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Kraepelin and used
The three terms that Kraepelin used to refer to the end state of the disease were " Verblödung " ( deterioration ), Schwachsinn ( mental weakness ) or Defekt ( defect ).
Although " dementia " is part of the name of the disease, Kraepelin did not intend it to be similar to senile dementia and rarely used this term to refer to the end state of the disease.

Kraepelin and term
The term " manic-depressive illness " or psychosis was coined by German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin in the late nineteenth century, originally referring to all kinds of mood disorder.

Kraepelin and manic
Kraepelin, regarding the major psychoses as naturally occurring disease entities, reduced the complex psychiatric taxonomies of the nineteenth century by dividing them into two classes: manic depressive psychosis or dementia praecox.
It has been described as remarkable that Kraepelin now considered mood disturbances to be not part of the same category, but only attenuated ( more mild ) phases of manic depressive illness ; this corresponds to current classification schemes.
The division of the major psychoses into manic depressive illness ( now called bipolar disorder ) and dementia praecox ( now called schizophrenia ) was made by Emil Kraepelin, who attempted to create a synthesis of the various mental disorders identified by 19th century psychiatrists, by grouping diseases together based on classification of common symptoms.
In 1899 Emil Kraepelin identified the condition dementia praecox in which a person loses touch with reality and distinguished it from the manic depressive psychosis.
) In 1920, psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin ( 1856 – 1926 ), the founder of contemporary scientific psychiatry, observed a " great number " of cases that had characteristics of both groups of psychoses that he originally posited were two distinct and separate illnesses, dementia praecox ( now called schizophrenia ) and manic depressive insanity ( now called bipolar disorder and recurrent depression ).

Kraepelin and depressive
Kraepelin contrasted this with manic-depressive psychosis, in which he included not just what would be termed bipolar disorder today but also other forms of mood disorder, including major depressive disorder.

Kraepelin and insanity
In the first through sixth edition of Kraepelin's influential psychiatry textbook, there was a section on moral insanity, which meant then a disorder of the emotions or moral sense without apparent delusions or hallucinations, and which Kraepelin defined as ' lack or weakness of those sentiments which counter the ruthless satisfaction of egotism '.
Kraepelin had referred to psychopathic conditions ( or ' states ') in his 1896 edition, including compulsive insanity, impulsive insanity, homosexuality, and mood disturbances.

Kraepelin and mood
* Emil Kraepelin introduces the concept of dementia praecox in the classification of mental disorders, distinguishing it from mood disorder in his Lehrbuch der Psychiatrie ( 4th edition ).

Kraepelin and disorders
Kraepelin proposed that by studying case histories and identifying specific disorders, the progression of mental illness could be predicted, after taking into account individual differences in personality and patient age at the onset of disease.
Kraepelin also demonstrated specific patterns in the genetics of these disorders and specific and characteristic patterns in their course and outcome.
Kraepelin postulated that there is a specific brain or other biological pathology underlying each of the major psychiatric disorders.
Kraepelin was confident that it would someday be possible to identify the pathologic basis of each of the major psychiatric disorders.

Kraepelin and sense
Kraepelin's assumption of a moral defect rather than a positive drive towards crime has also been questioned, as it implies that the moral sense is somehow inborn and unvarying, yet it was known to vary by time and place, and Kraepelin never considered that the moral sense might just be different.

Kraepelin and than
Kraepelin spoke out against the barbarous treatment that was prevalent in the psychiatric asylums of the time, and crusaded against alcohol, capital punishment and the imprisonment rather than treatment of the insane.
Kraepelin, on the basis on the dream-psychosis analogy, studied for more than 20 years language disorder in dreams in order to study indirectly schizophasia.
Emil Kraepelin ( 1856 – 1926 ) introduced new medical categories of mental illness, which eventually came into psychiatric usage despite their basis in behavior rather than pathology or etiology.

Kraepelin and is
Alzheimer is credited with identifying the first published case of " presenile dementia ", which Kraepelin would later identify as Alzheimer's disease.
In 1886, at the age of 30, Kraepelin was named professor of psychiatry at the University of Dorpat ( today the University of Tartu ) in what is today Estonia ( see Burgmair et al., Vol IV ).
Kraepelin is specifically credited with the classification of what was previously considered to be a unitary concept of psychosis, into two distinct forms ( known as the Kraepelinian dichotomy ):
In addition, as Kraepelin accepted in 1920, " It is becoming increasingly obvious that we cannot satisfactorily distinguish these two diseases.
In order to study them the full range of biographical knowledge available today on Kraepelin is necessary ( see e. g. Burgmair et al., I-VII ).
is: Emil Kraepelin
The categorical view of psychosis is most associated with Emil Kraepelin, who created criteria for the medical diagnosis and classification of different forms of psychotic illness.
Anhedonia, or a reduced ability to experience pleasure, is a feature of full-blown schizophrenia that was commented on by both Kraepelin and Bleuler.

Kraepelin and today
He studied with the most eminent neurologists of his time, first in Paris, France, with Pierre Marie and Dupré, then in Munich, Germany, with Emil Kraepelin ( the " father " of modern scientific psychiatry ) and Alois Alzheimer ( the discoverer of the most common form of senile dementia, which today bears his name ); and in Heidelberg, with Franz Nissl, a neuropathologist.

Kraepelin and .
In 1909 he commenced clinical work under the psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin and did laboratory work with Franz Nissl and Alois Alzheimer in Munich.
Aloysius " Alois " Alzheimer (; 14 June 1864 – 19 December 1915 ) was a German psychiatrist and neuropathologist and a colleague of Emil Kraepelin.
It was popularized by German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin ( 1856 – 1926 ) in 1893, 1896 and 1899 in his first detailed textbook descriptions of a condition that would eventually be reframed into a substantially different disease concept and relabeled as schizophrenia.
However, Kraepelin himself noted cases in between and eventually accepted that it was not possible to distinguish his categories on the basis of cross-sectional symptoms.
From the outset, dementia praecox was viewed by Kraepelin as a progressively deteriorating disease from which no one recovered.
However, by 1913, and more explicitly by 1920, Kraepelin admitted that although there seemed to be a residual cognitive defect in most cases, the prognosis was not as uniformly dire as he had stated in the 1890s.
Emil Kraepelin ( 15 February 1856, Neustrelitz – 7 October 1926, Munich ) was a German psychiatrist.
Kraepelin believed the chief origin of psychiatric disease to be biological and genetic malfunction.
Kraepelin, the son of a civil servant, was born in 1856 in Neustrelitz, in the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz in Germany.
Kraepelin began his medical studies at 18, in Leipzig and Würzburg, Germany.
Kraepelin would be a disciple of Wundt and had a lifelong interest in experimental psychology based on his theories.
While there, Kraepelin wrote a prize-winning essay, " The Influence of Acute Illness in the Causation of Mental Disorders.
In 1903 Kraepelin moved to Munich to take up post as Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at the University of Munich.
Kraepelin retired from teaching at the age of 66, spending his remaining years establishing the Institute.
Kraepelin announced that he had found a new way of looking at mental illness.
In fact, it was precisely because of the demonstrated inadequacy of such methods that Kraepelin developed his new diagnostic system.
Kraepelin believed that schizophrenia had a deteriorating course in which mental function continuously ( although perhaps erratically ) declines, while manic-depressive patients experienced a course of illness which was intermittent, where patients were relatively symptom-free during the intervals which separate acute episodes.

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