous fluid and electricity as virtually identical, both
often associated with a principle of vitality. Disease was often seen as
due to a lack or disequilibrium of nerve force, and electricity was seen
as restoring the healthy state. Since both mesmerism and electrization
were regarded by some as due to similar if not identical fluids,
it is not surprising to find one author who prescribes them interchangeably
and another who bases his electrotherapy practice on a version of animal
magnetism known as electrobiology. In any event, the hallmark of pre-civil
war practice was the wide variety of conditions to which electricity was
applied. Among the conditions for which good results were reported were:
paralysis, rheumatism, asthma, indigestion, liver complaints, sciatica,
nervous complaints and nervous headaches.
Beard and Rockwell’s
general electrization undoubtedly owes something to this earlier electrothrapeutics.
In the first place, simply getting referrals from Miller exposed them to
the same variety of complaints that Miller treated. In addition, they went
“again and again” to study his method. The rationale of their treatment
in terms of nerve tonic bears a clear resemblance to earlier notions of
the relationship of nerve force, electricity and vitality. The aim of general
electrization also resembled the earlier electrotherapeutics rather than
the recent European practice. This aim was to “bring every portion of the
body under the influence of the electric current.”
The treatment itself
involved an elaborate ritual. Patients would come to the doctor’s office
for ten to twenty minute sessions. They would sit facing a more or less
imposing generator. Both men and women would disrobe except for underclothing
which would be loosened in such a way that free access could be had to
the entire surface of the body. The cathode was placed under the coccyx
or under the feet and the positive pole in the form of a damp sponge or
the operator’s hand was moved over the head, neck, shoulders, trunk, extremities
and, in the case of impotence, the penis as well. Interestingly, Beard
and Rockwell recommended passing the current through the operator;s hand.
This though criticized by Garrat, had been Miller’s technique for thirty-five
years. As the treatment might be painful and as many of their patients
were highly sensitive, having the current pass through the operator’s body
allowed for the kind of individualized treatment that Beard and Rockwell
regarded as critical. For example, with especially sensitive patients,
the treatment might begin with the application of the doctor’s hands but
no current at all. This would allow the doctor a palapable reading of the
patient’s response to the idea of the treatment. In any event this individualized
and highly intimate treatment proceedure, once begun, would be repeated
daily or at least every other day for months.
One of Beard’s cases,
reported in 1866, three years before he first used the term neurasthenia,
will suggest the kind of patient they treated and the way this treatment
influenced theirperception of patients:
A pale-lipped, sad-eyed lady came panting into our office and almost
fell down in the sette before she could begin to tell her story. So exhausted
was she with the exertion of ascending one flight of stairs, that her speech
was at first only in broken utterances, and we very naturally surmised
that she was laboring under some organic derangement of the heart. But
the history of the case seemed to point unmistakably toward anoemia as
the prime source of all her unpleasant symptoms. She was troubled with
great depression of spirits, Amenorrhea had existed for nine months.
The patient was so hysterical
that the first application was given with difficulty. She could endure
but the slightest current. Whenever its strength was much increased faintness
was at once produced. This extreme susceptibity was, however, speedily
overcome, and after the first week, she could bear a current of ordinary
severity without the slightest discomfort. Applications were made every
other day for a month, at the end of which time the improvement was most
satisfactory. The menses returned after seven or eight applications. A
few days ago she came briskly up the stairs, and with a light elastic step,
and with a smiling rubicund countenance. All her cardiac symptoms had disappeared,
her breating was natural, and her whole appearance was that of a person
in the hey-day of youthful vigor.
In the late 1860s,
while developing general electrization, Beard and Rockwell began a campaign
to promote and legitimize the treatment. It was a good time to promote
a new treatment such as theirs. Neurology as a medical specialty was being
born in America and its practitioners, like Beard and Rockwell, worked
not in asylums but in private ofices among the urban “comfortable classes.”
Here they saw, and were to a certain extent in competition for, patients
with vague and often chronic complaints of the sort that general electrization
was designed to treat. That there was a need to legitimize the treatment
can be seen in the fact that Rockwell was refused an opportunity to address
the New York Medical Society on the grounds that electrotherapy was advocated
only by quacks.
Beard and Rockwell
pursued this campaign in a series of papers some of which were republished
as a book and then expanded into the impressive looking Practical Treatise
on the Medical and Surgical Uses of Electricity. With some lack of gratitude
their first objective was to distinguish themselves from such irregular
parctitioners as Miller. In these papers Miller is referred to with respect,
but only incidentally. Of other American electrotherapists they wrote:
In our country at
least the practical applications of this agent [electricity] has fallen
into the hands of uneducated and unscrupulous practitioners who know little
of the human sysyem and still less of the agent they employ. Empirics and
charalatans versed in no art except that of robbing the unfortunate have
thus far had the field mostly to themselves…
Garratt, whose cautious
and practical book had reported on twenty years of experience as well as
introducing European work, was dismissed as 'verbose and mystic.' Such
rhetorical excess must have been intended to convince their readers that
they were rescuing the field for scientific medicine.
An equally important
objective of this campaign was to identify themselves with the European
tradition associated with Duchenne and Remak, while claiming their own
work as a genuine innovation. The very name of their treatment, general
electrization, would have called to mind Duchenne’s local electrization.
Comparing the tow they wrote that, “ While it is true, as is commonly supposed
that galvanism and faradization are specially indicated in certain forms
of paralysis it is also true that they are still morevaluable in general
nervous debility whether it manifests itself in the shape of dyspepsia,
chorea, neuralgia, anemia or amenorrhea.” In another place they add that
parealysis is among the “least tractible of the various diseases that present
for…” electrization. At the same time they promoted their discovery that
electrization, used generally, “is a tonic of vast and varied powers.”
Others had failed to perceive this tonic property of the curent because
they had either applied it only locally or had failed to persist in its
application in the face of discouragement. Readers were, it seems, to see
their treatment as a logical thouugh original extension of accepted electrotherapeutic
practice.
In 1869 Beard published
'Neurasthenia or Nervous Exhaustion' in the Boston Medical and Surgical
Journal. While this paper is well known as his first use of a term which
would have wide influence on late nineteenth century neurology, it can
be seen in the context of his career as an electrotherapist as his most
effective effort to popularize and legitimize his treatment. He indicated
here that his “atention was first drawn to this morbid condition quite
early in [his] professional life in the cultivation of the department of
neurology and electrotherapeutics…” Although the expressed intent of this
paper was merely to coin a name for a commonly observed phenomenon, what
it did in effect was to attribute the array of symptoms for which general
electrization worked so well to a single neurological disease-- neurasthenia.
Much of the paper was devoted to praising the treatment and it recorded
that twenty out of thirty of
Beard’s neurasthenics were either cured or much improved by it. As
a disease due to a want of nerve force neurasthenia was suitabley treated
by nerve tonics and Beard concluded that, among those tonics, general electrization
was “preeminent.” For Beard as an electrotherapist this identification
of his treatment with such a disease could only have helped distinguish
him from empirics and charalatans.
During the next few
years Beard and Rockwell changed the name of their original proceedure,
which involved induced current, to general faradization. They also developed
a new proceedure, central galvanization, in which direct current was applied
primarily to the head and spine. Beard increasingly identified with
the rising specialty of neurology; he sold his share of their electrotherapy
treatise to Rockwell and devoted his energies to writing about neurasthenia,
or as he came to call it the “American Nervousness.” As a neurologist he
continued to use general electrization and to encourage others to do so.
It becam, however, only one of many treatments in a complicated gegimen
and this has tended to obscure its unique role in the deliniation of the
concept of neurasthenia.
The reaction to general
electrization itself was ambivalent, though most of the negative reaction
appears to have been to Beard and Rockwell’s style, rather than to the
treatment itself. A review in 1868 suggestd that Beard and Rockwell had
been less than scientific, doubted that their claims were warranted and
referred the reader to a translation of a French report in the same issue.
That some change in attitude may have occured is suggested by the fact
that Rockwell, though interestingly not Beard, was a charter member of
the American Neurological Association and presented a paper on electrization
at its first meeting 1875. What influence their Practical Treatise, which
appeared in 1871, had on this is hard to say. Certainly its form resempled
European treatises, even if it continued to be, in large measure, an advertisement
for their version of electrization. Nonetheless it was translated into
German and ten additions appeared over the next forty years. In 1876 the
Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases, the official journal of the American
Neurological Association, devoted a long review to the second edition of
ther treatise. It did not question the rationale, method or results of
the treatment, though it did look askance at the authors denigration of
experimental science and worried that their enthusiastic promotion of electrotherapy
might lead to sectarianism
In germany personal
reactions to the authors were apparently less important. Fischer reported
good results with their method and maintained that constitutional illnesses
like 'nervous dyspepsia, neurasthenia, anemia, chlorosis, hypochondria
and hysteria' should be treated with general electrization while local
diseases werre indications for local electrical treatment. Erb, in a text
that Freud among others used, credits Beard and Rockwell with the development
of general electrization and notes that he also got good results with it.
The reaction of patients
is more difficult to determine except through the fact that the treatment
remained popular for many years. One case cited by Beard does suggest the
role that belief in the tonic properties of electricity as well as his
charisma played in the treatment.
Whatever the reaction to Beard and Rockwell’s often bombastic style the treatment became standard for functional nervous disorders. This is not surprising in that they had effectively camoflaged any associations between their treatment and early nineteenth century electrotherapeutics and, in presenting the treatment as a nerve tonic had used a somatic vocabulary acceptable to doctors and patients. In addition it is reasonable to assume that general electrization was helpful to many nervous patients. One sign of the treatment’s acceptance was its role in S. Weir Mitchell’s rest cure. In 1876 Mitchell gave as the pillars of his treatment isolation from family, strict bed rest, overfeeding, massage and electrization. He cited Beard and Rockwell and considered electrization a tonic--albeit for muscles. As a component of the rest cure general electrization was assured an even wider acceptance, though not as the preminent treatment for neurasthenia that Beard had once claimed it to be.The patient was a twenty-nine year old physician who was chronically underweight and suffered and sick headaches, fatigue, poor appetite. After the first treatment he felt temporarily enlivened and exhilarated… returning after two days he felt no special benefit, but had gained one half pound. This change, however slight as it was, encouraged him. He watched and studied his symptoms, and carefully ascertained his weight from day to day, not as a hypochondriac at all, but as a scientific man, inspired not by any special faith in the remedy but by a desire to test for himself the tonic effects of general electrization. He continued to gain weight…The improvement in his general condition has gone hand in hand with [this].