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

EUR -
AED 4.201992
AFN 73.227845
ALL 93.855216
AMD 419.810955
ANG 2.048539
AOA 1049.781355
ARS 1699.968984
AUD 1.645671
AWG 2.059519
AZN 1.946861
BAM 1.956317
BBD 2.300618
BDT 140.78721
BGN 1.934667
BHD 0.430614
BIF 3401.098898
BMD 1.144177
BND 1.477716
BOB 7.922094
BRL 5.889405
BSD 1.142307
BTN 108.904783
BWP 15.430146
BYN 3.308168
BYR 22425.877079
BZD 2.297317
CAD 1.626271
CDF 2580.120253
CHF 0.921497
CLF 0.026911
CLP 1059.153409
CNY 7.776285
CNH 7.773593
COP 3839.950895
CRC 520.43755
CUC 1.144177
CUP 30.320701
CVE 110.293186
CZK 24.171835
DJF 203.414651
DKK 7.474739
DOP 67.567858
DZD 152.33123
EGP 55.880137
ERN 17.162661
ETB 184.367528
FJD 2.55975
FKP 0.856933
GBP 0.854226
GEL 3.014877
GGP 0.856933
GHS 13.01644
GIP 0.856933
GMD 84.099115
GNF 10018.735479
GTQ 8.716304
GYD 238.943152
HKD 8.974069
HNL 30.574081
HRK 7.53487
HTG 149.272061
HUF 353.781917
IDR 20578.030575
ILS 3.429675
IMP 0.856933
INR 109.041537
IQD 1496.37587
IRR 1574044.852165
ISK 143.994622
JEP 0.856933
JMD 180.657747
JOD 0.811241
JPY 185.22687
KES 147.953692
KGS 100.058494
KHR 4583.291463
KMF 493.714038
KPW 1029.760062
KRW 1742.507872
KWD 0.354798
KYD 0.951939
KZT 539.937423
LAK 25757.582518
LBP 102288.840581
LKR 382.597775
LRD 207.324795
LSL 18.533636
LTL 3.378458
LVL 0.692101
LYD 7.328969
MAD 10.694627
MDL 20.138146
MGA 4851.282177
MKD 61.661566
MMK 2402.491822
MNT 4098.864054
MOP 9.228218
MRU 45.590049
MUR 53.856273
MVR 17.677503
MWK 1980.30608
MXN 19.890831
MYR 4.667216
MZN 73.111202
NAD 18.53396
NGN 1564.799315
NIO 42.031844
NOK 11.199729
NPR 174.248053
NZD 2.007173
OMR 0.439947
PAB 1.142302
PEN 3.889628
PGK 5.01937
PHP 70.262737
PKR 317.579423
PLN 4.289121
PYG 6928.861552
QAR 4.175904
RON 5.230725
RSD 117.332297
RUB 88.213829
RWF 1673.927783
SAR 4.299201
SBD 9.264892
SCR 16.636342
SDG 687.080395
SEK 11.017828
SGD 1.477797
SHP 0.854244
SLE 27.889289
SLL 23992.832224
SOS 652.772525
SRD 43.127486
STD 23682.162137
STN 24.506691
SVC 9.99451
SYP 126.468328
SZL 18.529978
THB 38.111979
TJS 10.565993
TMT 4.004621
TND 3.379093
TOP 2.754905
TRY 53.589612
TTD 7.735112
TWD 36.681759
TZS 3003.463381
UAH 50.934517
UGX 4173.102936
USD 1.144177
UYU 45.952145
UZS 13758.756641
VES 762.269504
VND 30097.014471
VUV 136.150222
WST 3.173017
XAF 656.124677
XAG 0.018647
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.092197
XCG 2.058617
XDR 0.816016
XOF 656.133281
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.255895
ZAR 18.549822
ZMK 10298.972254
ZMW 21.046655
ZWL 368.424657
  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22.06

    +0.32%

  • RBGPF

    0.1700

    68.32

    +0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    22.23

    +0.36%

  • AZN

    -4.9900

    190.16

    -2.62%

  • BTI

    -0.3100

    61.46

    -0.5%

  • RIO

    -0.8400

    93.58

    -0.9%

  • BCE

    -0.5500

    20.87

    -2.64%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    19.9

    +1.11%

  • NGG

    -0.2600

    82.59

    -0.31%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    53.09

    -1.07%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    13.08

    -0.54%

  • BCC

    -0.6500

    75.28

    -0.86%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    13.11

    +0.84%

  • RELX

    0.3400

    32.27

    +1.05%

  • BP

    -0.0100

    37.39

    -0.03%

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