home > on-air > feature documentaries > my lobotomy >

Frequently Asked Questions
Untitled Page

What is the difference between a prefrontal lobotomy and a transorbital lobotomy?

 The two procedures differ in how the doctor gets access to the brain. In a prefrontal lobotomy, the doctor drills holes in the side or on top of the patient’s skull to get to the frontal lobes. In the transorbital lobotomy, the doctor accesses the brain through the eye sockets. Freeman started out by doing prefrontal lobotomies, but later created the transorbital lobotomy, which he considered to be an improved version of the original procedure. The transorbital lobotomy left no scars (apart from two black eyes), took less than 10 minutes, and could be performed outside of an operating room. According to Freeman, it produced better results.

What effect did the transorbital lobotomy have on patients?

 Freeman believed that cutting certain nerves in the brain could eliminate excess emotion and stabilize one's personality. Indeed, many people who received the transorbital lobotomy seemed to lose their ability to feel intense emotions, appearing childlike and less prone to worry. But the results were variable, according to Dr. Elliot Valenstein, a neurologist who wrote a book about the history of lobotomies: "Some patients seemed to improve, some became 'vegetables,' some appeared unchanged and others died." In Ken Kesey’s novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Randall McMurphy receives a transorbital lobotomy.

What type of patients received lobotomies?

 Freeman’s most common rationale for performing lobotomies was to treat schizophrenia, especially in patients who’d just recently been diagnosed with the disease.  He also used the procedure to treat chronic pain and suicidal depression. A New York Times article from 1937 stated that people with the following symptoms would benefit from a lobotomy: "Tension, apprehension, anxiety, depression, insomnia, suicidal ideas, delusions, hallucinations, crying spells, melancholia, obsessions, panic states, disorientation, psychalgesia (pains of psychic origin), nervous indigestion and hysterical paralysis."

How many people were lobotomized in the United States?

 About 50,000 people received lobotomies in the United States, most of them between 1949 and 1952. About 10,000 of these procedures were transorbital lobotomies. The rest were mostly prefrontal lobotomies. Walter Freeman performed about 3,500 lobotomies during his career, of which 2,500 were his "ice pick" procedure.

Did Freeman operate on Rosemary Kennedy?

 Yes, he did in the summer of 1941. This operation was one of his most famous failures. Freeman and his neurosurgeon partner James Watts performed a prefrontal lobotomy on Rosemary Kennedy, leaving her inert and unable to speak more than a few words. After her lobotomy she was sent to live at Saint Coletta’s School in Wisconsin, where she remained until her death in 2005 at the age of 86.

Did Freeman operate on the actress Frances Farmer?

 There’s some controversy about this. Though Freeman's son Frank Freeman believes that his father did, there is no documentary evidence to support this. To learn more, visit Shedding Light on Shadowland.

 

LISTEN
Please consider supporting the work of Sound Portraits and StoryCorps by making a donation.

LISTEN
This piece is available in the following audio formats [22:00 min]:
28.8 kbps Real Audio
T1 kbps Real Audio

READ
Transcript
Intro
Transorbital Lobotomy
Howard Dully
"My Lobotomy"

MORE

Learn about Howard Dully's memoir, published in 2007 by Random House

Howard's memoir on Amazon.com

An interactive lobotomy timeline

FAQ about lobotomies

A childhood photo of Howard Dully

A photo of Howard's step-mother, Lou

More information about the "ice pick" lobotomy

Audio extras from "My Lobotomy"

Oral histories from patients and witnesses

Photographs from Howard's journey

Producers' Notes


YOU ARE HERE: home > on-air > feature documentaries > my lobotomy >

email this page | top of page



 

home  |  ON-AIR |  in-print |  about |  education |  support |  store

Sound Portraits Productions, 80 Hanson Place, 2nd Floor, Brooklyn, NY 11217
Telephone (646) 723-7020 | Fax (646) 723-7026

Copyright © 2010 Sound Portraits Productions. All rights reserved.