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Declining Use of the Hallervorden-Spatz Disease Eponym in the Last Two Decades

journal contribution
posted on 2013-12-03, 00:00 authored by Lawrence A. Zeidman, Dilip K. Pandey
There has been a movement to rename Hallervorden-Spatz disease to pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration given Hallervorden and Spatz's complicity in murderous Nazi programs. Similar controversy surrounds Reiter syndrome, and 2 studies demonstrated decreased unqualified use of that eponym in the literature, but not in textbooks. There have been no similar studies regarding Hallervorden-Spatz disease. The authors performed a MEDLINE search (1990-2010) looking for unqualified use of Hallervorden-Spatz disease and performed statistical analysis. They defined "unqualified" as having no reference to the eponym's disfavored use. They then looked in 6 neurology textbooks. The authors identified 156 of 278 articles (56.1%) containing unqualified use of Hallervorden-Spatz disease. But there was a declining trend (P = .000), with 70/80 (87.5%) of articles from 1990 to 1999 and 86/198 (43.4%) from 2000 to 2010. There was also decreased unqualified use of the eponyms in textbooks, with all recent editions using pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration instead. The significant decrease in unqualified use of Hallervorden-Spatz disease is reassuring.

History

Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in the Journal of Child Neurology © 2012 SAGE Publications.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Language

  • en_US

issn

0883-0738

Issue date

2012-10-01

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