François Rabelais and his dystonic giants.
Léo CoutinhoCarlos Henrique Ferreira de CamargoHélio Augusto Guizoni TeivePublished in: Arquivos de neuro-psiquiatria (2024)
Spasmodic torticollis was an early designation used for cervical dystonia. The origin of this name is attributed to French physician and writer François Rabelais in the mid-sixteenth century. This early description of torticollis in the book Pantagruel was an inspiration for the understanding of cervical dystonia. The art expressed in Rabelais' literature ‒ which was immortalized by the drawings of Gustave Doré ‒ influenced poetry, art, and photography, and led to the adoption of the term torticollis in the neurological sciences.