Walter Jackson Freeman II | American Neurologist & Neurosurgeon | Britannica (original) (raw)
Walter Jackson Freeman II (born November 14, 1895, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died May 31, 1972) was an American neurologist who, with American neurosurgeon James W. Watts, was responsible for introducing to the United States prefrontal lobotomy, an operation in which the destruction of neurons and neuronal tracts in the white matter of the brain was considered therapeutic for patients with mental disorders. Freeman’s use of and public advocacy for the procedure and others like it made him a controversial figure.
Education and early career
Freeman’s father, Walter Jackson Freeman, was an otolaryngologist (an ear, nose, and throat doctor), and his maternal grandfather, William Williams Keen, was a prominent surgeon. Freeman did not express a strong interest in medicine in his youth, but, after receiving a bachelor’s degree in 1916 from Yale University, he enrolled as a medical student at the University of Pennsylvania and earned a medical degree (1920). He subsequently worked as an intern in pathology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and in 1923 traveled to Europe to study neurology. Upon his return to the United States the following year, Freeman took a position as the director of laboratories at Saint Elizabeths Hospital, then a leading psychiatric institution in Washington, D.C. Freeman’s initial perception of the hospital’s patient wards was marked in part by disgust and fear. Later he described mental disorders and the fate of affected individuals as a social tragedy, and he came to believe that such disorders arose from organic causes, such as abnormal neuronal function, rather than from unconscious mental processes, as was emphasized by psychoanalysis.
The rise of prefrontal lobotomy
In 1926 Freeman began teaching in Washington, D.C., both at the U.S. Naval Medical School and at Georgetown University, where he served without pay and later (1931) earned a Ph.D. Also in 1926 he was appointed a professor of neurology and chair of the neurology department at George Washington University. By the 1930s he had begun to use oxygen therapy as a treatment for mental illness. He later experimented with various chemical treatments and in 1938 began using electroshock therapy.
Britannica Quiz History of Lobotomy Quiz
The possibility of surgical intervention had presented itself in 1935, however, when Freeman learned of a frontal lobe ablation (the surgical removal of tissue) technique that had been used on chimpanzees in task-performance experiments. Following ablation, one of the animals in the study experienced reduced agitation upon making an incorrect choice during a memory task (although the operation made the other chimpanzee in the study more agitated). The same year, Portuguese neurophysician António Egas Moniz, with the help of Portuguese surgeon Pedro Almeida Lima, modified a surgical technique for the prefrontal cortex in the frontal lobe of the brain and tested it on a human subject. Moniz experimented with ethyl alcohol, injecting the chemical through the holes in order to destroy areas of tissue thought to be involved in causing mental illness. He subsequently created an instrument known as the leukotome, which contained a deployable wire loop designed to cut sections of tissue. (Later models used a steel band to compress tissue cores.) The procedure of drilling holes in the front of the head and creating cores of brain matter with the instrument became known as prefrontal leukotomy.
In 1936 Freeman modified Moniz’s technique, describing his version of the operation as “lobotomy.” On September 14 that year Freeman and Watts performed the first prefrontal lobotomy operation in the United States, on a 63-year-old housewife who was suffering from insomnia and agitated depression (mixed bipolar disorder, in which manic and depressive symptoms occur together). Although the medical community was skeptical of the procedure and many physicians disapproved of it, Freeman believed it would change psychiatric medicine for the better and found the popular media to be an ally in his efforts to promote its use. Freeman and Watts performed a number of “standard” lobotomies, many of which were carried out at their private practice in Washington, D.C.
Development of transorbital lobotomy
By 1945 Freeman had begun to lose confidence in the effectiveness of standard lobotomy, and thus he set to work on refining a procedure known as transorbital lobotomy, which was not only less expensive and faster than standard lobotomy but also, Freeman believed, more effective. Transorbital lobotomy was first attempted in 1937 by Italian psychosurgeon Amarro Fiamberti. Fiamberti performed the operation by forcing a thin tube (cannula) or a leukotome through the bony orbit at the back of the eye socket and injecting alcohol (or formalin) into the frontal lobe. Instead of a tube and alcohol, Freeman’s instrument of choice to penetrate through the bone was initially an ice pick and later a specially designed leukotome, which he manipulated by hand to destroy the neuronal tracts in the brain that were thought to give rise to mental illness. In January 1946 he performed his first transorbital lobotomy procedure, operating on a depressed and violent 29-year-old woman. The procedure was deemed a success; the patient was able to return to a relatively normal life.
Freeman did not share his plans for transorbital lobotomy with Watts, and, after finding out about it, Watts argued that such procedures should not be performed in their private offices. From that point on, Freeman performed the procedure elsewhere and for a period of time toured the country, operating on patients in hospitals and sometimes in other settings, such as hotel rooms. Watts later parted ways with Freeman, who performed his last lobotomy in February 1967, when a patient he operated on died from a brain hemorrhage.
A controversial treatment
While Freeman’s work found many supporters, his courting of the media reflected an arrogance and recklessness that placed many peoples’ lives and health at risk. Of the 3,500 lobotomies he performed or supervised during his career, an estimated 490 individuals died as a result of the treatment. His attitude and fatality rate, combined with his lack of interest in describing a scientific basis for the procedure, left him with little authority in the medical community. But Freeman’s desire to help the mentally afflicted—who often lived in mental institutions, where neglect was rampant and a successful return to society unlikely—was, by all appearances, genuine. His promotion of lobotomy as a psychiatric treatment at a time when antipsychotic drugs were not widely available for mental disorders also broke important ground for the field of neurosurgery.