This electrical power was also supported by electrodiagnosis and electrotherapy. Studying the effect of electricity on the living was done in many ways, depending on the intention. The problem of elucidating the nature of nerve impulses, excitability and underlying processes seemed to be distinct from the problem of investigating the possible use of electricity in medicine. For a physician, knowledge of the laws of excitability, or even that of simple correlations or modifications of excitability according to the pathology making electrodiagnosis possible, as well as the revelation of the therapeutic effects of electricity, could be quite sufficient. In this sense, the electrophysiological studies carried out in the laboratory on animals seemed to have little relevance to medicine. Under the influence of positivism, empiricism and pragmatism, a myth of 19th Century medical thought was forged, that of the independence of the experimental and the clinical.
In fact, the history of electrodiagnosis attests to the close and constant links between the laboratory and the clinic from the very beginning. One of its founders, the clinician Duchenne de Boulogne, who gave his name to various myopathies, conceived it as a true experiment in the examination of patients. In the 19th Century, electrophysiological instrumentation was common to both the laboratory and the hospital. The characters who have marked the history of electrodiagnosis were often both laboratory technicians and clinicians. Duchenne used the induction coil (faradic current), with which it was possible to excite nerves and muscles through the skin at certain points. He established the topography of these motor points, skin regions where the electrodes had to be placed to obtain the muscle jolt with the least possible intensity (bipolar excitation). He thus inaugurated electrical semiology: either the muscles no longer responded to induction excitations (faradic hypoexcitability; Duchenne reaction), or the excitability was normal. As for anatomopathology, it was the electrodiagnosis inaugurated by Duchenne that contributed to the creation of a nosological group, that of degenerative diseases, and, more generally, of an electrical semiology of muscular and neuromuscular diseases.
In France, chairs of medical physics were developed and journals were created for the new specialty, such as the Archives d’électricité médicale (1893) or the Annales d’électrobiologie (1898). Following Duchenne, prestigious names, often both doctors and physicists, devoted themselves to medical electricity and wrote treatises in which electrology held a central place, such as Jean Bergognié, founder of French radiobiology and creator of the first anti-cancer centers, Emmanuel Doumer, who studied the use of electricity in surgery, or Jacques d’Arsonval, a student of Claude Bernard, a Brown-Sequard collaborator who worked with diathermic currents, electrocoagulation (electric scalpel) and electrotherapy with high-frequency currents (darsonvalization, 1913). Forms of electrodiagnosis were developed that were not based on neuromuscular excitability (electrical resistance of the human body, voltaic vertigo), preceding an electrodiagnosis no longer based on stimulation, but simply on detection (EEG, electromyography). It should be noted that while English-speaking countries were engaged in electromyography (Adrian and Bronk), the Netherlands in electrocardiography (Einthoven, Nobel Prize 1924), Germany in electroencephalography (Berger), France’s focus in the thirties remained on chronaximetry with Louis Lapicque, and thus demonstrated a considerable delay between the two wars.
Electrotherapy was another cornerstone of electricity in the medical sciences. In the 18th Century, ignorance of the exact nature of nervous fluid did not prevent the empirical use of electricity for therapeutic purposes by great names such as Nollet, Jalabert, Aldini, or Marat. During the 19th Century, electrotherapy instrumentation developed considerably in the field of galvanization, faradization, galvanofaradization, franklinization and hertzian and other darsonvalization, up to the point of the electroshock of patients.
It is necessary to underline how poor and disappointing neurochemistry remained for a long time, in comparison with this wealth of medical electricity. Moreover, some physiologists still had the diffuse idea, inherited from the 19th Century, that it was not necessary to precisely identify the charge carriers, that is, to penetrate to the deepest level of the phenomena, in order to explain cerebral or nervous functioning. Electricity was still “the essence of life”. The dominant paradigm and culture of electricity explained, for example, the skepticism with which the first real experimental argument in favor of chemical neurotransmission at the ends of the autonomic nervous system was greeted, the experiment of Otto Loewi (1921), and then, from the 1930s onwards, the results of Henry Dale’s school concerning chemical transmission at the lymph node and neuro-muscular scales. In 1936, when Loewi and Dale were awarded the Nobel Prize, the accumulation of divergent data led to major difficulties in chemical theory, giving way to the development of elaborate electrical designs following Lapicque’s ancient chronaxial theory, such as that of John Eccles. While, at the beginning of the 1950s, a consensus had been established among pharmacologists in view of the considerable therapeutic perspectives offered by chemical theory, it remained limited to the peripheral nervous system, especially since explanations of the characteristics of the most elementary central activity, reflex activity, had been proposed, avoiding any departure from a strictly electrical determinism using neuronal circuits. For these reasons, and for reasons of anatomical complexity, the penetration of chemical theory at the central level was slow. It was finally made possible by techniques (microiontophoresis), by the renewal of the neurochemical context (neuroendocrinology), and, above all, by the appearance of psychotropic drugs, despite the subsequent discovery of electrical synapses. Chemical theory offered a considerable range of interpretations of the mode of action of psychotropic drugs, from which one sought to extrapolate the pathogenesis of neurological (Parkinson’s, epilepsy) or even psychiatric (depression, psychoses) diseases.
It is the importance of this culture of electricity that Céline Cherici develops in her book. The judicious choices of the long period and the resonance of different disciplinary fields (physics, physiology, medicine, in particular, neurology and psychiatry) around this theme of electricity have allowed her to propose research at the crossroads of the history of techniques and the history of biology and medicine. Céline Cherici demonstrates the imprint left by electricity in culture and life sciences, focusing her analyses on the links between electricity and the nervous system (“from the clouds to the brain”) and the medical appropriation of electricity. The aim is to describe the establishment of this culture, and to analyze, beyond the origin of ideas and facts, the beginnings (Canguilhem), the epistemical (Foucault, [FOU 06]) and the phenomenotechnical (Bachelard) bases that made this establishment possible. She thus shows how the questions of materiality and the location of the soul and faculties are closely linked, in the 18th Century, to the promotion of electricity as a tool for the treatment of convulsive illnesses.
One can only agree with this idea of a long and profound influence of electrical culture if we remember the resistance to brain chemistry reported above. During the 20th Century, the electric brain model, supported by electroencephalographic data, still predominated, despite the experimental evidence to the contrary. Similarly, when Cherici studies deep brain stimulation applied to the field of psychiatry, which is also an exploratory technique, it is to show its importance in the development of a normal and pathological model of brain function. By paying attention to the instrumental context of the discoveries, Céline Cherici underlines the extent to which Gaston Bachelard’s invitation to understand science as an “empirical inventive thought” applies to medicine. Medical practices require instruments, which they transform as needed. Conversely, medical instruments transform practices, and model representations of diseases, directing them towards certain theoretical options concerning body functions. The history of nervous diseases covered and medical electricity described by Céline Cherici is a masterful illustration of this. From these subtle interactions between the instrument and the concept results a true invention of nervous diseases and a construction of brain models, which a history of medicine had to consider. There are, however, few works that address the question in such a way and to such an extent, François Zanetti’s recent book being limited to the France of the Enlightenment (2017). Cherici’s work thus undoubtedly fills an editorial gap. It also testifies to the vitality of an approach, that of a history of methods and concepts, in the tradition of French epistemology, which the author knows how to extend by