The Rappaport Eichhorn method is a unique and highly effective method for diagnosing disease in the field of psychiatry, which was created by the outstanding Russian physician Fyodor Petrovich Rappaport and German psychiatrist Friedland Ehrlich in 1929.
The Rappapart-Eichhorn method was the result of long efforts by a group of psychiatrists from the Central Psychiatric Clinic in Moscow and the Graduate Medical School at the Imperial Medical Institute in Berlin, where the method was researched and improved. This method is often used in the treatment of patients suffering from mania and depression - two of the most common mental illnesses.
This method first appeared back in 1899, when the German psychologist Max Wertheimer decided to study the nature of human attention. He noticed that people often have the ability to pay attention to details that others might overlook. Wertgeier used a technique called the "Eichhorn Method", which included a series of games and exercises to train attention and concentration.
Fyodor Petrovich Rappaport, who then headed the Kyiv Psychiatric Hospital, drew attention to the potential of this method, and he began to conduct a series of experiments, studying its effectiveness on patients suffering from neuroses, schizophrenia and other mental disorders. He adapted Eichhorn's method and developed his own theory, which became the basis for Rappaport's method.
However, within a few years, Rappapart faced a serious problem in publishing his research. His works were not published in scientific journals, and sometimes were not even accepted for consideration at official meetings of scientific conferences. Ultimately, thanks to the efforts of psychiatrists, Fyodor Petrovich was able to receive support from Germany, France, Great Britain, Spain and Italy in the publication of his works. Today, the Rappaparta Eichhorn method is used in the vast majority of cases in the identification and treatment of mania and depression. It is also used as an integral part of the complex treatment of mental illnesses such as:
-Bipolar affective disorder (MAD), where this is one of the most important methods of qualitative diagnosis of a patient, for which the doctor identifies disorders in the form of decreased mental mobility, psycho-emotional problems, leading to disorders of the vegetative-vascular system and various diseases. This is what the Rapp method does; it is like a fast-acting pharmaceutical cocktail that has a general tonic effect on the human body.
-Brain tumor (SMA), when diagnostic methods are used to determine a tumor in the brain by calculating specific antibodies and molecular substances using laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF). The technique allows you to assess the functional state of microvessels. This technique is patented and is taken as the basis for the Ekhov method. X-rays (CT, MRI) are performed to detect tumors in the early stages of development. Electroencephalography and Doppler ultrasound of the carotid arteries of the brain are also used. When taking a certain range of medications, for example, Lipifirnin, certain biochemical processes in nerve tissues are activated, causing their paralysis and death. Method