The Prague Post - Grey area: chilling past of world's biggest brain collection

EUR -
AED 4.26686
AFN 77.479286
ALL 96.72917
AMD 442.46749
ANG 2.080161
AOA 1065.407223
ARS 1651.559431
AUD 1.780324
AWG 2.091311
AZN 1.97974
BAM 1.954773
BBD 2.329576
BDT 140.855982
BGN 1.954773
BHD 0.436071
BIF 3438.892916
BMD 1.161839
BND 1.501711
BOB 8.009791
BRL 6.4194
BSD 1.156592
BTN 102.549112
BWP 16.419372
BYN 3.936132
BYR 22772.053647
BZD 2.326178
CAD 1.628609
CDF 2759.369166
CHF 0.928619
CLF 0.02828
CLP 1109.406116
CNY 8.266198
CNH 8.305357
COP 4495.137876
CRC 581.494434
CUC 1.161839
CUP 30.788746
CVE 110.207088
CZK 24.313355
DJF 205.96177
DKK 7.464591
DOP 72.931676
DZD 150.536895
EGP 55.013091
ERN 17.427592
ETB 170.500205
FJD 2.646032
FKP 0.870942
GBP 0.870129
GEL 3.149039
GGP 0.870942
GHS 14.168555
GIP 0.870942
GMD 83.652855
GNF 10031.728486
GTQ 8.862343
GYD 241.982842
HKD 9.042005
HNL 30.373039
HRK 7.532559
HTG 151.510384
HUF 392.719215
IDR 19291.879693
ILS 3.836209
IMP 0.870942
INR 103.121972
IQD 1515.203784
IRR 48869.877216
ISK 141.582206
JEP 0.870942
JMD 185.992264
JOD 0.82379
JPY 175.664365
KES 149.371508
KGS 101.603308
KHR 4655.55358
KMF 493.782182
KPW 1045.668009
KRW 1660.908062
KWD 0.356035
KYD 0.963893
KZT 622.592837
LAK 25092.814124
LBP 103575.772574
LKR 350.036062
LRD 211.089076
LSL 19.939622
LTL 3.43061
LVL 0.702786
LYD 6.290694
MAD 10.59883
MDL 19.63968
MGA 5197.268918
MKD 61.592634
MMK 2438.950106
MNT 4178.855697
MOP 9.271228
MRU 46.369633
MUR 52.852517
MVR 17.788202
MWK 2005.746012
MXN 21.614804
MYR 4.908817
MZN 74.245875
NAD 19.939622
NGN 1700.124026
NIO 42.567631
NOK 11.753604
NPR 164.078779
NZD 2.030904
OMR 0.444756
PAB 1.156592
PEN 3.966716
PGK 4.930409
PHP 67.764332
PKR 327.56527
PLN 4.263196
PYG 8115.73531
QAR 4.227279
RON 5.094322
RSD 117.108461
RUB 93.850683
RWF 1678.218123
SAR 4.34472
SBD 9.562568
SCR 17.182171
SDG 698.850713
SEK 11.045637
SGD 1.507956
SHP 0.913023
SLE 26.958936
SLL 24363.197061
SOS 661.052627
SRD 45.23394
STD 24047.731321
STN 24.487132
SVC 10.120682
SYP 15106.487518
SZL 19.931526
THB 37.963149
TJS 10.704575
TMT 4.066438
TND 3.40591
TOP 2.721149
TRY 48.593035
TTD 7.857871
TWD 35.692294
TZS 2839.707779
UAH 48.16469
UGX 3964.916499
USD 1.161839
UYU 46.325657
UZS 14022.63133
VES 224.302448
VND 30602.851687
VUV 141.593481
WST 3.2318
XAF 655.612486
XAG 0.023234
XAU 0.00029
XCD 3.13993
XCG 2.084505
XDR 0.815372
XOF 655.612486
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.621964
ZAR 20.333822
ZMK 10457.953618
ZMW 26.168249
ZWL 374.111836
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    75.55

    0%

  • GSK

    0.1000

    43.54

    +0.23%

  • NGG

    1.1900

    74.52

    +1.6%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1900

    15.16

    -1.25%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.64

    -0.21%

  • AZN

    -0.5100

    84.53

    -0.6%

  • RIO

    -1.5600

    65.44

    -2.38%

  • RELX

    -0.3300

    44.82

    -0.74%

  • BTI

    0.1800

    51.54

    +0.35%

  • BP

    -0.8000

    33.49

    -2.39%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    11.3

    +0.18%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    24.14

    -0.54%

  • BCC

    -1.5700

    72.32

    -2.17%

  • BCE

    0.4600

    23.9

    +1.92%

  • SCS

    -0.2400

    16.29

    -1.47%

  • JRI

    -0.2400

    13.77

    -1.74%

Grey area: chilling past of world's biggest brain collection
Grey area: chilling past of world's biggest brain collection / Photo: Sergei GAPON - AFP

Grey area: chilling past of world's biggest brain collection

Countless shelves line the walls of a basement at Denmark's University of Odense, holding what is thought to be the world's largest collection of brains.

Text size:

There are 9,479 of the organs, all removed from the corpses of mental health patients over the course of four decades until the 1980s.

Preserved in formalin in large white buckets labelled with numbers, the collection was the life's work of prominent Danish psychiatrist Erik Stromgren.

Begun in 1945, it was a "kind of experimental research," Jesper Vaczy Kragh, an expert in the history of psychiatry, explained to AFP.

Stromgren and his colleagues believed "maybe they could find out something about where mental illnesses were localised, or they thought they might find the answers in those brains".

The brains were collected after autopsies had been conducted on the bodies of people committed to psychiatric institutes across Denmark.

Neither the deceased nor their families were ever asked permission.

"These were state mental hospitals and there were no people from the outside who were asking questions about what went on in these state institutions," he said.

At the time, patients' rights were not a primary concern.

On the contrary, society believed it needed to be protected from these people, the researcher from the University of Copenhagen said.

Between 1929 and 1967, the law required people committed to mental institutions to be sterilised.

Up until 1989, they had to get a special exemption in order to be allowed to marry.

Denmark considered "mentally ill" people, as they were called at the time, "a burden to society (and believed that) if we let them have children, if we let them loose... they will cause all kinds of trouble," Vaczy Kragh said.

Back then, every Dane who died was autopsied, said pathologist Martin Wirenfeldt Nielsen, the director of the collection.

"It was just part of the culture back then, an autopsy was just another hospital procedure," Nielsen said.

The evolution of post-mortem procedures and growing awareness of patients' rights heralded the end of new additions to the collection in 1982.

A long and heated debate then ensued on what to do with it.

Denmark's state ethics council ultimately ruled it should be preserved and used for scientific research.

- Unlocking hidden secrets -

The collection, long housed in Aarhus in western Denmark, was moved to Odense in 2018.

Research on the collection has over the years covered a wide range of illnesses, including dementia, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression.

"The debate has basically settled down, and (now people) say 'okay, this is very impressive and useful scientific research if you want to know more about mental disease'," the collection's director said.

Some of the brains belonged to people who suffered from both mental health issues and brain illnesses.

"Because many of these patients were admitted for maybe half their life, or even their entire life, they would also have had other brain diseases, such as a stroke, epilepsy or brain tumours," he added.

Four research projects are currently using the collection.

"If it's not used, it does no good," says the former head of the country's mental health association, Knud Kristensen.

"Now we have it, we should actually use it," he said, complaining about a lack of resources to fund research.

Neurobiologist Susana Aznar, a Parkinson's expert working at a Copenhagen research hospital, is using the collection as part of her team's research project.

She said the brains were unique in that they enable scientists to see the effects of modern treatments.

"They were not treated with the treatments that we have now," she said.

The brains of patients nowadays may have been altered by the treatments they have received.

When Aznar's team compares these with the brains from the collection, "we can see whether these changes could be associated with the treatments," she said.

V.Nemec--TPP