In another of Poe's short stories, " The Fall of the House of Usher ", Madeline Usher has catalepsy, and is buried alive by her unstable brother Roderick.
42.
In Hegel's " Lectures on the History of Philosophy : Greek Philosophy to Plato ", Hegel describes Socrates as having catalepsy caused by magnetic somnambulism when in deep meditation.
43.
In " On the Curability of Certain Forms of Insanity, Epilepsy, Catalepsy, and Hysteria in Females ", he gave a 70 per cent success rate using this treatment.
44.
Catalepsy is considered a symptom of serious diseases of the nervous system ( e . g ., Parkinson's disease, Epilepsy, etc . ) rather than a disease by itself.
45.
By contrast if we look at one of Tsanders examples we see the supports placed actually further apart with a non-hypnotised volunteer than in those supposedly hypnotised and demonstrating " catalepsy ".
46.
In 1866, Baker Brown described the use of clitoridectomy, the removal of the clitoris, as a cure for several conditions, including epilepsy, catalepsy and mania, which he attributed to masturbation.
47.
As Philip is preparing to leave following the entombment, the butler, Bristol ( Harry Ellerbe ), lets slip that Madeline suffered from catalepsy, a condition which can make its sufferers appear dead.
48.
During the performances dancers would fully become the characters in the drama and exhibit unusual behaviors such as stabbing themselves with small knives ( without harming themselves ) and dramatic changes in physiology including catalepsy and convulsions.
49.
In Arthur Conan Doyle's " The Adventure of the Resident Patient ", a man feigns catalepsy to gain access to a neurologist's rooms; the doctor attempts to treat him with amyl nitrite.
50.
In accordance, similarly to aripiprazole, which is also a partial agonist of presynaptic D 2 receptors, lumateperone showed no striatum-based motor side effects ( i . e ., catalepsy ) in animals.