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  1. Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum . Seine richtung-weisenden Erkenntnisse und Behand-lungsformen im Bereich der Psychiatrie gehören zum Inhalt von Vorlesungen an deutschen Universitäten, werden bei Kongressen oder über Veröffentli-chungen vermittelt . In den USA spricht man in diesem Zusammenhang von der Görlitzer Schule . Am 28 . Dezember 1828 wurde Karl

  2. Carroll BT (2001) Kahlbaum’s catatonia revisited. Psychiatry Clin Neurosci 55:431–436. CAS PubMed Google Scholar. Casey DE (1995) Neuroleptic-induced acute extrapyramidal syndromes and tardive dyskinesia. In: Hirsch SR, Weinberger DR (eds) Schizophrenia. Blackwell, Oxford, pp 546–565.

  3. 1. Juli 1999 · Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum was born in 1828 in Dierschau, Eastern Germany. His parents owned a freight transport company. They provided him with the opportunity to study medicine, basic sciences, and mathematics. Beyond this, he was interested in botany, zoology, and anthropology.

  4. 3. Juli 2009 · Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum (1828-1899) spent most of his professional career as director of a private psychiatric sanatorium in Germany. He remains influential for introducing his "clinical method" (based on considering the course of an illness as well as the signs and symptoms) of differential diagnosis of specific psychiatric syndromes and urging abandonment of the more unitary views of psychotic ...

  5. Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum was the first to describe catatonia in 1868. There has been a tendency to consider catatonia as a psychiatric disease despite many case reports demonstrating a wide range of medical and neurological as well as psychiatric causes. We present our accumulated experience of the catatonic syndrome.

  6. Discusses K. L. Kahlbaum's work on psychiatric disorders as a further contribution to the evolutionary approach to psychiatric disorders, as described by I. Jones and J. K. Blackshaw (2000). Brüne contends that Kahlbaum, a 19th century German psychiatrist is commonly known among psychiatrists for the 1st systematic description of catatonia, but his relevance in modern psychiatry has been ...