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ARTICLE |

NEURASTHENIA AND ITS TREATMENT.

H. C. SHARP, M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXII(2):71-73. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450290021001f.
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ABSTRACT

Neurasthenia is far from a rare disease. In fact, from the point of frequency, it stands at the head of the list of nervous diseases and is the most important neurosis met with by the general practitioner. This is especially true in America. Beard, who was the first to recognize the importance of this disease, believed it to be limited to this country, and described it as being a condition recognized by a group of symptoms which do not rest upon any distinguishable anatomic basis, and peculiar to America. Later investigation, however, has shown that people of other nations are subject to neurasthenia, although it is by far more prevalent in our own than any other country. In my judgment, this is due to the fact that we expend a greater amount of energy in accomplishing our ends than any other people on the face of the globe.

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