++
Neurology is the practice and study of diseases of the nervous system. It is among the most complex and exacting medical specialties and yet it is perhaps the most rewarding, encompassing as it does all aspects of human behavior, cognition, memory, movement, pain, sensory experience, and the homeostatic functions of the body that are under nervous control. Among the provocative aspects of neurology is the manner in which diseases disrupt the functions of the mind, but the field also encompasses the study of the diseases of nerves, muscles, spinal cord, and cerebral hemispheres.
++
The neurologist occupies a special role by using extensive synthetic and analytical skill to explain neurologic symptoms and findings. Neurology is distinctive in allowing a type of detailed interpretation of signs and symptoms that, as a result of the fixed structure of the nervous system, provides certainty in diagnosis that is not possible in other fields. This is the method of localization that is almost unique to neurology.
++
Part of the excitement of modern neurology is the incorporation of advances in imaging, and in the neurosciences including neurogenetics, neurochemistry, neuroepidemiology, and neuropathology, which now offer deep insights into the fundamental nature of disease. The close connections among neurology and the fields of internal medicine, psychiatry, neuropathology, developmental medicine and pediatrics, critical care, neurorehabilitation, and neurosurgery extend the purview of clinical neurology. As has occurred in other branches of medicine, increased understanding of disease and therapeutic options has led to the emergence of numerous subspecialties of neurology (Table 1–1).
++++
Neurologic symptoms, of course, do not present themselves as immediately referable to a part of the nervous system, and the neurologist must therefore be knowledgeable in all aspects of nervous system function and disease. The authors believe that a successful application of medical knowledge is attained by adhering to the principles of the clinical method, which has been retained to a greater degree in neurology than in other fields of medicine. Even the experienced neurologist faced with a complex clinical problem uses this basic approach.