Oliver Sacks

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Oliver Wolf Sacks (born July 9, 1933, London) is a neurologist who has written popular books about his patients. He considers it following the tradition of 19th-century "clinical anecdotes", a literary-style that included informal case histories. His favorite example is Alexander Luria's The Mind of a Mnemonist.[citation needed] He is a childhood friend of Jonathan Miller and a cousin of the late Abba Eban.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Sacks earned his medical degrees from Oxford University while a member of The Queen's College and became a resident in neurology at UCLA. He has lived in New York since 1965. He is a clinical professor of neurology at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, adjunct professor of neurology at the New York University School of Medicine, and consultant neurologist to the Little Sisters of the Poor. He has a practice in New York City.

Sacks describes his cases with little clinical detail, concentrating on the experiences of the patient (which was in one case himself). The patients he describes are often able to adapt to their situation in different ways despite the fact that their neurological conditions are usually considered incurable.

His most famous book, Awakenings, upon which the movie of the same name is based, describes his experiences using the new drug L-Dopa on patients who were victims of the 1920s sleeping sickness (encephalitis lethargica) epidemic. It was also the subject of the first film made in the British television series Discovery.

In his other books, he describes cases of Tourette syndrome and various effects of Parkinson's disease. The title article of The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat is about a man with visual agnosia and was the subject of a 1986 opera by Michael Nyman. The title article of An Anthropologist on Mars is about Temple Grandin, a professor with high-functioning autism. In his book The Island of the Colour-blind he describes the Chamorro people of Guam, who have a high incidence of a form of ALS known as Lytico-bodig; a devastating combination of ALS, dementia, and parkinsonism. Along with Paul Cox, Sacks is responsible for the resurgence in interest in the Guam ALS cluster, and has published papers setting out an environmental cause for the cluster, namely toxins from the cycad nut accumulating by biomagnification in the flying fox bat.[1] [2]

Sacks's writings have been translated into 21 languages, including Catalan, Finnish, and Turkish.

Oxford University awarded him an Honorary Doctor of Civil Law degree in June 2005.

In March 2006, he was one of 263 doctors who published an open letter in The Lancet criticizing American military doctors who administered or oversaw the force-feeding of Guantanamo detainees who had committed themselves to hunger strikes. [3]

[edit] Books

[edit] Essays and articles

[edit] Television series

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Occurrence of beta-methylamino-l-alanine (BMAA) in ALS/PDC patients from Guam, National Institutes of Health, October 11, 2004
  2. ^ Cycad neurotoxins, consumption of flying foxes, and ALS-PDC disease in Guam, National Institutes of Health, November 26, 2002
  3. ^ Medics call for US to stop Guantanamo force feeding, The Scotsman, March 10, 2006

[edit] External links

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