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German Epilepsie Museum Kork
Oberdorfstraße 8, D-77694 Kehl-Kork, Germany
open Sundays 2.00 - 5.00 p.m. or by arrangement
email: info@epilepsiemuseum.de
Diagnosis in the Ancient World (1/2)

The 'Holy Sickness', epilepsy, was diagnosed by ancient Greek, Roman and later by the Byzantine physicians whom they had influenced, mainly by observing the clinical symptoms, i.e. by observing the epileptic seizures.

As no other diagnostic means then existed, the most important 'diagnostic instruments' for the physician of antiquity were exact observation, the careful recording of the patient's case history (mainly from information provided by the patient's relatives) and his own analytic thinking.

 

Only in exceptional cases did other factors play a supporting role in the diagnosis:

The physicians of antiquity knew, for instance, that the glistening wet surface of a turning potter's wheel would trigger an epileptic seizure in some people. In this way it was possible for them to objectify the disposition of some epilepsy patients to having seizures.

We know now that seizures are triggered in such people as a result of their photosensibility.

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How to react to a seizure