Manfred Sakel
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Manfred Sakel | |
Manfred Sakel
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Born | June 6, 1900 Nadwórna |
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Died | December 2, 1957 New York City |
Nationality | United States |
Alma mater | University of Vienna |
Known for | insulin shock therapy |
Manfred Joshua Sakel, Polish neurophysiologist and psychiatrist, was born on June 6, 1900, in Nadwórna, in the former Austria-Hungary Empire (now Ukraine). Sakel studied Medicine at the University of Vienna from 1919 to 1925, specializing in neurology and neuropsychiatry. In 1933 he became a researcher at the University of Vienna's Neuropsychiatric Clinic, but was forced to immigrate to the United States in 1936, when the National Socialist Party came to power in Austria. In the USA, he became an attending physician and researcher at the Harlem Valley State Hospital.
Dr. Sakel was the discoverer of the insulin shock therapy for schizophrenics and other mental patients in 1927, while a young doctor in Vienna. He noted that insulin-induced coma and convulsions, due to the low level of glucose attained in the blood (hypoglycemic crisis) was effective in improving the mental state of drug addicts and psychotics, sometimes dramatically so. His findings indicated that up to 88% of his patients improved with insulin shock therapy, and his method became widely applied for many years in mental institutions worldwide. In the USA and other countries it has been largely replaced by electroconvulsive therapy and other means of treatment,
Dr. Sakel died on December 2, 1957, in New York City, NY, USA.
[edit] References
- Peters, U H (1992), “[Introduction of shock therapy and psychiatric emigration]”, Fortschritte der Neurologie-Psychiatrie 60 (9): 356-65, 1992 Sep, PMID:1398417, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1398417>
- “MANFRED J. SAKEL.”, Journal of clinical and experimental psychopathology 15 (3): 319, PMID:13221647, <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13221647>
Fink, M (1984) Meduna and the Origins of Convulsive Therapy. American Journal of Psychiatry, 141(9): 1034-1041 This historical and biographical papers discusses the introduction of the shock treatment in psychiatry, the role of a theory of the biological antagonism between epilepsy and schizophrenia, and the contributions of Ladislau von Meduna, Sakel, Ugo Cerletti, and Lucio Bini.