The lobotomy, once a widely used method for treating mental illness, epilepsy and even chronic headaches, is generating fresh controversy 30 years after doctors stopped performing the procedure now viewed as barbaric.
A new book and a medical historian contend the crude brain surgery actually helped roughly 10% of the estimated 50 000 Americans who underwent the procedure between the mid-1930s and the 1970s. But relatives of lobotomy patients want the Nobel Prize given to its inventor revoked.
The lobotomy debate was discussed in an editorial in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine.
Lobotomy was pioneered in 1936 by Portuguese neurologist Egas Moniz, who operated on people with severe psychiatric illnesses, particularly agitation and depression.
Through holes drilled in the skull, Moniz cut through nerve fibres connecting the brain’s frontal lobe, which controls thinking, with other brain regions — believing that as new nerve connections formed the patient’s abnormal behavior would end.
Moniz, already widely respected for inventing an early brain-imaging method, gave sketchy reports that many patients benefitted and was awarded the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1949.
The procedure was so in vogue that Rosemary Kennedy, former president John F Kennedy’s mildly retarded sister, had a lobotomy in the 1940s at age 23. She remained in an institution until she died in January 2005.
Other doctors used a more primitive version than Moniz, punching an ice pick into the brain above the eye socket and blindly manipulating it to sever nerve fibers.
By the late 1930s doctors were reporting many lobotomy patients were left childlike, apathetic and withdrawn — not unlike the depiction in the novel and movie One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Use eventually waned with the advent of effective psychiatric drugs in the mid-1950s and the growing use of electroshock therapy.
Modern views of lobotomy have led to a call to pull Moniz’s Nobel prize.
”How can anyone trust the Nobel Committee when they won’t admit to such a terrible mistake?” asks Christine Johnson, a Levittown, New York, medical librarian who started a campaign to have the prize revoked.
Her grandmother, Beulah Jones, became delusional in 1949, was lobotomised in 1954 after unsuccessful psychiatric and electroshock treatments, and spent the rest of her life in institutions.
One member of Johnson’s campaign, retired nurse Carol Noell Duncanson of Marietta, Georgia, said her mother, Anna Ruth Channels, was lobotomised while pregnant to end chronic headaches in 1949. Channels, described as a brilliant and vivacious woman, was sent home incapacitated, Duncanson said.
”The woman could not feed herself, she could not toilet, she could not speak and she was combative,” Duncanson said.
Channels eventually re-learned those things but remained childlike and unable to care for her daughters, who spent years in foster care.
Her husband abandoned her and she lived the rest of her life in a small West Virginia town with her mother, who was resentful and ashamed of her, Duncanson said.
”She never had a life after her lobotomy. She had nothing,” the daughter said.
Johnson, whose grandmother died in 1989, started the website psychosurgery.org several years ago to build a support network among families of lobotomy patients.
Then she and group members began urging removal of an article on the Nobel website praising Moniz and saying he deserved the prize because there were no alternative psychiatric treatments at the time.
The Nobel Foundation refused to remove or change the article. Now Johnson is asking Nobel laureates to support her campaign to strip Moniz’s Nobel.
”There’s no possibility to revoke it,” said foundation executive director Michael Sohlman, who could not recall a medicine prize ever being challenged. ”It’s a nonstarter.”
The Nobel charter has no provision for appeal of a prize awarded, he said, and the foundation ignores such criticisms, as it did when Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat’s Peace Prize was challenged.
Meanwhile, journalist Jack El-Hai recently published The Lobotomist, about the chief US proponent, neurosurgeon Walter Freeman, who did roughly 3 400 operations. He developed the ice pick technique.
In the New England Journal editorial, Dr Barron Lerner, a medical historian and associate professor at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, wrote that the procedure was a desperate effort to help many of the 400 000 patients confined to US mental hospitals at mid-century.
He said a small number of patients became calmer and more manageable.
”I think the numbers that were harmed were quite substantial,” Lerner said in an interview.
”It was way overused, and it was used in inappropriate circumstances — retardation, anxiety, headaches”.
El-Hai began his research eight years ago after meeting a relative of a man committed to a mental hospital for epilepsy around 1930 and later lobotomised.
As he got into his research about Freeman, El-Hai wondered, ”What led this undeniably gifted and compassionate doctor to champion a brain-mutilating procedure and why he stayed with it so long, past the point of reason?”
El-Hai said patients no longer felt strong emotions and their behaviour changed immediately, which was Freeman’s goal. But he concluded Freeman was driven to be a showman. – Sapa-AP