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German storywriter E.T.A. Hoffmann appears to have had and died in 1822 from tabes dorsalis. Mary Todd Lincoln [Dec 12, 1818 - Jul 16, 1882], wife of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln and America's First Lady from 1861 to 1865 most probably suffered from tabes dorsalis as early as 1869, at age 51. She died of a stroke at age 63 in Springfield, IL.
It is often a symptom of tabes dorsalis, which is a key finding in tertiary syphilis. It is caused by degeneration of the posterior (dorsal) white column of the spinal cord. In popular culture
Queen Mary University of London: Dropped out [126] John Sessions: Actor PhD English Literature McMaster University: Dropped out [127] Zhai Tianlin: Actor PhD Film Science Beijing Film Academy: Revoked [128] Lee Young-ae: Actress PhD Theater and Cinema Hanyang University: Studying as of 2009 [129] [130]
Mary Lincoln, c. 1860–65 An 1867 lithograph of Abraham and Mary Lincoln and their sons, Robert and Thomas lithograph by Currier and Ives shows Abraham Lincoln with Mary Lincoln and their sons, Robert and Thomas ("Tad") During her White House years, Mary Lincoln faced many personal difficulties generated by political divisions within the nation.
Conditions affecting the dorsal columns of the spinal cord, such as tabes dorsalis (neurosyphilis), in which it was first described. [1] Conditions affecting the sensory nerves (sensory peripheral neuropathies), such as chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy . Friedreich's ataxia; Ménière's disease
Tabes dorsalis is a form of late neurosyphilis that affects the posterior columns of the spinal cord. Parenchymal syphilis occurs in the late stage of neurosyphilis, with average presentation occuring 15 to 25 years after initial infection. [3] This stage of the disease is generally in the form of tabes dorsalis or general paresis.
Hutchinson's mask is a patient's sensation that the face is covered with a mask or a gauzy network like cobwebs. This medical sign is associated with tabes dorsalis [1] affecting the trigeminal nerve (fifth cranial nerve CN V).
His journal entries relating to the pain he experienced from tabes dorsalis are collected in the volume In the Land of Pain, translated by Julian Barnes. He died in Paris on 16 December 1897, and was interred at that city's Père Lachaise Cemetery .