Arnold Pick

Arnold Pick
Born(1851-07-20)20 July 1851
Died4 April 1924(1924-04-04) (aged 72)
NationalityCzech
Medical career
ProfessionDoctor
FieldPsychiatry
Neuropathology
Institutionsthe German University

Arnold Pick (20 July 1851 – 4 April 1924) was a psychiatrist from Austria-Hungary and later Czechoslovakia. He is known for first describing clinical features of frontotemporal dementia between 1892 and 1906.[1] The disorder he described was given the name Pick's disease in 1922.[2] This term is now reserved for the behavioral variant of frontal temporal dementia that shows the presence of the characteristic Pick bodies and Pick cells,[3] which were first described by Alois Alzheimer in 1911.[2][4]

He was the first to name reduplicative paramnesia. He was the second to use the term dementia praecox (in 1891).[5] Pick trained in Berlin with Karl Friedrich Otto Westphal and later worked at the infamous asylum of Wehnen.[2] Pick headed the Prague neuropathological school and one of the school's members was Oskar Fischer.[6] This school was one of the two neuropathological schools (the other one was in Munich where Alois Alzheimer worked) in Europe at the time that framed Alzheimer disease through empirical discoveries.[7]

  1. ^ Mikol J (2018). "History of Pick's disease". Revue Neurologique. 174 (10): 740–741. doi:10.1016/j.neurol.2018.09.009. ISSN 0035-3787. S2CID 81923630.
  2. ^ a b c Pearce JM (2003). "Pick's disease". J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 74 (2): 169. doi:10.1136/jnnp.74.2.169. PMC 1738259. PMID 12531941.
  3. ^ Adams and Victor's Principles of Neurology (eleventh ed.). McGraw Hill. 2019. p. 1096.
  4. ^ PICK, A. (1892). "Uber die Beziehungen der senilen Hirnatrophie zur Aphasie". Prag Med Wochenschr. 17: 165–167.
  5. ^ Ueber primäre chronische Demenz (so. Dementia praecox) im jugendlichen Alter. Prager medicinische Wochenschrift, 16, 312—15, 1891
  6. ^ Scott Brady; George Siegel; R. Wayne Albers; Donald Price (7 December 2011). Basic Neurochemistry: Principles of Molecular, Cellular, and Medical Neurobiology. Academic Press. pp. 829–. ISBN 978-0-08-095901-6. Retrieved 3 September 2012.
  7. ^ Annemarie Goldstein Jutel (7 April 2011). Putting a Name to It: Diagnosis in Contemporary Society. JHU Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-4214-0067-9. Retrieved 3 September 2012.