Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Nash is given a course of insulin shock therapy and eventually released.
He also conducted research on schizophrenia and the use of insulin shock therapy.
Insulin shock therapy was introduced at the hospital in 1935 for the treatment of schizophrenia.
She was given insulin shock therapy, a treatment then accepted as standard psychiatric procedure.
Following a series of breakdowns in 1952, she received insulin shock therapy and psychotherapy treatment.
He received three months of insulin shock therapy, which erased much of his long-term memory.
When young, he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and insulin shock therapy erased much of his long-term memory.
The 1000 patients were subjected to electric shock treatment, insulin shock therapy and lobotomies.
At Rockland, insulin shock therapy was begun in 1937, followed by electroshock treatment and lobotomies.
Manfred Sakel begins to practice insulin shock therapy on psychiatric patients in Vienna.
Insulin shock therapy (no longer practiced)
Another treatment introduced at the Maudsley while Sargant was there was insulin shock therapy.
Chlorpromazine largely replaced electroconvulsive therapy, psychosurgery, and insulin shock therapy.
A transplant operation took care of the testosterone and insulin shock therapy helped eradicate the traumatic memories, but, well, there's only in much we can do.
Over the next nine years, he spent periods in psychiatric hospitals, where, aside from receiving antipsychotic medications, he was administered insulin shock therapy.
Insulin shock therapy (defunct)
She went in and out of mental hospitals and was treated with medication, insulin shock therapy, and electroshock therapy.
Film actress Frances Farmer's treatment with insulin shock therapy is depicted in the 1982 biopic, "Frances."
Electroconvulsive therapy, insulin shock therapy, lobotomies and the "neuroleptic" chlorpromazine came to be used by mid-century.
Insulin shock therapy is a method used by a character played by Vincent Price in the 1946 film "Shock" to control a murder witness.
Actress Frances Farmer, misdiagnosed as a "paranoid schizophrenic," received insulin shock therapy at Kimball.
Lobotomies, Insulin shock therapy, Electro convulsive therapy, and the "neuroleptic" chlorpromazine came in to use mid-century.
He then takes her to his sanitarium and at Elaine's urging, gives Janet an overdose of insulin under the pretense of administering insulin shock therapy.
Esther Greenwood in Sylvia Plath's 1967 novel The Bell Jar receives insulin shock therapy while hospitalized.
Insulin shock therapy was featured and dramatized in the 2001 film A Beautiful Mind, based on the life of John Forbes Nash, Jr.