20/03/2010 17:10
Chapter 6. Photocopies of Most Medical Test
Results of
Stephen Cattier. Doctors' reports:
EEG
'Possibly...Leucodystrophy'
However, June 2006
blood test result was negative for the condition.
- EEGs somewhat abnormal
i.e. 1977,
"Dr. Harris thought the EEG probably abnormal and possibly
due to Leucodystrophy." the 4th line.
- Last EEG, 1991.
- VRP, ERG,ENG,1977, Maudsley Hospital.
- 1981 EMG muscle test.
- MRI brain pictures and spectroscopy of thalamus privately paid for.
- SPECT Brain Scan privately paid for.
- B Vitamin functional tests privately paid for.
- Sweat analysis privately paid for.
- Muscle relaxation and contraction studies private test.
- Urine amino acid report privately paid for.
- Immunofluorescence tests for tissue antibodies privately paid for.
- Blood serotonin level privately paid for.
- Catecholamines privately paid for.
- Pseudocholinesterase activity privately paid for.
- 1975 February Dr. Irwin, consultant psychiatrist. NHS report to a consultant physician, Wanstead Hospital.
- 1975 March-June Claybury Hospital doctor's report.
Inpatient.
- 1976 May Dr. M. A. Barrie, consultant
neurologist. Private. St. Margaret's Hospital,
Epping.
- 1976 August Claybury Hospital consultant psychiatrist's report before inpatient was transferred to Severalls Hospital.
- 1977 - '78 Seven pages of Maudsley doctors' reports.
Inpatient.
- 1979 -'80 Maudsley Hospital doctors' report.
Inpatient.
- 1981 Severalls Hospital psychiatrist's letter to GP after transfer to Maudsley.
Inpatient.
- 1981 - 82 Maudsley doctors' report.
Inpatient.
- 1983
Dr. Vicky Rippere, clinical psychologist. NHS.
High Ige 493. Author 'Is not schizophrenic but cerebral allergic.'
- 1986 Prof. David Marsden, consultant neurologist. NHS, Maudsley.
1989 Dr. Read,
consultant neurologist. Private.
1989 Dr. Kocen, consultant
neurologist. NHS, National Hospital.
1990 Dr. M. Ron, consultant psychiatrist. NHS, National Hospital.
1997 Dr. L.
J. Findley, consultant neurologist. NHS.
Failed referral. Harold Wood Hospital.
2004 Dr. David
Rickards, consultant radiologist.
Private. Video urodynamics bladder pressure test.
These EEGs should have been interpreted with the author's
claimed new type of neurological injury in mind. Locum Consultant was M. Schwarz, 1976.
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1/
1976. This
EEG was performed when the author was in the middle of a relapse occurring
which had been brought on a little earlier by him blowing his trombone for
approximately twenty minutes when it used up his "battery" to a
damaging level. Within one to two days he was unable to walk, speak, nor
communicate but improved gradually naturally to do those things again a bit three to four weeks later.
During the EEG he was able to walk but not communicate nor speak. They have recorded his
age one year out.
It should be 25 not 24. D.O.B. 22 March 1951.
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au

The same EEG as above:

1977.
Extract from report of Stephen Cattier's tests including EEG at the Maudsley Hospital Spring
1977 when Dr. Peter Noble and the
late Dr. Ibiapuye Martyns-Yellowe, the former doctor's
registrar, were two of his psychiatrists. Stephen's condition from the
neurological disorder when he had these tests and EEGs was: unable to walk nor
speak (but could scream with fright), difficulty moving and could only
communicate by pointing to letters of the alphabet. Also, sensitivity to
outdoor light level, temperature, music, speech, plus a mostly paralysed mind
and a feeling of not being quite in the world, and an emotional mechanism that
hardly worked. Ears
sensitive to music, and speech. Eyes hurt to look at the TV screen and faces.

EEG, 1981, ordered by
Consultant Psychiatrist Dr. David Ramster, Severalls Hospital, Colchester.
Essex.
EEG 22/03/79. "...raises the possibility of subacute sclerosing leucoencephalopathy."

EEG 10/10/79

EEG 21/11/79

1981, Severalls Hospital, Colchester,
Essex. Author's age is recorded one year out. Dr. David Ramster, Consultant
Psychiatrist, ordered this EEG. Condition of the author caused by the
neurological disorder was: maybe mostly unable to speak, could not walk,
sensitive to outside light level, temperature, rough textures, weak bladder*
(apparently, one suffers from the opposite with hysteria - the author was not
suffering from hysteria with all due respect to the doctors), sensitive to
loud sound, music and speech. Sensitive to the amount of clothes he wore. Upon
admission he was unable to wear anything. Medication improved him a bit. Eyes
hurt to look at the TV screen and faces. Emotional mechanism hardly worked. *It
could not have been conversion hysteria because retention of the urine is the
norm then and not a weak bladder.

Maudsley Hospital EEG, 4 August 1981.

2/
Condition of the author when this was
done: as one sees him here in the first part of Chapter
10 except his bladder was a lot stronger then which was before his slight
relapse of August 1992 when he over-spoke and it was weakened more by it, owing to
the nerve link between the mind and it becoming further affected. He was
unable to do any voluntary movements thus had to be in the mood to initiate
movements. However, since about 1996 he has improved slightly and so been able to
deliberately turn on the TV and
make a drink any time he desires without it causing severe muscular spasms
owing to having gradually and carefully forced the voluntary movements thus
improving them like forcing a rusty hinge to move so to speak. Since 1991 his
mental illness of not being in his right mind has gradually totally gone now
whereas then it had a bit more to go. When he used to experience the severe
spasms upon attempting a voluntary movement he never did it when undergoing an
EEG to see what the result of the test would be. He should have done it but it
was too difficult to do it under a testing scenario. Also, attempting to do deliberate thoughts
caused bodily spasms followed by momentary total weakness. It is not so bad
now since forcing the movements in 1996 but it is still worth doing while
undergoing an EEG as he has never attempted deliberate thoughts during it
either for the same reason. He needs encouragement to do it by the testing
staff who need to believe he could be correct and wait until he is able to do
the demonstration. However, he might be successful at it now that he can do
deliberate movements easier than before.

3/

4/


5/
My dopamine system was examined by spectroscopy too
but that was also ok.



This shows the author's
enlarged left-hand side brain ventricle.

This shows the author's
right-hand side and wider than the left temporal horn. www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2002-07/pg-nrb063002.php
says it 'indicates psychosis.' I am not suffering from it now since my zinc and vitamin B 6 deficiencies have been corrected for long enough.

287 kbs jpg. 587 kbs jpg.
View the author's complete brain
scan from 17 November 1995.
6/

'Parietal Lobe:
The parietal lobe receives and interprets sensations. These sensations include
pain, temperature, touch, pressure, size, shape, and body-part awareness.
Other activities of the parietal lobe are hearing, reasoning, and memory.' (on
line information from OncoLink).
7/

Note: the Biolab's telephone area code has
changed. When this test was done, the author was already taking, in tablet
form, 10 to 20 mgs of pyridoxine daily. The daily requirement of pyridoxine is
only 2 mgs. Consequently, he claims this deficiency state made him mentally
ill. Since 1985, he has taken 100 to 150 mgs of it daily. Warning: long-term over dosage
will cause nerve damage.
8/

To clarify the illegible zinc result: it is 300,
with the reference range 360 - 680. When this test was done, the author was
already taking one to two Zincomed capsules daily. Each capsule contains 220
mgs of zinc sulphate (45 mgs of zinc?). Therefore, he has to take two and a
half of these capsules daily. He claims that this deficiency state caused him
to be, apparently, schizoid from puberty up to his breakdown in 1974. Dr. Adrianne Reveley,
consultant psychiatrist, Maudsley Hospital, S. London, UK, diagnosed the
author in 1999 as suffering from Asperger syndrome of which Stephen claims he
suffered from five symptoms up to 1974. Warning: over-dosing on
zinc will cause a copper deficiency, among other things.
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