December 15, sitting back of a wall were three minor officers and an homme de liaison, when a 105 shell punctured the wall and burst, killing one and wounding another severely. One of these, a sous-lieutenant, lost consciousness for a quarter of an hour and had some severe headaches for a few days, but nothing more. The other, the homme de liaison, was found standing, bewildered, looking at the dead. When his name was called, he jumped and started off, weeping and crying out.
When caught, he was still somewhat clear, recognized his superior officer, answered yes and no, but kept asking, “Where is the other?” Next day he kept weeping and said not a word.
He was evacuated through a series of hospitals and was sent to convalesce with his sister at Montpellier, having now got back his speech. He had a seizure of fear in the street and was picked up by the police and was carried to a general hospital January 21. Here he could not speak, could hardly write, being unable to find his words. He walked slowly, bent over, eyes abnormally wide open, with a look of terror. The lighting of a match made him start off weeping. The symptom picture included tinnitus, vertigo, deafness, some reduction of the visual field (especially on the left side), hypesthesia and hypalgesia on the left side, hyperalgesia on the right, painful points (epigastric, inguinal, supra and infra mammary left), reflex, muscular and tendon, hyperexcitability on right side, jactitation, impairment of recollective memory, complete memory gap for the accident and everything thereafter, retentive memory reduced, imagination impaired, nightmares (awaking with a start).
A few days later he was able to pronounce his name with difficulty and to say yes and no. February 4 there was an appendicular crisis, whereupon mutism became absolute again and lasted into May, despite suggestive therapy.
May 10, improvement in memory for things before the accident grew better, nightmares had become less frequent, the jactitation had continued.
There was no neuropathic predisposition in this case except infantile convulsions in two sisters, followed by nervous crises in one.
Re appendicular crisis, which was the occasion of a relapse in mutism, see remarks under relapses under [Case 292].
Re mutism, Babinski counts mutism, hysteria major, and rhythmic chorea as so characteristically hysterical that no nervous disturbance of an organic nature can resemble them. The description of hysterical mutism is due to Charcot. According to Babinski, mutism is just as curable as hysterical deafness, and perhaps more curable. Yet mutism persists unchanged for many months unless it is treated properly by some form of suggestion. “It may be almost said that a subject suffering from speech defect, who nevertheless succeeds in making other people understand by all sorts of varied and expressive gestures the circumstances of his condition, is a hysterical mute and not an aphasic.” According to Babinski, no true case of hysterical aphasia has been published since the beginning of the war; all the cases have been cases of mutism.
Shell explosion; fainting: Hysterical crises of emotion; fright at a frog in the garden. Hereditary and acquired neuropathic taint.