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  1. Article: Risk factors for seizures in ischemic stroke: mainly cortical involvement?

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2010  Volume 19, Issue 1, Page(s) 1–2

    MeSH term(s) Brain Ischemia/complications ; Cerebral Cortex/physiology ; Humans ; Risk Factors ; Seizures/etiology ; Stroke/complications
    Language English
    Publishing date 2010-03
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type Editorial
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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  2. Article: Chapter 46: neurology and traditional Chinese medicine.

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Handbook of clinical neurology

    2010  Volume 95, Page(s) 755–767

    MeSH term(s) China ; Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use ; History, 15th Century ; History, 16th Century ; History, 17th Century ; History, 18th Century ; History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, Ancient ; History, Medieval ; Humans ; Medical Illustration/history ; Medicine, Chinese Traditional/history ; Nervous System/anatomy & histology ; Nervous System Diseases/history ; Nervous System Diseases/therapy ; Neurology/history
    Chemical Substances Drugs, Chinese Herbal
    Language English
    Publishing date 2010
    Publishing country Netherlands
    Document type Historical Article ; Journal Article
    ISSN 0072-9752
    ISSN 0072-9752
    DOI 10.1016/S0072-9752(08)02146-5
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article: [Re-evaluation of using acupuncture needle as sphenoidal electrode in temporal lobe epilepsy].

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2009  Volume 18, Issue 2, Page(s) 137–142

    Abstract: In 1965, Feng of the Peking Union Hospital published an article entitled "Innovation in electroencephalography: the use of acupuncture needles as sphenoidal electrodes". It was a preliminary report, but surprisingly EEG records in the figures did not ... ...

    Abstract In 1965, Feng of the Peking Union Hospital published an article entitled "Innovation in electroencephalography: the use of acupuncture needles as sphenoidal electrodes". It was a preliminary report, but surprisingly EEG records in the figures did not show definite spikes or sharp waves in the sphenoidal leads. In 1983, Feng and his colleagues reported a summary of 2,000 cases studied with acupuncture needle sphenoidal electrodes. This time, spikes or sharp waves were shown in EEG recordings. However, cases studied were several "paroxysmal disorders", including psychomotor seizure (155 cases), generalized seizure (765 cases), epileptic cephalgia (101 cases), syncope (104 cases), abdominal epilepsy (24 cases), encephalopathy (135 cases), brain tumor (32 cases), hemiplegia of unknown cause (43 cases), psychosis (34 cases), and others (607 cases). Therefore, there were many unknown cases and many cases that were not related to temporal lobe epilepsy. Surprisingly, the increase in detection by acupuncture needle electrode was higher for hemiplegia of unknown cause, brain tumors, and encephalopathies than for the temporal lobe epilepsy. Furthermore, the issue of no insulation of the acupuncture needle was not addressed. Therefore, we began in 1988 to reinvestigate the usefulness of uninsulated acupuncture needles as sphenoidal electrodes. We also compared the efficacy of anterior temporal electrodes (T1, T2) with those of acupuncture needle and EMG needle. Our results showed that when compared to the routine EEG recordings, acupuncture needle sphenoidal electrodes increased the yield of detecting anterior temporal spikes from 41% to 70%. Our data further showed that when compared to the EMG needle recordings, acupuncture needle recordings had the same detection rate, but the spike amplitude was slightly smaller (129 microv vs. 135 microv). Interestingly, we also found that anterior temporal surface electrode recordings were nearly as good as those of acupuncture needle and traditional insulated needle electrodes in the detection of anterior temporal spikes. Our data indicate that acupuncture needle sphenoidal electrode is as effective as the traditional insulated needle sphenoidal electrode in the detection of anterior temporal spikes. We agree with Feng that the use of acupuncture needle is easy, safe, and has minimal discomfort and complications. However, when the use of the acupuncture needle is not acceptable to patients or as in the pediatric group, anterior temporal electrode is an ideal alternative to acupuncture needle sphenoidal electrode.
    MeSH term(s) Acupuncture Therapy/instrumentation ; Electrodes ; Electroencephalography/instrumentation ; Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe/diagnosis ; Humans ; Needles ; Sphenoid Bone/physiopathology
    Language Chinese
    Publishing date 2009-06
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type English Abstract ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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  4. Article: [Eradication of opium smoking in Taiwan during the Japanese colonial period (1895-1945)].

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2008  Volume 17, Issue 1, Page(s) 66–73

    Abstract: Eradication of opium smoking during the Japanese colonial period is one of the most proud medical accomplishments in Taiwan. The mission was accomplished mainly due to a governmental policy of gradual prohibition in 1897 and the establishment of the ... ...

    Abstract Eradication of opium smoking during the Japanese colonial period is one of the most proud medical accomplishments in Taiwan. The mission was accomplished mainly due to a governmental policy of gradual prohibition in 1897 and the establishment of the Government Center Hospital for Opium Addicts in 1930. Professor Tsungming Tu, medical director of the Government Center Hospital, was responsible for the unique medical treatment of opium addiction there. The latter consisted of an immediate withdrawal of opium smoking which was partly substituted by small amounts of morphine in gradual reduction, and at the same time special pills were given to enhance the sympathetic activity also to lessen the withdrawal symptoms. By such treatment, the habit of opium smoking could often be eliminated in a few weeks. The success rate was 46%. Shortly after the World War II, the number of opium smokers in Taiwan became negligible. In early colonial period, however, there were grass roots movements as well as private efforts by physicians of Western medicine to treat opium addiction. In 1898, the Flying Phoenix Society which was a laymen organization worshipping deities began to use supernatural power to force the addicts to stop opium smoking. More than thirty thousand were enlisted and the success rate was 58%. In 1908, the enthabitual treatment in a private correction infirmary called 'Newmatou' consisted of a substitute treatment using morphine to replace opium and a gradual reduction in morphine dosage afterwards. All addicts were hospitalized until treatment goal was achieved. Among 55 addicts thus treated, 53 (96%) were ridded of opium smoking habit. The treatment method was almost identical to that employed by Professor Tu. Another physician, Dr. Ching-yue Lin, who worked at the Red Cross Hospital in Taipei, also used substitute treatment, replacing opium by heroine, and obtained a success rate of 80%. Dr. Lin published his comprehensive study on opium addiction and treatment in the Journal of the Formosan Medical Association in 1908. Therefore, Dr. Tu's enthabitual treatment seemed to be not so unique. Previous treatments employed by physicians at 'Newmatou' infirmary and by Dr. Lin at the Red Cross Hospital were strikingly similar or nearly the same. This review may help us reassess the prevailing opinion regarding the history of eliminating opium smoking in Taiwan.
    MeSH term(s) History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Opioid-Related Disorders/history ; Opioid-Related Disorders/prevention & control ; Opioid-Related Disorders/therapy ; Opium/history ; Smoking ; Taiwan
    Chemical Substances Opium (8008-60-4)
    Language Chinese
    Publishing date 2008-03
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type Biography ; English Abstract ; Historical Article ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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  5. Article: Asianization of dementia research and management: an initiative from Taiwan.

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2006  Volume 15, Issue 1, Page(s) 1

    MeSH term(s) Dementia/therapy ; Humans ; Research ; Taiwan
    Language English
    Publishing date 2006-03
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type Editorial
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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  6. Article: [Centennial of the nobel prize for Golgi and Cajal--founding of modern neuroscience and irony of discovery].

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2006  Volume 15, Issue 3, Page(s) 217–222

    Abstract: In 1906, Golgi and Ramón y Cajal shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "in recognition of their work on the structure of the nervous system". However, it was an unusual occasion in the history of Nobel Prize award because their views on the ... ...

    Abstract In 1906, Golgi and Ramón y Cajal shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine "in recognition of their work on the structure of the nervous system". However, it was an unusual occasion in the history of Nobel Prize award because their views on the structure of the nervous system were not only different but even opposite, creating the "storm center of histological controversy". Furthermore, the new staining method Cajal had employed to study the nervous system was developed by Golgi, creating an irony of discovery. In 1873, Golgi revolutionized the histological study of the nervous system by developing a new staining method, "la reazione nera" or black reaction, which allowed good visualization of axons, dendrites and glia. But because his stain was so selective, staining only about 3 percent of neurons, he was unable to see clearly how the neuronal processes ended as they approached other neurons. Consequently, he embraced the popular belief that neuronal processes physically fuse with each other--the "reticular theory". On the other hand, Cajal was incidentally introduced to the Golgi stain 14 years after its discovery and immediately realized its beauty. He found that better results could be produced by staining more intensely and cutting thicker sections. He further observed that the Golgi stain worked best on non-myelinated axons. The search for brains containing non-myelinated axons led him to study birds and very young mammals, including embryos. Cajal obtained fascinating results by modifying the Golgi stain and by studying avian and young mammalian brains. From those studies, Cajal was able to infer that axons and dendrites ended freely and did not physically anastomose. Therefore, he strongly advocated the "neuron theory". Golgi seemed to be too headstrong and too conservative to relinquish his belief that neurons constitute a network which reacts as a whole. On the other hand, Cajal's hard work using the Golgi stain led to new understanding on the structure and function of the nervous system, and earned him "the founder of modern neuroscience". This centennial occasion may be further impressed by Cajal's comment on the shared Nobel Prize that "what a cruel irony of fate of pair, like Siamese twins united by the shoulders, scientific adversaries of such contrasting character!".
    MeSH term(s) History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; Nervous System/anatomy & histology ; Neurology/history ; Nobel Prize ; Staining and Labeling
    Language Chinese
    Publishing date 2006-09
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type Biography ; English Abstract ; Historical Article ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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  7. Article: Progressive facial and cerebral hemiatrophy: Parry-Romberg syndrome or scleroderma "en coup de sabre"?

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2004  Volume 13, Issue 4, Page(s) 217–218

    MeSH term(s) Adult ; Facial Hemiatrophy/diagnosis ; Female ; Humans ; Scleroderma, Systemic/diagnosis ; Tomography, X-Ray Computed
    Language English
    Publishing date 2004-12
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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  8. Article: Delayed encephalopathy after carbon monoxide intoxication: prognosis is still uncertain.

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2004  Volume 13, Issue 2, Page(s) 48–49

    MeSH term(s) Carbon Monoxide Poisoning/complications ; Carbon Monoxide Poisoning/physiopathology ; Humans ; Hypoxia, Brain/etiology ; Hypoxia, Brain/pathology ; Hypoxia, Brain/physiopathology ; Prognosis ; Time Factors
    Language English
    Publishing date 2004-06
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type Comment ; Editorial
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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  9. Article: Contribution of a snake venom toxin to myasthenia gravis: the discovery of alpha-bungarotoxin in Taiwan.

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Journal of the history of the neurosciences

    2005  Volume 14, Issue 2, Page(s) 138–148

    Abstract: Myasthenia gravis (MG) is now recognized as an autoimmune disorder in which antibodies to acetylcholine (ACh) receptor lead to impairment of neuromuscular transmission. The discovery of alpha-bungarotoxin by Chang and Lee in 1963 has played a crucial ... ...

    Abstract Myasthenia gravis (MG) is now recognized as an autoimmune disorder in which antibodies to acetylcholine (ACh) receptor lead to impairment of neuromuscular transmission. The discovery of alpha-bungarotoxin by Chang and Lee in 1963 has played a crucial role in establishing the new concept of MG. However, isolation of bungarotoxins from the venom of Taiwan banded krait, Bungarus multicinctus, was accomplished in the poorly funded and under equipped laboratory of the Department of Pharmacology, National Taiwan University, during the post-WWII period of economic depression and research isolation. Because alpha-bungarotoxin binds specifically and irreversibly with the muscle type nicotinic ACh receptor, it was used to localize ACh receptor and to isolate the ACh receptor protein, opening up a new era of receptor studies. It was also used to produce an antibody to ACh receptor and eventually an experimental autoimmune model of MG and clinical confirmation. The discovery of alpha-bungarotoxin has been considered the most important contribution to neurosciences from Taiwan.
    MeSH term(s) Animals ; Bungarotoxins/history ; Bungarotoxins/pharmacology ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Myasthenia Gravis/history ; Neurotoxins/history ; Neurotoxins/pharmacology ; Pharmacology/history ; Taiwan
    Chemical Substances Bungarotoxins ; Neurotoxins
    Language English
    Publishing date 2005-06
    Publishing country England
    Document type Historical Article ; Journal Article ; Portraits
    ZDB-ID 1233549-6
    ISSN 0964-704X
    ISSN 0964-704X
    DOI 10.1080/096470490881770
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  10. Article: [Neurological diseases in late 19th century Taiwan--medical reports of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs].

    Chu, Nai-Shin

    Acta neurologica Taiwanica

    2005  Volume 14, Issue 4, Page(s) 221–233

    Abstract: Western medicine was introduced to Taiwan in 1865 when Dr. James L. Maxwell, a missionary doctor of the English Presbyterian Church, established a hospital in nowadays Tainan. The period of the missionary medicine lasted for over 30 years until Japanese ... ...

    Abstract Western medicine was introduced to Taiwan in 1865 when Dr. James L. Maxwell, a missionary doctor of the English Presbyterian Church, established a hospital in nowadays Tainan. The period of the missionary medicine lasted for over 30 years until Japanese took over. During this period, however, official records of diseases in Taiwan that were based on Western medicine were scanty or not available. Fortunately, port surgeons stationing respectively in Tamsui and Kelung in the north and in Takow and Taiwan-fu in the south reported semi-annually diseases seen in the ports, foreign communities and missionary hospitals that they volunteered to work. The diseases reported by port surgeons were either cases or summary of cases with classification and statistics. Their medical reports covered from 1871 to 1900. The data show that neurological diseases and/or disorders in the late 19th century Taiwan were uncommon, comprising only 2-3% of total diseases. The data further show that common neurological diseases were leprosy, opium smoking, syphilitic dementia (GPI), paralysis, hysteria, neuralgia, epilepsy, mania, sciatica, meningitis and ataxia. Stroke was uncommon while Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease were not mentioned, indicating that neurological diseases related to old age and neurodegeneration were not yet a threat to health. Similarly, headache, insomnia, anxiety and depression, hallmark of functional disorders of the modern society, were also not mentioned, suggesting that these disorders were indeed rare or did not cause sufficient concern for patients to seek help from doctors of Western medicine.
    MeSH term(s) History, 19th Century ; Missionaries ; Nervous System Diseases/history ; Religious Missions ; Taiwan
    Language Chinese
    Publishing date 2005-12
    Publishing country China (Republic : 1949- )
    Document type English Abstract ; Historical Article ; Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2192417-X
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
    ISSN 1028-768X ; 1019-6099
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