Female Hysteria — 2,400 Years of the ‘Wandering Womb,’ Deleted From the DSM in 1980
Hysteria entered Western medicine through the Hippocratic Corpus of the 5th and 4th centuries BC, which attributed a roster of female complaints — convulsions, suffocation, paralysis, mood disturbance — to a uterus that wandered the body in search of moisture, and the gap between that promise of explanation and its evidentiary basis never closed across the twenty-four centuries the diagnosis survived. The mechanism was anatomically impossible; Galen had said as much in the 2nd century AD, noting the womb could not “move from one place to another like a wandering animal.” Yet the label outlived its own physiology. What persisted was not the wandering-womb anatomy but the diagnostic habit it licensed: a single, elastic category onto which a clinician could map almost any unexplained symptom in a woman, and, by the 19th century, blame on her reproductive organs, her nerves, or her sex itself.
The diagnosis was never retracted by an experiment; it was dissolved by reclassification. By the late 1800s “hysteria” had become one of the most frequently assigned disorders in European and American medicine, a major form of neurotic illness diagnosed predominantly in women and treated with regimens ranging from marriage and pregnancy to the “rest cure,” pelvic manipulation, and, in extreme cases, surgical removal of the ovaries. Jean-Martin Charcot relocated it from the uterus to the nervous system at the Salpêtrière in the 1870s and 1880s; Sigmund Freud and Josef Breuer relocated it again, in their 1895 Studies on Hysteria, to repressed psychological trauma. Each move stripped away a layer of the original etiology without retiring the word.
The formal revocation came on a date psychiatry can name. When the American Psychiatric Association published the third edition of its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual in 1980, “hysterical neurosis” was deleted as a unified entity and its fragments redistributed into discrete, criteria-based diagnoses — conversion disorder, somatization disorder (the streamlined heir to Briquet’s syndrome), the dissociative disorders, and histrionic personality disorder. The wandering womb retains no medical standing whatsoever, and the gendered super-category that succeeded it was judged too vague, too sexed, and too entangled in bad science to survive contact with operational criteria.
This dossier files “Overturned” entry TH-009 as the archetype of a theory revoked not by a single trial but by an institution editing its own manual: a diagnosis that endured because it explained nothing and therefore could be made to explain anything, and that fell only when psychiatry agreed to require that a category say something specific.