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Swiss Archives of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychotherapy is published by MDPI from Volume 176 Issue 1 (2026). Previous articles were published by another publisher in Open Access under a CC-BY (or CC-BY-NC-ND) licence, and they are hosted by MDPI on mdpi.com as a courtesy and upon agreement with EMH Editores Medicorum Helveticorum.

Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother., Volume 162, Issue 1 (01 2011) – 20 articles

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Book Review
Book review: Die Psychoanalyse im Pluralismus der Wissenschaften
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02228 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Die Herausgeber von «Die Psychoanalyse im Pluralismus der Wissenschaften» Münch, Munz und Springer haben sich für die Psychoanalyse mit Herausgabe dieses Werkes einmal mehr verdient gemacht [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book review: Brain's diseases of the Nervous System
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02227 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Zum insgesamt zwölften Mal und zum zweiten Mal unter der Leitung von Michael Donaghy wird das Werk «Brain’s Diseases of the Nervous System» veröffentlicht [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book review: Kognitive Verhaltenstherapie bei Hypochondrie und Krankheitsangst
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02226 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Ängste vor Krankheiten sind weit verbreitet [...] Full article
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Book Review
Wie nationalsozialistisch ist die Eugenik? What is National Socialist about Eugenics?
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02224 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Eugenik – was hat die Schweiz damit zu tun [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book Review: Dysarthrie - verstehen - untersuchen - behandeln
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02221 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Dysarthrien, neurogen bedingte motorische Störungen des Sprechvorgangs, treten nach ätiologisch unterschiedlichen Schädigungen des zentralen oder peripheren Nervensystems auf [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book review: Bipolare affektive Störungen
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02218 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Das sehr kompakte 55 Seiten umfassende und übersichtlich in drei Kapitel gegliederte Taschenbuch vermittelt einen konzisen Überblick über den gegenwärtigen Stand der Diagnostik und der pharmakotherapeutischen Behandlung der bipolaren affektiven Störung [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book review: Reconstructive Neurosurgery
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02216 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Das Fach Neurochirurgie beschäftigt sich hauptsächlich mit der Entfernung und Behandlung von raumfordernden Krankheiten, Blutungen, mit dem Ausschluss von Blutungsquellen oder Beseitigung von Kompression neuraler Strukturen [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book Review: Was hat L. mit uns zu tun?
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02215 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Die Autorin, eine niedergelassene Psychiaterin und Psychotherapeutin mit forensisch-psychiatrischem Schwerpunkt und breitem klinischen Hintergrund (u.a. als Stv. Chefärztin einer Hochsicherheitsabteilung) legt hier einen Therapiebericht über einen Sexualstraftäter vor, anhand dessen sie eine Reihe massnahmerechtlicher, sozial- und entwicklungspsychologischer sowie bindungstheoretischer Gesichtspunkte erläutert, Vor allem [...] Read more.
Die Autorin, eine niedergelassene Psychiaterin und Psychotherapeutin mit forensisch-psychiatrischem Schwerpunkt und breitem klinischen Hintergrund (u.a. als Stv. Chefärztin einer Hochsicherheitsabteilung) legt hier einen Therapiebericht über einen Sexualstraftäter vor, anhand dessen sie eine Reihe massnahmerechtlicher, sozial- und entwicklungspsychologischer sowie bindungstheoretischer Gesichtspunkte erläutert, Vor allem aber bemüht sie sich, die spezifischen Therapieziele und psychologischen Wirkungsmomente einer erfolgreichen Behandlung herauszuarbeiten. Dabei bedient sie sich einer klaren, allgemeinverständlichen Sprache, welche ein Übermass an Fachterminologie tunlichst vermeidet [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book review: Handbuch psychoanalytisch-interaktionelle Therapie
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02214 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
Das sehr ausführliche und didaktisch klar strukturierte Lehrbuch der psychoanalytisch-interaktionellen Methode stellt eine lang erwartete Weiterentwicklung der von F. Heigl, A. Heigl- Evers und J. Ott in den 80er und frühen 90er Jahren entwickelten psychoanalytisch-interaktionellen Methode zur Behandlung von strukturellen Ich-Störungen (schweren Persönlichkeitsstörungen) [...] Read more.
Das sehr ausführliche und didaktisch klar strukturierte Lehrbuch der psychoanalytisch-interaktionellen Methode stellt eine lang erwartete Weiterentwicklung der von F. Heigl, A. Heigl- Evers und J. Ott in den 80er und frühen 90er Jahren entwickelten psychoanalytisch-interaktionellen Methode zur Behandlung von strukturellen Ich-Störungen (schweren Persönlichkeitsstörungen) vor [...] Full article
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Book Review
Book review: Checkliste Doppler- und Duplexsonographie
by EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd.
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 43-46; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02213 - 1 Jan 2011
Abstract
In der 3. Auflage ihrer «Checkliste Doppler- und Duplexsonographie» geben Kopp und Ludwig einen prägnanten Überblick über das Wissen, das in einem Doppler- und Duplexlabor einer medizinischen Klinik notwendig ist. Im Kitteltaschenformat beschreiben die Autoren [...] Full article
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Obituary
In memoriam Professor Klaus Ernst
by Daniel Hell
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 42; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02231 - 1 Jan 2011
Viewed by 62
Abstract
Prof. Dr. med. Klaus Ernst (1924–2010) ist vielen als Arzt, Hochschullehrer und Autor bekannt [...] Full article
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Article
The Swiss connection of Augusta Déjerine-Klumpke
by Julien Bogousslavsky
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 37-41; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02222 - 1 Jan 2011
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 100
Abstract
The C7 form of brachial plexus paralysis is still known today as the Klumpke variant, however, it is not widely known that this description was made by the 27-year-old Augusta Klumpke. She was already famous in Paris for being the first woman to [...] Read more.
The C7 form of brachial plexus paralysis is still known today as the Klumpke variant, however, it is not widely known that this description was made by the 27-year-old Augusta Klumpke. She was already famous in Paris for being the first woman to become externe (at 23 years of age) and interne des Hôpitaux (at 26), despite strong opposition by a large group, including her own mentor Alfred Vulpian. Two years after her paper on the brachial plexus, Augusta Klumpke (1859–1927) married a young Swiss-born neurologist, Jules Déjerine (1849–1917), who would become Jean-Martin Charcot’s second successor at La Salpêtrière. This marriage was not Augusta’s only link to Switzerland. At the age of 14, in 1873, she had arrived in Clarens/Montreux, on Lake Geneva from her native San Francisco after a stay in Germany, with her mother, sisters and brother. She quickly moved to Lausanne for reasons of schooling, and an analysis of the documents available from the local archives shows that she was already unusually active compared to her classmates. She even became president of a girl’s cultural association, “La Perseveranza”, and was deemed to be too “liberal” by the local bourgeoisie in Lausanne, as emphasised in 1941 by the Lausanne neurologist and 11th president of the Swiss Society of Neurology Hermann Brunnschweiler at the 49th assembly of the society. This culminated when her application to attend courses at the Lausanne Academy for obtaining the baccalauréat was turned down by the Vaudois authorities on 27th April 1876, because she was a girl. This triggered her decision to leave for Paris a few months later, where she immediately embarked on her medical studies. Later, the Déjerine couple rented and subsquently bought a chalet close to Berne, at the Thalgut on the Aar, where each year Augusta used to spend two and a half months with her daughter, the future neurologist Yvonne Sorrel-Déjerine, while Jules Déjerine, who stayed only 4 to 6 weeks, would spend his vacation fishing and meeting friends, such as the neuropsychiatrist Paul Dubois from Berne, whom he had met in Geneva at Collège Calvin as a boy, and who had become the second president of the Swiss Society of Neurology (1910–1916). In contrast to Jules Déjerine, who became doctor honoris causa in Geneva for the University’s 350-year Jubilé in 1909, along with Marie Curie, Yvan Pavlov and Camillo Golgi, Augusta was never officially honoured in Switzerland, not even in Lausanne, despite her adolescence roots and her being a neurological celebrity in France, becoming the first woman to be elected president of the Société de Neurologie de Paris in 1914. However, in her obituary, two prominent Swiss neurologists, Édouard Long from Geneva, and Gustave Roussy (who had become a French citizen) underlined Augusta’s deep and continued relationships with Switzerland. Full article
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Case Report
Neurologist-in-training
by Andrea O. Rossetti
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 35-36; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02229 - 1 Jan 2011
Viewed by 53
Abstract
The aim of this section is to prepare the neurologist-in-training for the FMH examination, to confront her or him with specific problems of ever yday neurological practice and to give him or her updates on recent controversies in clinical neurology [...] Full article
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Article
Implementation of guidelines on delirium in the General Hospital: A before-after study of their impact on caregivers' knowledge and clinical skills
by Rachel Voellinger, Friedrich Stiefel, Laurent Michaud, Patrik Michel, Yves Dorogi, Bernard Burnand and Alexandre Berney
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 31-34; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02220 - 1 Jan 2011
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 70
Abstract
Introduction: Delirium is a highly prevalent disorder, with serious consequences for the hospitalised patient. Nevertheless, it remains underdiagnosed and undertreated. We developed evidence-based clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) focusing on prevention, screening, diagnosis, and treatment of delirium in a general hospital. This article [...] Read more.
Introduction: Delirium is a highly prevalent disorder, with serious consequences for the hospitalised patient. Nevertheless, it remains underdiagnosed and undertreated. We developed evidence-based clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) focusing on prevention, screening, diagnosis, and treatment of delirium in a general hospital. This article presents the implementation process of these CPGs and a before after study assessing their impact on healthcare professionals’ knowledge and on clinical practice. Methods: CPGs on delirium were first implemented in two wards (Neurology and Neurosurgery) of the Lausanne university hospital. Interactive one hour educational sessions for small groups of nurses and physicians were organised. Participants received a summary of the guidelines and completed a multiple choice questionnaire, assessing putative changes in knowledge, before and three months after the educational session. Other indicators such as “diagnosis of delirium” reported in the discharge letters, and mean duration of patients’ hospital stay before and after implementation were compared. Results: Eighty percent of the nurses and physicians from the Neurology and Neurosurgery wards attended the educational sessions. Both nurses and physicians significantly improved their knowledge after the implementation (+9 percentage-points). Other indicators were not modified by the intervention. Conclusion: A single interactive intervention improved both nurses’ and physicians’ knowledge on delirium. Sustained and repeated interventions are probably needed to demonstrate changes in clinical practice. Full article
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Article
Die Bestimmung der intraepidermalen Nervenfaserdichte in der Hautbiopsie - Eine valide Methode zur Diagnostik von isolierten Small Fiber Neuropathien Erste Erfahrungen an der neurologischen Universitätsklinik Basel
by Kathrin Doppler, Anne-Kathrin Peyer, Claudio Gobbi, Peter Fuhr, Andreas Arnoldd, Ludwig Kapposa, Andreas J. Steck, Markus Tolnay, Stephan Frank and Susanne Renaud
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 27-30; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02225 - 1 Jan 2011
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 130
Abstract
Evaluation of intra-epidermal nerve fibre density in skin biopsy. Background: Small fibre neuropathy is a sensory neuropathy affecting small, thinly myelinated Ad-fibres and unmyelinated C-fibres. It clinically presents with burning pain and sensory symptoms. As nerve conduction studies mainly detect large fibre [...] Read more.
Evaluation of intra-epidermal nerve fibre density in skin biopsy. Background: Small fibre neuropathy is a sensory neuropathy affecting small, thinly myelinated Ad-fibres and unmyelinated C-fibres. It clinically presents with burning pain and sensory symptoms. As nerve conduction studies mainly detect large fibre function, they often show normal values. Skin biopsy is a new, minimally invasive and painless tool for the diagnosis of small fibre neuropathy. Objective: Evaluation of the newly established method of skin biopsies for the diagnosis of small fibre neuropathy at the University Hospital Basel. Material/Methods: Between 2007 and 2009, a total of 50 patients presenting with neuropathic symptoms were examined clinically, electrophysiologically and by skin biopsies at the University Hospital Basel. Biopsies were taken under local anaesthesia, using a 3-mm punch. Three sections of each specimen were stained immunohistochemically with anti-protein-geneproduct 9.5 antibody. The intra-epidermal nerve fibres were counted and assessed according to published normative values. Results: Out of the 50 patients presenting with neuropathic symptoms, 35 had normal nerve conduction studies. In 28 of these patients, a reduced intra-epidermal nerve fibre density was found, suggesting a pure small fibre neuropathy. A total of 7 patients had neuropathic symptoms without reduction of intra-epidermal nerve fibres. In addition, skin biopsies of 15 patients with clinically and electrophysiologically diagnosed polyneuropathy were analysed. In all of these patients an involvement of small fibres was detected. Aetiological work-up for each patient resulted in findings consistent with previously published data: pure small fibre neuropathy was associated with impaired glucose tolerance in 7.1% (2 patients), diabetes in 7.1% (2 patients), MGUS in 7.1% (2 patients) and with polyarthritis, alcoholtoxicity, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, Sjögren’s syndrome and sarcoidosis in 3.5% (1 patient). In 57.1% (16 patients), the neuropathy was classified as idiopathic small fibre neuropathy. Conclusions: Skin biopsy proves to be an effective and sensitive method for the diagnosis of small fibre neuropathy. It is especially helpful in patients with an isolated lesion of small fibres where nerve conduction studies show normal values. Our results are consistent with the published data and applicable in a tertiary referral centre. Full article
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Article
International adoption: influence of attachment and maternal monitoring style in the emergence of behavioural problems in adolescence in relation to age at adoption
by Stephanie A. Habersaata, Réjean Tessierb and Blaise Pierrehumbertc
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 21-26; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02217 - 1 Jan 2011
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 86
Abstract
Adolescence is a particularly sensitive period for adoptees in regard to psychological, social, and physical transformations, particularly for children adopted from abroad. Past studies highlighted that age at adoption could have an effect on child development. Through our research on 350 internationally adopted [...] Read more.
Adolescence is a particularly sensitive period for adoptees in regard to psychological, social, and physical transformations, particularly for children adopted from abroad. Past studies highlighted that age at adoption could have an effect on child development. Through our research on 350 internationally adopted adolescents in Quebec we show that the intensity of attachment behaviours to mothers, as well as maternal monitoring style, may have an impact on the emergence of behavioural problems in adolescence. Full article
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Review
La psychiatrie: fondement d’une anthropologie philosophique?
by Philippe Veysset
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 10-20; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02223 - 1 Jan 2011
Viewed by 75
Abstract
Psychiatry: foundation of a philosophical anthropology? Ludwig Binswanger and psychiatrist-being How can the human status of an insane person be maintained from the moment he has lost his reason which traditionally defines the human being? That’s the question to which the psychiatric anthropology, [...] Read more.
Psychiatry: foundation of a philosophical anthropology? Ludwig Binswanger and psychiatrist-being How can the human status of an insane person be maintained from the moment he has lost his reason which traditionally defines the human being? That’s the question to which the psychiatric anthropology, by her most eminent representative, Ludwig Binswanger, believed to have found an answer in suggesting an alternative definition of the human being, based on Heidegger’s concept of “Dasein”. When later on transcendental philosophy was rehabilitated and an intercorporeity (a primary bodily relatedness) was identified which opens again the possibility of a primordial relatedness to the other, this approach was given up. In fact, L. Binswanger, the founder of “Daseinsanalyse” gives a redefinition of “being a psychiatrist” as distinct of a “being an anthropologist” (a scientific conception) and of “being a doctor” (a conception of care), in incorporating into madness the phenomenon of an impossibility to be the other. So the psychiatrist would be the insane person’s other only if he becomes all others, which presupposes the use of a philosophy supporting and validating all potential worlds. Full article
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Review
Syndrome de déficit en transporteur du glucose de type 1
by Christian M. Korff and Margitta Seeck
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 5-9; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02219 - 1 Jan 2011
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 75
Abstract
Glucose-transporter type 1 deficiency Glucose-transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome is a treatable metabolic disorder, which clinical spectrum is rapidly expanding. The metabolic defect is a constantly low glucose concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid, due to an abnormal diffusion across the blood brain barrier. [...] Read more.
Glucose-transporter type 1 deficiency Glucose-transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome is a treatable metabolic disorder, which clinical spectrum is rapidly expanding. The metabolic defect is a constantly low glucose concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid, due to an abnormal diffusion across the blood brain barrier. The classical type starts in infancy and associates refractory seizures, developmental delay, and progressive microcephaly. Recently, the phenotype has been extended to atypical idiopathic generalized epilepsies, and to movement disorders. A ketogenic diet allows a rapid and favorable evolution in most cases. This review aims at presenting the current knowledge about this disease, in order to increase its recognition and thereby allow early intervention. Full article
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Editorial
Neurologische Vielfalt
by Margitta Seeck
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02230 - 1 Jan 2011
Viewed by 52
Abstract
Diesmal soll das Editorial also ein Rückblick werden – und es wird ein freudiger und stolzer Rückblick [...] Full article
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Editorial
Adoptions internationales
by Dora Knauer
Swiss Arch. Neurol. Psychiatry Psychother. 2011, 162(1), 3; https://doi.org/10.4414/sanp.2011.02232 - 1 Jan 2011
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 45
Abstract
Dans ce numéro est insérée une recherche élégante et originale au sujet des adoptions internationales, où ont été étudiés les effets à l’adolescence de l’attachement précoce sur une cohorte de 350 adolescents adoptés au Québec par des familles canadiennes, présentée par Stephanie Habersaat, [...] Read more.
Dans ce numéro est insérée une recherche élégante et originale au sujet des adoptions internationales, où ont été étudiés les effets à l’adolescence de l’attachement précoce sur une cohorte de 350 adolescents adoptés au Québec par des familles canadiennes, présentée par Stephanie Habersaat, Réjean Tessier et Blaise Pierrehumbert [...] Full article
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