[THS] Lobotomy is Back (you will be relieved to know that...)
Peter Webster
psalience at fastmail.fm
Wed Feb 17 13:14:06 CET 2010
Source: Discover
http://discovermagazine.com/1997/oct/lobotomysback1240
Lobotomy's Back
10.01.1997
In 1949 lobotomy was hailed as a medical miracle. But images of zombielike patients
and surgeons with ice picks soon put an end to the practice. Now, however, the
practitioners have refined their tools.
by Frank T. Vertosick, Jr.
Last year a team of Harvard investigators headed by neurosurgeon G. Rees Cosgrove
published a technical report bearing the ponderous title Magnetic Resonance Image-
Guided Stereotactic Cingulotomy for Intractable Psychiatric Disease. Although steeped
in medical jargon, the reports central thesis--that psychiatric diseases can be treated
by the selective destruction of healthy brain tissue--dates back to a much earlier, less
sophisticated age when the search for a surgical cure for mental illness spawned an
entire medical specialty known as psychosurgery.
Psychosurgery enjoyed a brief period of global acceptance around the time of World
War II but was quickly driven from the medical mainstream with the advent of better,
nonsurgical methods of treating the mentally ill. Now, almost half a century after
psychosurgerys demise, the Harvard Medical School and a handful of other centers
are hoping that new and improved surgical techniques can revive it. Todays
neurosurgeons are also trying to rename the field psychiatric surgery, presumably to
avoid the Hitchcockian overtones of the older moniker. But, as rock star Prince
discovered, shedding the name that made you famous isnt easy.
In their 1996 paper that appeared in the respected journal Neurosurgery, Cosgrove
and his co-workers described a brain operation designed to relieve emotional distress
and reduce abnormal behavior. Between 1991 and 1995, they performed
cingulotomies--which means, essentially, that they burned dime-size holes in the
frontal lobes of the brain--on 34 patients suffering from one of the following
afflictions: severe depression; bipolar disorder, or manic-depression; obsessive-
compulsive disorder (ocd); and generalized anxiety disorder. The target of their
operations, the cingulate gyrus, is a thin ribbon of gray matter believed to play a role
in human emotional states. The authors used a computer-guided technique known
as stereotaxis to advance an electrode into the cingulate gyrus, then cooked the
tissue with electric current.
Cingulotomy produced major clinical improvement, as judged by psychiatrists, in a
little over a third of the patients; another quarter of them had a possible response to
surgery. Not stellar results, to be sure, but the Harvard patients all had severe
disease that had proved resistant to all other available therapies. Any good outcomes
in this population might be significant, and the investigators believed that their results
were good enough to warrant a larger trial of cingulotomy.
Despite its high-tech approach, however, the Harvard paper still looks anachronistic,
to say the least. Finding a paper extolling the virtues of psychosurgery in todays
medical literature is rather like finding one advocating bloodletting. Modern
neurosurgeons destroying normal brain to treat mental illness? To borrow from
Samuel Johnson, this is akin to a dog walking on its hind legs--the question is not
how well the act can be done but why its even attempted.
In spite of its elevated reputation, neurosurgery is a crude business, even--or
especially--to a neurosurgeon, and Ive been in practice for ten years. When
confronted with an exposed brain at the operating table, I feel as if Im about to
repair a computer with a chain saw. The living brain has a surreal fragility; its
porcelain surface is laced with delicate arteries that begin as thick cords but quickly
branch into finer and finer threads. Looking at the surface of the brain is like looking
at a satellite photo of a large city--one immediately senses a function far more
complex than what is visible.
The idea that a sophisticated derangement in brain function, like ocd, can be cured
by frying holes in the frontal lobe looks as patently absurd as recovering a lost file
from a floppy disk by burning it with a curling iron. But experience suggests that
such lesions can work, if they are done correctly and on the right patients.
Psychosurgery got its start back in 1890 when Gottlieb Burckhart, a Swiss psychiatrist
and surgeon, tried removing portions of the cerebral cortex from schizophrenic
brains. His victims, previously agitated and tormented by violent hallucinations,
became more peaceful after the operation. Burckharts operation didnt impress his
colleagues, though, and an angry outcry from the European medical community
prevented its further use.
Psychosurgery surfaced again with a vengeance in Portugal, during the mid-1930s;
shortly thereafter, neurologist Walter Freeman enthusiastically imported it to the
United States. Psychiatrists started to believe Freemans proselytizing hype, and
desperate families of the mentally ill began seeking surgery for their loved ones.
During World War II the United States saw an increased demand for mental health
care as thousands of combat-fatigued veterans crowded already overburdened
hospitals. In this setting, psychosurgery became established as a standard therapy.
Over the 20-odd years that psychosurgery held the attention of the medical
mainstream, perhaps as many as 35,000 patients underwent psychiatric operations of
one form or another.
But as Burckhart had discovered decades earlier, the medical community could not
long ignore the ethical quagmire surrounding psychiatric brain operations. In the
1950s the rising use of psychosurgery ignited a national debate over the morality of
inflicting irreversible brain injuries on the most emotionally vulnerable patients. While
this debate smoldered among academics right up to the 1970s, the introduction of
the tranquilizer chlorpromazine in 1954 rendered many of the concerns about
psychosurgery moot.
Armed with effective chemical therapies, psychiatrists soon turned to pills instead of
the knife and quit referring their patients for surgery. A few centers continued to use
modified forms of psychosurgery on very small numbers of patients, both here and in
Europe, well into the 1980s, so psychosurgery as a specialty never died--although
psychosurgery as an industry did.
Should psychosurgery be brought back from the realm of the experimental and
made a mainstream treatment once again? Should we reopen this ethical can of
worms? As Cosgroves report shows, there are those who think we should. Hundreds
of severely incapacitated people fail all other treatments, including drugs,
electroshock, and psychotherapy, leaving surgery their only option. The illness most
helped by cingulotomy--major depression--can be life-threatening. If psychosurgery
works, shouldnt it be used?
The successful resurrection of extinct brain operations has a recent precedent:
pallidotomy for parkinsonism. In this procedure, parts of the globus pallidus, a clump
of tissue in the core of the brain controlling limb coordination, are surgically
destroyed. The operation is technically similar to cingulotomy, and in the past few
years it has enjoyed a renaissance. Before the discovery of L-dopa--a chemical
substitute for the brain chemical dopamine--surgeons carried out pallidotomies and a
number of other destructive procedures to ease the tremor and rigidity of Parkinsons
disease. After the introduction of L-dopa, the role of the surgeon in the treatment of
Parkinsons lessened, and the operations soon fell into relative disuse.
While L-dopa did revolutionize the treatment of Parkinsons, the drug proved
ineffective in a small number of patients. Still others responded to medical therapy
only to become resistant to it months or years later. As neurologists accumulated
more experience with drug treatments for Parkinsons, they realized that medical
therapy alone could not keep the disease at bay. A growing demand for alternative
treatments renewed interest in pallidotomy, and several medical centers began trying
it again. Since todays image-guided pallidotomy can be done with far greater
accuracy than was ever possible before, modern surgical results have been excellent,
and pallidotomy is currently available nationwide.
But bringing back pallidotomy, an operation with no historical baggage, was a piece
of cake. To achieve a similar comeback in their own field, modern neurosurgeons
must overcome psychosurgerys dark past--a considerably more difficult task.
Looking back today, psychosurgery is seen as nothing short of a mental health
holocaust perpetrated by mind-stealing hacks in the dimly lit clinics of public
psychiatric hospitals. It will always be synonymous with the flagship operation of its
heyday, the dreaded prefrontal lobotomy. In the conventional form of the operation,
a neurosurgeon poked holes in the patients skull just above and in front of the ear
canals on both sides of the head and plunged a flat knife, called a leucotome, into
the frontal lobes to a depth of about two inches. By sweeping the leucotome up and
down within the brain, the surgeon amputated the anterior tips of the frontal lobes,
the so-called prefrontal areas, from the rest of the brain. In contrast to the half-inch
lesions of pallidotomy and cingulotomy, the lobotomist sliced an area of brain equal to
the cross section of an orange.
This technique soon gave way to a quicker, albeit somewhat grislier, version of
prefrontal lobe destruction. Before World War II, brain surgeons--not exactly a dime
a dozen even today--were quite scarce; this lack of surgical expertise hindered the
wider use of psychosurgery. To rid himself of the need for a surgeon, Freeman
began tinkering with the transorbital approach invented by Amarro Fiamberti in Italy.
(At this point, James Watts, Freemans surgical colleague in conventional lobotomies,
ended their collaboration, saying the transorbital procedure was too risky.)
In Freemans modification of the procedure, the lobotomist inserted an ice pick (yes,
an ice pick) under the upper eyelid and drove it upward into the frontal lobe with a
few sharp raps of a mallet. The pick was then twisted and jiggled about, thus
scrambling the anterior frontal lobes. The ice-pick lobotomy could be done by anyone
with a strong stomach, and, even better, it could be done anywhere. Freeman
carried his ice pick in his pocket, using it on one occasion to perform a lobotomy in a
motel room. A cheap outpatient procedure, the ice-pick lobotomy became a common
psychosurgical choice in state hospitals across the country.
In the late 1950s lobotomys popularity waned, and no one has done a true lobotomy
in this country since Freeman performed his last transorbital operation in 1967. (It
ended in the patients death.) But the mythology surrounding lobotomies still
permeates our culture. Just last year the operation surfaced on the television show
Chicago Hope. Few of us have ever met a lobotomized patient, but we all know what
to expect--or at least we think we do. Who can forget the vacant stare of the freshly
knifed Jack Nicholson in One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest? At best, according to the
popular conception, the luckier victims recovered enough to wander about like
incontinent zombies.
Although some patients ended up this way, or worse, the zombie stereotype derives
more from Hollywood fiction than from medical reality. Lobotomy peaked in the
1950s, not during the Middle Ages. While we may have been a little more bioethically
challenged back then, we werent Neanderthals either. Lobotomy could never have
survived for 20 years if it yielded a lot of cretins. In fact, intelligence, in those cases
where it was measured pre- and postoperatively by formal testing, remained
unaffected by a competent lobotomy, and in some cases it even improved.
Not surprisingly, the operation did have disturbing side effects. Patients often
suffered major personality changes and became apathetic, prone to inappropriate
social behavior, and infatuated with their own toilet habits. They told pointless jokes
and exhibited poor hygiene. Postoperative deaths, although uncommon, occurred
and could be gruesome. But all these problems must be put into the context of the
era: in the 1940s brain surgery for any disease was very risky.
Its easy for us to forget that the media first hailed psychosurgery as a medical
miracle. Lobotomys reputation once ran so high that the Nobel committee awarded
the prize in Medicine and Physiology to its inventor, the Portuguese neurologist Egas
Moniz, in 1949. But less than a decade after this endorsement, lobotomy was dead
and its memory vilified.
The operations descent into disgrace had many causes. For one thing, lobotomy
never had a scientific basis. Moniz got the idea for it in a flash after hearing a
presentation by Fulton and Jacobsen, two Yale physicians, during a 1935 neurological
conference in London. The Americans described two chimpanzees, Becky and Lucy,
that had become remarkably calm after frontal lobe ablation.
This single, almost casual observation prompted Moniz to return home and begin
human trials immediately. Further animal work would not be useful, he argued, since
no animal models of mental illness existed. Why he rejected the thought of further
animal experimentation while still viewing Fulton and Jacobsens tiny report as a
virtual epiphany remains a mystery. Moniz, who had just endured a nasty priority
fight concerning his invention of cerebral angiography, may have rushed into human
trials in order to stake the earliest claim to lobotomy.
The association of the frontal lobes with emotional and intellectual dysfunction was
hardly a radical idea, even in 1935. The frontal lobes of lower mammals are
vanishingly tiny; even chimps and apes have fairly small ones. In humans, on the
other hand, the frontal lobes make up nearly two-thirds of the cerebrum, or higher
brain. Since mental illnesses are uniquely human afflictions, a therapeutic surgical
assault on the frontal lobes seemed quite plausible.
Moniz subsequently created a fanciful theory of abnormally stabilized pathways in the
brain to justify his operation. He reasoned that cutting brain fibers might interrupt
the abnormal brain circuitry of psychiatric patients, freeing them from a cycle of
endless rumination. Since then, no better rationale for lobotomy has been advanced.
Nevertheless, a lack of scientific justification doesnt doom an operation as long as the
operation works. Many good operations, pallidotomy included, can trace their origins
to pseudoscience or serendipity. But was lobotomy ever a good operation? Weve had
half a century to study it and were still not sure.
Unfortunately, lobotomists showed no great talent for comprehensive, long-term
analysis of their data. The esteemed Moniz often followed his patients for only a few
weeks after their surgery. The peripatetic Freeman drove about the country doing
hundreds of ice-pick procedures, but only near the end of his life did he find out how
the majority of them fared. Even then, his assessments proved vague and
unconvincing.
Only a single certain conclusion emerged from the dozens of lobotomy studies that
have appeared over the years: schizophrenics dont get better after surgery. This is
ironic, given that they were the first to undergo psychosurgery. We now have an
inkling as to why the treatment doesnt work. Unlike depression and mania, which are
disorders of mood, schizophrenia is a disorder of thought. And what a lobotomy alters
is emotional state, not cognitive abilities.
Most lobotomists had vague and paternalistic ideas of what constituted a good result.
Results were typically judged by psychiatrists, families, or institutional custodians;
detailed surveys of what the patients thought rarely appear in the psychosurgery
literature. This seems strange, since a cure, as judged by outsiders, may not be
viewed that way by the patient. Is the patient, although inwardly miserable, cured
because he no longer assaults the nursing staff, or because he can now sit quietly for
hours without screaming? A careful reading of Freemans more detailed case histories
shows that a few patients didnt even see themselves as ill in the first place, although
they realized that their behavior disturbed others.
Probably the most important factor in lobotomys demise was its deep physical and
metaphysical ugliness. More than one seasoned professional vomited or passed out
while watching Freeman crack through a patients orbital bone with his ice pick.
Moreover, prospective patients often had to be dragged to an operating room or
clinic. In Psychosurgery, the textbook he coauthored with Watts, Freeman frankly
describes his unorthodox methods of obtaining consent for lobotomy. Occasionally,
forcible sedation was needed to keep the patient from backing out at the last minute.
Freemans landmark treatise also notes that if the patient was too disturbed to sign a
consent, a close relative could give permission instead. He didnt elaborate on how
disturbed a person needed to be to abdicate his right to refuse lobotomy. Freeman
never considered the possibility that relatives might have less than honorable motives
for agreeing to the dissection of their loved ones frontal lobes. Tennessee Williams,
however, had no trouble envisioning such a nasty scenario. In his play Suddenly Last
Summer, Mrs. Venable orders her young niece, Catharine, to be lobotomized.
Catharine knew a little too much about the deviate practices of Mrs. Venables late
son, Sebastian. Who would believe the poor child after she had the appropriate
therapy at Lions View asylum?
Its doubtful that many real families ever had such fanciful motives behind their
surrogate assents for lobotomy, although even mundane motives can be illegitimate.
Was it right to authorize a lobotomy to make an argumentative person a quiet one?
Or to stop behaviors repugnant to everyone--everyone, that is, except the patient?
In retrospect, the real question isnt why lobotomy died, but why it survived for so
long. The answer is simple: Walter Freeman. Lobotomy became his career, his
crusade, and he spread psychosurgerys gospel with boundless enthusiasm. His
elegant bearing and Freudian goatee gave him the look of a world-renowned healer
of minds. In the end, his force of will could no longer counter lobotomys growing
ethical opposition and pharmaceutical competition. Freeman did his best to carry on,
but it was no use.
Modern psychosurgery has no evangelist equal to Freeman to spread its message,
and so it must survive only on its merits. Time will tell whether it can.
There are good reasons to think the field can be revived. For starters, modern
procedures like magnetic resonance-guided cingulotomy bear little resemblance to
the ugly lobotomies of the past. Computer-guided electrodes the thickness of pencil
lead that can inflict minute injuries with millimeter precision have replaced ice picks
and leucotomes. Procedures now take place only in sophisticated operating theaters,
not in motel rooms or in the back rooms of county hospitals.
Modern neurosurgeons like Cosgrove approach their operations not as true believers
but as skeptical scientists. Freemans arm-twisting consents are also gone; today
multidisciplinary committees review each patient on a rigorous case-by-case basis.
And no one but the patient can give consent for cingulotomy--there were no Mrs.
Venables involved in the Harvard study. Unlike the itinerant lobotomists of Freemans
time, modern psychosurgeons follow their patients closely for years and test them
exhaustively.
But two problems remain. First, Cosgroves report, like earlier psychosurgery studies,
makes no mention of the patients perception of their operations; it details only what
their psychiatrists thought. Patients cant even request this surgery on their own; an
operation is offered only if the psychiatrist agrees. In other quality of life operations--
face-lifts, surgical removal of herniated spinal disks, elective joint replacements--the
patient approaches the surgeon directly, requests surgery, and then personally
decides if the postoperative outcome is satisfactory. An orthopedic surgeon doesnt
ask an internist if a knee replacement has alleviated a patients pain. So why must we
rely on psychiatrists to tell us if a patient no longer feels depressed after cingulotomy?
Second, the cingulotomy rests on no firmer scientific foundation than lobotomy did.
First performed in 1952 as a modified version of the lobotomy, cingulotomy was
based on Freemans observations that lobotomy patients seemed to have less
psychological tension when fibers near the cingulate gyrus were severed. This ribbon
of brain tissue is thought to be a conduit between the limbic region, a primitive area
involved in emotional behavior, and the frontal lobes, the seat of reason and
judgment. But we lack any more detailed understanding of how the cingulate gyrus
functions. As such, cingulotomy can trace its intellectual heritage right back to the
chimps Becky and Lucy.
Psychosurgery will never become as routine as it was in the 1940s and 1950s. The
most refractory of the chronically disabling mental illnesses, schizophrenia, cant be
treated surgically. Depression, while quite common, usually responds to one of the
many excellent medical therapies that must be tried first, leaving few patients as
candidates for surgery. And patients with ocd often respond to nonsurgical
treatments. Thus, the pool of patients likely to benefit from cingulotomy will always
be fairly small. In addition, few major medical centers can muster the psychiatric,
bioethical, and surgical resources to perform and evaluate the procedure correctly.
Then there is that sticky public relations problem. No matter how refined their
surgeries, modern psychosurgeons will still be perceived as lobotomists. An unfair
label, perhaps, but one that will prove difficult to shed.
A greater concern may be that the public wont care at all. In Freemans day, society
paid to house and care for great numbers of the mentally infirm, making psychiatric
disease a public health problem of the first order. This may be why no one bothered
to ask the patients what they thought of surgery--the lobotomists werent treating
patients, they were treating a national crisis. Since lobotomy did make patients easier
to care for, and even got many out of institutions and off the public dole,
psychosurgeons served the national interest well. Freeman acknowledged that the
lobotomist often put the needs of society over those of the individual, arguing that it
was better for a patient to have a simplified intellect capable of elementary acts than
an intellect where reigns disorder of subtle synthesis. Society can accommodate itself
to the humble laborer, but it justifiably mistrusts the mad thinker.
The goal of lobotomy wasnt to control disease but to control patients. Some would
argue that our present heavy use of psychotropic drugs is just as flawed, in that we
dont make the patients better--we just succeed in preventing them from bothering
us.
As a nation, we could seriously question all our recent efforts in the mental health
arena. During the last three decades, mental illness has been literally cast into the
streets. Asylums have vanished and many private health plans now refuse to pay for
psychiatric treatment. Before we judge the lobotomists of old too severely, we should
go to the nearest street grate and see how we are dealing with our mental health
crisis today. High-profile diseases like aids and breast cancer dominate the headlines
and the federal research budgets, leaving many victims of mental illness to suffer in
silent solitude.
Modern psychosurgeons are thus courageous in seeking to address a difficult
problem. By trying to bring the best neurosurgical technologies to a group of patients
who have run out of hope, they risk the scorn of those who see only what
psychosurgery was and not what it can be. I wish them luck. Given the lessons of
history, theyll surely need it.
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