Romanian School of Neurology


The Romanian School of Neurology influenced a great share of Romanian and foreign neurologists, descending from a group of Gheorghe Marinescu's co-workers at the Neurological Department of the Colentina Hospital at the University of Bucharest. One can therefore also speak of Marinescu's School of Neurology.
Marinescu's closest collaborators were Ion Minea, Anghel Radovici, Nicolae Ionescu-Sisești, State Drăgănescu, 1932 and of the monograph Encefalite Virotice Umane, Oskar Sager, Arthur Kreindler, 1955, La Physiologie et Physiopathologie du cervelet, 1958, with Mircea Steriade, Anatomo-fiziologia clinică a sistemului nervos central, Afazia, Emmerich Façon.
Starting from 1954, Arthur Kreindler, in his double position as director of the Institute of Neurology of the Romanian Academy and head of the post-graduate chair of Neurology at the University of Bucharest, surrounded himself with personalities like State Drăgănescu, Theodor Horneţ and Vlad Voiculescu. The chair organized post-graduate specialization in neurology, training many neurologists all over the country.
The central themes of clinical research were epilepsy, cerebro-vascular diseases, viral encephalitis, aphasia. Basic research dealt especially with states of consciousness, physiology of the thalamus, conditioned reflexes a.s.o. From the initial anatomo-clinical orientation, Romanian neurology evolved to a neurophysiological one, involving such modern topics as neurochemistry, neurogenetics and neuropsychology.
The following neurologists from the next generation should be quoted: Mihai Ioan Botez, Victor Ionăşescu, Ion N. Petrovici, Jean-Jaques Askenasy and Mircea Steriade.
Presently the main representative of Marinescu's school of neurology in Romania is Constantin Popa, head of the neurological department at the Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy and director of the institute for cerebrovascular diseases in Bucharest.