Ira was born in Long Island in 1866, as the son of Dr. Ransford Everett Van Gieson (1836–1921). He was of Dutch-Jewish heritage.[1][2] The "Van" is from Dutch "van ("of" or "from"), anglicized with a capital V.
Ira Van Gieson graduated from the College of Physicians of Columbia University in 1885. In 1887, he served as a teacher at the college of physicians and surgeons and in 1894 he was appointed instructor of pathology and histology of the nervous system.[3]
In 1896, he was appointed as first director of the Pathological Institute of the New York State Hospitals for the Insane (renamed New York State Psychiatric Institute in 1929). He was dismissed after five years because of political controversy involving the newly appointed president of the NY State Commission on Lunacy, Peter Wise.[4][5]
As a result, the whole Institute's faculty resigned[6]
and in 1900 a formal "Protest of the Friends of the Present Management of the N.Y. Pathological Institute" was signed (S. Weir Mitchell, James J. Putnam, Percival Bailey, Morton Prince, Frederick Peterson, and many others).[7] After dismissal, he returned into the service of the New York State Health Department. He practised hypnosis and occasionally served as a forensic psychiatrist.[8][9]
"Dr. Van Gieson can best be described in a few words as a genius. He knew none of the rules that applied to the average man. He had a keen and incisive mind, he was alert and full of interest in everything, but he possessed that sensitive organization which made anything approaching control from outside sources utterly unsupportable. He was a spasmodic and irregular worker, when he worked, working with a fervor and depth of distraction that made him utterly forget time, food and, sleep, working for days and days without rest, way into the small hours of the morning. These periods of tremendous activity were followed by days of inactivity, during which he did nothing, and sometimes was entirely inaccessible, not even attending his office. He was, however, tremendously productive."
"A Report Of A Case Of Syringomyelia". Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease. 16 (7): 393–411. 1889.
Laboratory notes of technical methods for the nervous system. New York, 1889
L. Emmett Holt (1890). "A Case Of Spina Bifida With Suppurative Spinal Meningitis And Ependymitis, Due To Bacteria Entering The Wall Of The Sac". Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease. 15 (12): 773–781. doi:10.1097/00005053-189012000-00001. S2CID145315705.
Alternate paralysis due to multiple areas of softening in the pons varolii, extracted from the proceedings of the New York Pathological Society, 1890, in Miscellaneous Papers from the Laboratory of the Alumni Association, Department of Pathology, Columbia University, vol 1, 1890–1891, pp 1–3
A Study of the Artefacts of the Nervous System: The Topographical Alterations of the Gray and White Matters of the Spinal Cord Caused by Autopsy Bruises, and a Consideration of Heterotopia of the Spinal Cord. D. Appleton and Co., 1892
"A report of the gross and microscopical examinations in six cases of death by strong electrical currents". New York Med J. 55: 1–19. 1892.
"A contribution to the pathology of traumatic epilepsy". Medical Record. 43: 513–521. 1893.
"Remarks on the scope and organization of the Pathological Institute of the New York State Hospitals". State Hospitals Bulletin. 1 (255–74): 407–88. 1896.
The toxic basis of neural diseases. State Hospitals Bull I:407–488 (1896)
(with Arnold Graf) The individuality of the cell. State Hospitals Bulletin (April, 1897)
Epilepsy and expert testimony. Utica, 1897
(with Boris Sidis) Neuron energy and its psychomotor manifestations. Archives of Neurology and Psychopathology 1, pp. 5–24 (1898) link
^Roizin L (August 1970). "Van Gieson, a visionary of psychiatric research". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 127 (2): 180–5. doi:10.1176/ajp.127.2.180. PMID4919636.
^John M. Oldham, Michelle B. Riba: American Psychiatric Press
Review of Psychiatry. American Psychiatric Pub, 1994 ISBN
0880484403 p.39
^Jay Schulman: Remaking an
Organization: Innovation in a Specialized Psychiatric Hospital.
SUNY Press, 1969, ISBN0-87395-041-0 pp. 122–129
^Institute's Faculty Resigns. New York Times May 1, 1901,
PDF
^Lanska, Douglas J. (2002). "Classic Articles of 19th-Century American Neurologists: A Critical Review". Journal of the History of the Neurosciences. 11 (2): 156–173. doi:10.1076/jhin.11.2.156.15196. PMID12122807. S2CID34469937.
^HYPNOTISM TEST IN HITCHCOCK CASE; Doctor Tells of Putting Woman Under a Spell, in Which She Revealed Story of Shooting. The New York Times (September 1, 1908) PDF
^Hypnotic Defense Flaws. The New York Times (September 2, 1908) PDF
^White WA. "Dr. Van Gieson, An Obituary," American Journal of Insanity, 69 (January 1913), 801–03
^van Gieson I (1889). "Laboratory notes of technical methods for the nervous system". N Y Med J (50): 57.
^Hans Lüders, Youssef G. Comair: Epilepsy Surgery. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2000 ISBN0-7817-1442-7 p. 95
^Robert W. Rieber, Flora Rheta Schreiber: The Bifurcation of the Self: The History and Theory of Dissociation and Its Disorders. Birkhäuser, 2006 ISBN0-387-27413-8 p. 28
^Robert J. Desnick, Michael M. Kaback: Tay–sachs Disease. Academic Press, 2001 ISBN0-12-017644-0 pp. 13–14