J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1999;66:2 ( January )
Obituary
Professor C David Marsden 1938
98
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The sad death of Professor David Marsden in September
1998 leaves the world of both movement disorders and clinical
neuroscience without one of its most charismatic and outstanding
personalities. I first met David when I was a newly appointed Lecturer
in Neurology at the Institute of Neurology and he had just arrived as
Professor of Neurology. His enthusiasm for teaching and for pushing
forward our scientific understanding of the mechanisms of motor control rapidly seduced me, along with many others, into making movement disorders my clinical and scientific specialty. David was subsequently appointed Dean of the Institute of Neurology and ensured that it
maintained its individual identity during its incoorporation into
University College London.
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David had an extraordinary career, becoming Professor of Neurology at
the Institute of Psychiatry at the age of only 34 with consultant
appointments at both the Maudsley and King's College Hospitals. He set
up research programmes in neurophysiology . . . [Full text of this article]