Results 201 to 210 of about 9,408 (230)
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[Psychogenic Retrograde and Anterograde Amnesia].

Brain and nerve = Shinkei kenkyu no shinpo, 2018
Patients with dissociative retrograde amnesia, under the influence of high stress, lose access to past autobiographical event memories that should have been remembered. Patients with dissociative anterograde amnesia cannot recall extremely emotional experiences.
Haruo Yoshimasu   +2 more
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Anterograde amnesia and memory for temporal order

Neuropsychologia, 1981
Abstract Because amnesic patients have great difficulty remembering the order in which events occur, anterograde amnesia has sometimes been considered to be a selective defect in this ability. The present study showed that temporal order information is fragile in normal subjects to the same extent as it is in amnesic patients. It is suggested that in
Pamela C. Slater   +5 more
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Anterograde amnesia induced by hyperthermia in rats.

Behavioral Neuroscience, 1987
Anterograde amnesia (AA), forgetting of events that occur following a traumatic episode, has recently been demonstrated by using a mild decrease in temperature (hypothermia) as the amnestic agent. However, no data currently exist to indicate if an increase in body temperature (hyperthermia) might affect memory processing in a similar manner ...
Stephen T. Ahlers, David C. Riccio
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Remote memory in chronic anterograde amnesia

Behavioral Biology, 1977
A marked impairment in the ability to recall events that occurred in recent years (1960–1975) was demonstrated by objective remote memory tests in a case of chronic anterograde amnesia (case N. A.). Prompted recognition of information about these events improved scores of the amnesic patient, but it improved scores of a matched control group to an even
Larry R. Squire   +3 more
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Anterograde Amnesia Linked to Benzodiazepines

The Nurse Practitioner, 1992
Benzodiazepines, shown to affect memory, can produce anterograde amnesia (i.e., a loss of memory for events occurring forward in time). Following the ingestion of a benzodiazepine, short-term memory is not affected, but long-term memory is impaired. The memory loss may occur because events are not transferred from short-term memory to long-term memory ...
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Transient global amnesia

Neurology, 1988
Five patients with transient global amnesia (TGA) were given neuropsychological tests during and after their episode. During TGA, all patients were impaired on tests of new learning ability for both verbal and nonverbal material. Retrograde amnesia was patchy and covered a variable period of time before the onset of the episode: from about 36 hours in ...
Joyce A. Zouzounis   +2 more
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Effects of Cholinergic Treatment on Posttraumatic Anterograde Amnesia

Archives of Neurology, 1982
• The combined effects of orally administrated physostigmine salicylate and lecithin were assessed in a double-blind study of a single patient with post-traumatic amnesia. Treatment improved verbal but not visual memory. But storage and retrieval of words in verbal memory were facilitated, with the former effect being more robust.
Louis J. Gerstman   +5 more
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Hippocampal contributions to recollection in retrograde and anterograde amnesia

Hippocampus, 2006
AbstractLesions restricted to the hippocampal formation and/or extended hippocampal system (hippocampal formation, fornix, mammillary bodies, and anterior thalamic nuclei) can disrupt conscious recollection in anterograde amnesia, while leaving familiarity‐based memory relatively intact. Familiarity may be supported by extra‐hippocampal medial temporal
Fuqiang Gao   +8 more
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Diminution of Anterograde Amnesia Following Electroconvulsive Therapy

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1974
The memory loss that follows a series of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) treatments has been well documented. The amnesia appears to involve an impairment in the ability to acquire new memories, an impairment of memory for events that occurred shortly before ECT (Dornbush, 1972; Williams, 1966), and an impairment in the ability to recall material from ...
Larry R. Squire, Patricia L. Miller
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SenseCam as a rehabilitation tool in a child with anterograde amnesia

Memory, 2011
We present the case of a 13-year-old boy, CJ, with profound episodic memory difficulties following the diagnosis of a metastatic intracranial germ cell tumour and subsequent treatment with radiotherapy and chemotherapy. At the core of this study is the first application of SenseCam to a child with severe memory impairment. CJ was taken for a walk while
Katalin Pauly-Takacs   +2 more
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