Showing Records: 1031 - 1037 of 1037
PR2.21160, 1959-1964
Notes, charts and correspondence relating to male from Scotland (outside Edinburgh and the Lothians) aged 77 at first examination in 1959. Conditions mentioned include: paroxysmal trigeminal neuralgia; and facial pain. No treatment given. Patient discharged.
PR2.21218, 1959-1960
Correspondence, typed case summary, reports, charts and notes relating to female patient from Scotland (outside Edinburgh and the Lothians) aged 77 at first examination in 1959. Conditions mentioned include: paroxysmal trigeminal neuralgia; facial pain; and loss of balance. Surgical and nonsurgical treatment given. Patient discharged.
PR2.21234, 1959
Correspondence and typed case summary relating to male patient from Scotland (outside Edinburgh and the Lothians) aged 75 at first examination in 1959. Conditions mentioned include: paroxysmal trigeminal neuralgia. No treatment given. Patient discharged.
PR2.21304, 1959-1961
Typed case summary, correspondence, notes, reports and charts relating to female patient from Edinburgh and the Lothians aged 85 at first examination in 1959. Conditions mentioned include: trigeminal neuralgia; ?central facial pain; deterioration of vision; and throat pain. Surgical and nonsurgical treatment given. Patient discharged.
PR2.21328, 1959
Typed case summary, correspondence, charts, notes and reports relating to male from Scotland (outside Edinburgh and the Lothians) aged 74 at first examination in 1959. Conditions mentioned include: spasmodic trigeminal neuralgia; and herpes. Surgical and nonsurgical treatment given. Patient discharged.
PR2.21353, 1959-1960
Correspondence, reports, X-ray films, typed case summary, charts and notes relating to female from Edinburgh and the Lothians aged 47 at first examination in 1959. Conditions mentioned include: trigeminal neuralgia. Surgical and nonsurgical treatment given. Patient discharged.
Text of paper on 'Facial Pain', June 1951
Text of paper by Norman Dott on 'Facial Pain', delivered in June 1951. The material consists of the text of the paper, with summary, list of slides, and glossary of Scots terms used in poem by Robert Burns 'Address to the Tooth-Ache', with which paper opens. When the lecture was first delivered, these verses were spoken by Doctor A. Brownlie Smith and the item includes Dott's letter of instructions to him on his 'powerful declamation'.