"It may seem like a far cry from the lethargy of guinea pigs to the excitement of psychotics."
When the Australian psychiatrist John Cade began, at the end of the 1940s, the experiments which would lead him to write this sentence, he was far from thinking of curing manic depression (henceforth called "bipolar disease").
And yet.
From a conceptual leap that only a somewhat artistic scientist could take, one of the revolutions of psychiatry was born: the discovery that a drug, lithium, could stabilize the mood of manic-depressive patients.
To discover
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Cade seeks to prove that mental illnesses have a biochemical origin.
He is not the first to think so, but psychiatry is then more interested in the soul than the body.
She believes in the virtues of seismotherapy and lobotomy, and thinks more of locking up the mad than of treating them.
But Australian doctor, son of psychiatric hospital superintendent, finds patients' stories far too different
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