Jumping Frenchmen of Maine

The Jumping Frenchmen of Maine were a group of 19th-century lumberjacks who exhibited a rare disorder of unknown origin.[1] The syndrome entails an exaggerated startle reflex[2] which may be described as an uncontrollable "jump"; individuals with this condition can exhibit sudden movements in all parts of the body. Jumping Frenchmen syndrome shares some symptoms with other startle disorders.

Jumping Frenchmen of Maine
SpecialtyMedical genetics

Individuals with this condition were first found in the Moosehead Lake region of Maine,[3] and were first described by George Miller Beard in 1878.

Signs and symptoms

George Miller Beard recorded individuals who would obey any command given suddenly, even if it meant striking a loved one; the Jumping Frenchmen seemed to react abnormally to sudden stimuli.[3] The more common and less intense symptoms consisted of jumping, yelling, and hitting. These individuals exhibited outrageous bursts, and many described themselves as ticklish and shy. Other cases involved echolalia (repeating vocalizations made by another person) and echopraxia (repeating movements made by another person).[4][5][6] Beard noted that the men were "suggestible"[7] and that they "could not help repeating the word or sounds that came from the person that ordered them any more than they could help striking, dropping, throwing, jumping, or starting".[7]

Causes

The cause of Jumping Frenchmen syndrome is unknown.[8] One theory is that it is a genetic condition.[9] Observation of 50 cases found the disorder to be remotely located and concentrated in the northern regions of Maine. Fourteen of these cases were found in four families.[3] Another set of cases were found in a single family where the father, his two sons, and his two grandchildren exhibited "jumping" behavior.[6]

It may also be a culture-bound syndrome or a formed habit. These French "jumpers" lived in a very remote region and most were lumberjacks. This type of small community would allow for a majority to adapt to this sort of reaction. Also, instances of many being shy may imply that the "jumper" was positively reinforced by the sudden attention as the entertainment for a group.[4]

In 1885, Georges Gilles de la Tourette included Jumping Frenchmen syndrome in the typology of "convulsive tic illness";[7] studies of the condition in the 1980s cast doubt on whether the phenomenon was in fact a physical condition similar to Tourette syndrome. Documentation of direct observation of "Jumping Frenchmen" has been scarce, and while videotape evidence was recorded by several researchers that showed the condition to be real, MH and JM Saint-Hilaire concluded from studying eight affected people that it was brought on by conditions at their lumber camps and was psychological, not neurological.[10]

Differential diagnosis

Jumping Frenchmen of Maine syndrome must be distinguished from other conditions involving the startle reflex or tics.

Tourette syndrome is characterized by multiple physical (motor) tics and at least one vocal (phonic) tic. There are many overlaps when compared clinically, but the abnormal "jumping" response is always provoked, unlike the involuntary tics in Tourette syndrome.[9]

Latah from Southeast Asia is a disorder where one's startle response is similar to a state of trance with repetitive speech or movements. Meryachenie is a disorder found in Siberia that also displays an action similar to "jumping". Neurasthenia is a disorder with a startle response during periods of great fatigue. Hyperekplexia is an extremely rare autosomal dominant neurological disease. The symptoms start in infancy with hypertonia, an abnormal muscle tension that decreases flexibility, and an exaggerated startle in all ages of life.[9]

History

Beard had a unique interest in unusual disorders and took the opportunity to observe the endemic in Maine.[9] He recorded "startle, jumping, and tic-like behaviors"[7] among the French Canadians and lumberjacks who lived near Moosehead Lake in northern Maine.[9] He published his descriptions of the Jumping Frenchmen in 1880, and he believed the condition was hereditary.[7] History of Medicine professor Howard I. Kushner calls Beard's description "the most influential and detailed study" of these behaviors.[7]

According to Kushner, the French physician Jean-Martin Charcot chose his resident, Georges Gilles de la Tourette, to investigate the "relationship between tic disorders and jumping and startle behaviors reported in Malaysia, Siberia, and Maine";[11] Gilles de la Tourette translated Beard's descriptions and published them one year after Beard's papers.[7] In 1885, Tourette published "Study of a Nervous Affliction" where he included the startle disorders in the typology of what he called "convulsive tic illness", that included what later came to be known as Tourette syndrome.[7][10] Kushner argues that none of the patients studied by Tourette supported this assertion,[7] and says that "many of his contemporaries refuted Gilles de la Tourette's typology".[12]

The humorist E.C. Bentley wrote a limerick on the subject:

The Jumping Frenchmen of Maine
Were often considered insane:
Whatever you'd say
They would leap to obey,
Those excitable Frenchmen of Maine.

In the first episode, season 2 of ‘’Trial & Error (TV Series)’’ Anne Flatch has this, among her numerous neuroses.

References

  1. "Jumping Frenchmen of Maine | Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center (GARD) – an NCATS Program". rarediseases.info.nih.gov. Retrieved 2018-04-17.
  2. Howard R, Ford R (August 1992). "From the jumping Frenchmen of Maine to post-traumatic stress disorder: the startle response in neuropsychiatry". Psychol Med. 22 (3): 695–707. doi:10.1017/S0033291700038137. PMID 1410093.
  3. Stevens H (March 1965). ""Jumping Frenchmen of Maine." Myriachit". Arch. Neurol. 12: 311–4. doi:10.1001/archneur.1965.00460270087011. PMID 14247390.
  4. Saint-Hilaire MH, Saint-Hilaire JM (May 2001). "Jumping Frenchmen of Maine". Mov. Disord. 16 (3): 530. doi:10.1002/mds.1080. PMID 11391751.
  5. Lanska DJ (2010). "Chapter 33: the history of movement disorders". Handb Clin Neurol. 95: 501–46. doi:10.1016/S0072-9752(08)02133-7. PMID 19892136.
  6. Kunkle EC (April 1967). "The "jumpers" of Maine: a reappraisal". Arch. Intern. Med. 119 (4): 355–8. doi:10.1001/archinte.1967.00290220105005. PMID 6022518.
  7. Kushner (2000), p. 22.
  8. NORD
  9. Lanska DJ (June 2002). "Classic articles of 19th-century American neurologists: a critical review". J Hist Neurosci. 11 (2): 156–73. doi:10.1076/jhin.11.2.156.15196. PMID 12122807.
  10. Saint-Hilaire M, Saint-Hilaire J, Granger L (1986). "Jumping Frenchmen of Maine". Neurology. 36 (9): 1269–71. doi:10.1212/wnl.36.9.1269. PMID 3528919.
  11. Kushner (2000), p. 21.
  12. Kushner (2000), p. 25.

Bibliography

Kushner, HI. A cursing brain?: The histories of Tourette syndrome. Harvard University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-674-00386-1

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