Death erection (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Death erection" in English language version.

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  • Willis Webster Grube (1897). A Compendium of practical medicine for the use of students and practitioners of medicine. Hadley Co. p. 455. Retrieved 2007-01-26. "Erection has long been observed to follow injuries to the cerebellum and spinal cord. Out of eleven cases of cerebellar hemorrhage, erection of the penis was noted six times by Serres. Death by hanging is often accompanied by partial erection."
  • George M. Gould; Walter L. Pyle (1900). Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine. W. B. Saunders. p. 683. Retrieved 2007-01-26. "Priapism is sometimes seen as a curious symptom of lesion of the spinal cord. In such cases it is totally unconnected with any voluptuous sensation, and is only found accompanied by motor paralysis. It may occur spontaneously immediately after accident involving the cord, and is then probably due to undue excitement of the portion of the cord below the lesion, which is deprived of the regulating influence of the brain... Pressure on the cerebellum is supposed to account for cases of priapism observed in executions and suicides by hanging. There is an instance recorded of an Italian castrata who said he provoked sexual pleasure by partially hanging himself."
  • William Augustus Guy (1861). Principles of Forensic Medicine. London: Henry Renshaw. p. 245. Retrieved 2007-01-26.

books.google.com

  • Helen Singer Kaplan; Melvin Horwith (1983). The Evaluation of Sexual Disorders: Psychological and Medical Aspects. United Kingdom: Brunner Routledge. ISBN 9780876303290. Retrieved 2007-01-26. "Men subjected to capital punishment by hanging and laboratory animals sacrificed with cervical dislocation have terminal erections. The implication is that either central inhibition of erection is released and erection created or that a sudden massive spinal cord stimulus generates an erectile response. There is ample experimental and clinical evidence to support the former supposition."
  • Steinberg, Leo (January 1996). The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and in Modern Oblivion. University of Chicago Press. p. 315-316, 324-325. ISBN 978-0-226-77187-8.
  • Ismael Abu'l--Feda, De vita, et rebus gestis Mohammedis, Moslemicæ religionis auctoris, et Imperii Saracenici fundatoris. Ex codice MSto Pocockiano Bibliothecæ Bodleianæ textum Arabicum primus edidit, Latinè vertit, præfatione, & notis illustravit Joannes Gagnier, A.M.. Oxford, 1723, p. 140, note. c. Retrieved 25-06-2014. The English translation of the Arabic source should read: "In one account, ʿAlī, may God be best pleased with him, was called upon, while he was washing him [the Prophet], to raise his gaze to the sky."

emedicine.com

  • David Levy, DO. "Neck trauma". eMedicine.com. Retrieved 2007-01-26.

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