Fritz E. Dreifuss, MD, (Jan 20, 1926-
October 18, 1997) was a German-born, American neurologist and
subspecialist in epilepsy based at the
University of
Virginia
in Charlottesville
, Virginia, USA.
Early Life
He was born in Dresden, Germany. Escaping persecution of the Jews
in the 1930s, his family moved to South Africa and later to New
Zealand.
Education
His undergraduate education was at Wanganui Collegiate School in
Wanganui, New Zealand and his medical degree from the University of
Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. He studied neurology in a fellowship
at Queen’s Square Hospital in London, England.
Early Career
In 1959 he
was hired as a faculty neurologist at the University of
Virginia
. During his first faculty year, he
simultaneously worked as a medical intern at a regional hospital to
be eligible for a Virginia medical license.
Clinical Practice and the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center
Dreifuss’ clinical and research career centered on the evaluation
and treatment of epilepsy in children and adults. In 1959, he was
named head of the Commonwealth of Virginia’s Child Neurology
Program. To fulfill this mission, he formed a series of satellite
field clinics around the Commonwealth to provide state-of-the-art
neurological care in regions remote from main medical centers at a
time when neurologists were few. He maintained this clinics
throughout his career in collaboration with colleage
James Q. Miller. Although the emphasis was on
epilepsy, patients with a wide range of neurological disorders were
served. Three Appalachian field clinics in Tazewell, Wise, and
Bristol, Virginia continue to be staffed by University of Virginia
neurologists.
In the 1960s he and several colleagues in the US, especially
Kiffin Penry, created the concept of
subspecialty epilepsy care represented as the Comprehensive
Epilepsy Program. This approach gathered clinical neurologists,
pediatric neurologists, electrophysiologists, specialized nursing,
educational consultants, and psychologists with the common mission
of epilepsy care. In 1974 Dreifuss competed successfully for an
NIH-sponsored grant for the formation of a comprehensive epilepsy
center, forming one of the three original centers in the US. An
integral part of a comprehensive epilepsy center was the
development of feasible long-term monitoring methods with the use
of simultaneous video-
EEG in order to best
diagnose and characterize epileptic seizures. With
electrophysiology colleagues, Dreifuss aided in the development of
the video-
EEG system and was one of its early
adopters in clinical epilepsy research .
Although his specialty was
epilepsy,
Dreifuss published extensively in clinical descriptions within
other neurological fields. In 1961 Dreifuss and colleagues
described a family with form of muscular dystrophy distinct from
more severe Duchenne and Becker
muscular dystrophies. This syndrome is
now designated
Emery-Dreifuss muscular
dystrophy.
Clinical research
With collaborator Kiffen Penry and others and with the use of
advanced video-EEG techniques, Dreifuss investigated the
correlations between the clinical symptoms of
absence seizures and their accompaniments
on EEG. Dreifuss established that the generalized, 3Hz, spike-wave
discharge is accompanied by loss of attention and, sometimes, minor
motor automatisms; even brief discharges have momentary clinical
significance. Accordingly, treatment of absence epilepsy could be
accurately measured by tracking the amount of spike-wave discharges
captured via EEG
Dreifuss used these techniques and others in the process of
development of anticonvulsant medications for use in absence
epilepsy as well as in other epileptic conditions. He was
instrumental in the first publications in the use of
sodium valproate in the US in 1976, and in
1996 described those at most risk for side effects in the use of
this medication.
Classification of the epilepsies
Arguably his most important contribution was to head the
international commission for standardization of terminology and
classification of the
epilepsies His
classification, arrived at through a combination of clinical
relevance and diplomacy, stands still as the international
standard. The standardization of terms have allowed research
protocols and clinical practice to discuss the epilepsies in a
common language.
Awards, offices, and recognitions
At the
University of
Virginia
, Dreifuss achieved full the title of full Professor
of Neurology in 1968 and was awarded the first T.R. Johns Chair
of Neurology in 1990 and the Worrel Chair in 1993. He was nominated
as Vice Chair of the department in 1974 and served as interim chair
in the department’s transition from the leadership of
T.R. Johns to
G. Frederick Wooten.He was president of the
American Epilepsy Society
in 1978, Chairman of the Professional Advisor Board of the
Epilepsy Foundation of
America (EFA) from 1978 to 1980, President of EFA from 1983 to
1985, Chairman of the Board of EFA from 1987 to 1989,
secretary-general of the
International League
Against Epilepsy (ILAE) from 1981 to 1985, and President of
ILAE from 1985 to 1989. He, in collaboration with colleague
Soo Ik Lee taught a variety of fellows in
clinical epilepsy and clinical neurophysiology. He was named an
Ambassador for Epilepsy in 1979, was the winner of the
William G. Lennox Award of AES in 1983, and was the
AES Lennox lecturer in 1986. He received the AES Distinguished
Clinical Investigator Award in 1991 and the ILAE Epileptology Prize
in 1995. He received the EFA 25th Anniversary Award in 1993. The
American Academy of
Neurology posthumously designated the annual Dreifuss-Penry
Award for outstanding career contributions in epileptology.
Pop Culture References
The
Severed Heads, an Australian
industrial pop group active in the 1980s, released on their 1983
album “Since the Accident” a cut entitled “Epilepsy ‘82”. This song
featured a recording of one of Dreifuss’ lectures on the
classification of the epilepsies as background.
References
- (1)[Penry JK, Porter RJ, Dreifuss RE. Simultaneous recording of
absence seizures with video tape and electroencephalography. A
study of 374 seizures in 48 patients. Brain
1975;98(3):427-440]
- [Emery AE, Dreifuss FE (1966). "Unusual type of benign x-linked
muscular dystrophy". J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr. 29 (4):
338–42.
- [Penry JK, Porter RJ, Dreifuss RE. Simultaneous recording of
absence seizures with video tape and electroencephalography. A
study of 374 seizures in 48 patients. Brain 1975;98(3):427-440
- Browne TR, Dreifuss FE, Penry JK, Porter RJ, White BG. Clinical
and EEG estimates of absence seizure frequency. Arch Neurol
1983;40(8):469-472]
- [Browne TR, Penry JK, Proter RJ, Dreifuss FE. Responsiveness
before, during, and after spike-wave paroxysms. Neurology
1974;24(7):659-665.]
- Browne TR, Dreifuss FE, Penry JK, Porter RJ, White BG. Clinical
and EEG estimates of absence seizure frequency. Arch Neurol
1983;40(8):469-472.
- [Bryant AE, Dreifuss FE. Valproic acid hepatic fatalities. III.
U.S. experience since 1986. Neurology 1996;46:465–469.]
- [Dreifuss FE. The epilepsies: clinical implications of the
international classification. Epilepsia 1990;31:S3-10
- Commission on Epidemiology and Prognosis, International League
Against Epilepsy (1993). "Guidelines for epidemiologic studies on
epilepsy. Commission
on Epidemiology and Prognosis, International League Against
Epilepsy". Epilepsia 34 (4): 592–6.
- [Porter RJ. In Memoriam: Fritz E. Dreifuss 1926-1997. Epilepsia
1998;39:556-559.