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Percival Bailey

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Percival Bailey

Spouse
  
Yevnige Bashian


Percival Bailey wwwgforgwpcontentuploads201501PercivalBail

Born
  
May 9, 1892 (
1892-05-09
)

Institutions
  
Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, University of Chicago, Cook County Hospital, University of Illinois at Chicago

Notable students
  
Paul Bucy, A. Earl Walker, Bernard Pertuiset, Ralph Bingham Cloward, Karl H. Pribram, William H. Sweet, Clovis Vincent, Marcel David, Pierre Puech, Chisato Araki, Kenji Tanaka, Kentaro Shimizu, Cobb Pilcher, Sidney Gross, Adolfo Ley Gracia, Emilio Ley Palomeque, Arist Stender, Jerzy Chorobski, Wallace Hamby, Jess D. Hermann, John E. A. O' Connell, Stephen Kornyey, William E. Adams, Frederick E. Kredel, Henry Harkins, Theodore J. Case, John R. Green, Carl J. Graf, Carlos Oliveras de la Riva, B. Griponissiotis, H. R. Oberhill, Rudolf Petr, Roman Arana Iniguez, Joseph G. Chusid, F. E. Nulsen, John D. French, Oscar Sugar, Jose G. Albernaz, Orlando J. Andy, Paul H. Crandall, William S. Keith

Influences
  
Gaetan Gatian de Clerambault, Pierre Marie, George Boris Hassin, Harvey Williams Cushing, Julius Grinker, Pierre Janet, Anton Julius Carlson, Harvey A. Carr, George W. Bartelmez, C. Judson Herrick, Santiago Ramon y Cajal, Otfrid Foerster

Influenced
  
Arnold Bernard Scheibel

Died
  
August 10, 1973, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Books
  
A Classification of the Tumors of the Glioma Group on a Histogenetic Basis with a Correlated Study of Prognosis

Education
  
University of Chicago (1918), Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Northwestern University

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Natural Sciences, US & Canada

Fields
  
Neuropathology, Neurosurgery, Psychiatry

Percival Sylvester Bailey (May 9, 1892 – August 10, 1973) was an American neuropathologist, neurosurgeon and psychiatrist who was a native of rural southern Illinois.

Percival Bailey John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Percival Bailey

He originally studied to become a teacher at Illinois Normal University, but transferred to the University of Chicago in 1912, where he became interested in neurology. In 1918 he graduated from Northwestern University in Evanston, and in 1919 became an assistant to Harvey Cushing (1869-1939) at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston. In 1928 he became head of the neurosurgical department at the University of Chicago, and in 1939 was professor of neurology and neurological surgery at the University of Illinois. From 1951 he was director of the Illinois State Psychiatric Institute.

Percival Bailey is remembered for his collaborative work with Harvey Cushing, and his important work involving the classification of brain tumors, which prior to his research was in state of disarray and confusion. From 1922 to 1925, Bailey performed extensive pathological and histological studies of brain tumors, and based on cellular configuration, he created a classification system of thirteen categories. In 1927, he reduced the number of categories to ten.

In 1925, Bailey identified a mid-cerebellar glioma that is usually associated with childhood called a medulloblastoma, of which he published an important paper with Cushing titled Medulloblastoma Cerebelli. The two doctors are credited with coining the term "hemangioblastoma".

With Paul Bucy (1904-1992), Bailey made investigations involving the structure of intracranial tumors and meningeal tumors. The two men were able to confirm that a specific type of tumor (now known as an oligodendroglioma) consisted of oligodendroglia. With Gerhardt von Bonin (1890-1979), Bailey authored two works, "The Neocortex of Macaca Mulatta" and "The Isocortex of Man", which provided an accurate description concerning the cytoarchitecture of the cerebral cortex.

As a psychiatrist, Bailey was a vocal critic of Freudian psychology, which he considered speculative and unscientific. In 1965, he published a book about Freud titled "Sigmund The Unserene".

References

Percival Bailey Wikipedia


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