Originally published in 1976, this volume reports research that will help us to understand the causes of psychogenic diseases. It deals both experimentally and theoretically with the question of symptom specificity in psychosomatic research why some individuals respond to psychological stress with gastric disorders, others with sexual impotence, and still others with high blood pressure. As the author notes in summarizing his conclusions, "The repeated pairing of activation of a given organic system with intense nervous stress directs the pathological influence of the stressor primarily upon the system activated; subsequently the natural stimuli which would ordinarily activate the system in a normal manner sustain the pathological stressors effect as a conditioned stimulus for the stressor effect."
The translation of this work from the original Russian brings to the attention of Western investigators new and useful models of stress-induced disorders, and sheds new light on the pervasive problem of psychosomatic disease.
Preface to Startsevs Primate Models of Human Neurogenic Disorders David
T. Graham. Editors Introduction, Authors Introduction.
1. Experimental
Neuroses in Monkeys A Review
2. Immobilization Neurosis in Hamadryas
Baboons
3. An Experimental Model of Neurogenic Gastric Achylia in the
Hamadryas Baboon
4. Precancerous Gastric Lesions
5. Functional Hyperkinesis
and Paralysis in Hamadryas Baboons
6. Experimental Neurogenic Disorders of
the Sexual Cycle in Hamadryas Baboons
7. A Conditioned Reflex Model of
Chronic Hyperglycemia
8. Neurogenic Ischemic Heart Disease in Hamadryas
Baboons. Conclusion. References. Subject Index.
V. G. Startsev and Douglas M. Bowden