Abstract
All 44 neurosurgical units in the British Isles replied to a postal questionnaire asking about their use of neurosurgery during 1974–6 for functional mental illness. A total of 431 operations was reported, representing a yearly rate of 3.4 operations per million population aged over 15. The numbers of operations declined from 158 in 1974 to 119 in 1976. Four units did two-thirds of the operations. Stereotactic methods for locating the site for the lesion were used in two-thirds of procedures. Mood disorders, anxiety states, and obsessive-compulsive neurosis were the conditions most commonly treated. © 1978, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Mitchell-Heggs, N. A. (1978). Use of neurosurgery for psychological disorder in British Isles during 1974–6. British Medical Journal, 2(6152), 1591–1593. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.6152.1591
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