The Illness of Vincent Van Gogh
Blumer D. Department of psychiatry, University of Tennessee
Health Science Center, Memphis, 38105, USA.
Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) had an eccentric personality and
unstable moods, suffered from recurrent
psychotic episodes during the last 2 years of his extraordinary
life, and committed suicide at the age of 37. Despite limited
evidence, well over 150 physicians have ventured a perplexing
variety of diagnoses of his illness. Henri Gastaut, in a study of
the artist's life and medical history published in 1956, identified
van Gogh's major illness during the last 2 years of his life as
temporal lobe epilepsy precipitated by the use of absinthe in the
presence of an early limbic lesion.
In essence, Gastaut confirmed the diagnosis originally made by
the French physicians who had treated van Gogh. However, van Gogh
had earlier suffered two distinct episodes of reactive depression,
and there are clearly
bipolar aspects to his history. Both episodes of
depression were followed by sustained periods of increasingly
high energy and enthusiasm, first as an evangelist and then as an
artist.
The highlights of van Gogh's life and letters are reviewed and
discussed in an effort toward better understanding of the complexity
of his illness.
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