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The amnesia of transient global amnesia
Journal of Clinical Neuropsychology, 1980abstract A patient was tested during and following an episode of transient global amnesia. During the episode, the patient displayed a profound anterograde amnesia which spared short-term memory. There was also a retrograde amnesia which was transient and which involved recent material but not memory for events and persons that became famous between ...
Mark P. Kelly+2 more
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Journal of Neuroscience Nursing, 1989
Transient global amnesia is a benign, self-limiting disorder primarily involving a disturbance of memory. It occurs in late middle and older aged adults. Patients with this syndrome do not have a history of head trauma, drug or alcohol intoxication, hypoglycemia or psychologic dysfunction.
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Transient global amnesia is a benign, self-limiting disorder primarily involving a disturbance of memory. It occurs in late middle and older aged adults. Patients with this syndrome do not have a history of head trauma, drug or alcohol intoxication, hypoglycemia or psychologic dysfunction.
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Transient Global Amnesia in Migraine
Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 1979SYNOPSISThe clinical features of five migraine patients, suffering one to several episodes of transient global amnesia (TGA), were evaluated. All patients were women, with an age range of 34 to 67 years. One patient had common, and four, classical migraine.
Olivarius, B D, Jensen, T S
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2014
Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a sudden and severe anterograde memory disturbance accompanied by various degrees of retrograde amnesia and sometimes executive dysfunction. TGA affects elderly individuals and men and women equally. During the episode, patients cannot recall novel episodic information and therefore repeatedly ask the same questions ...
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Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a sudden and severe anterograde memory disturbance accompanied by various degrees of retrograde amnesia and sometimes executive dysfunction. TGA affects elderly individuals and men and women equally. During the episode, patients cannot recall novel episodic information and therefore repeatedly ask the same questions ...
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Transient global amnesia and migraine
The Italian Journal of Neurological Sciences, 1988Formal neuropsychological evaluation in patient with transient global amnesia (TGA) associated with migraine was performed 6 days and 17 months after the episode. Verbal learning difficulties and verbal IQ deficit were observed in line with the neuropsychological profile seen in the follow-up of TGA.
CAFFARRA, Paolo+3 more
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Neurologic Clinics, 2011
Transient global amnesia syndrome was initially described more than a century ago. Although the clinical syndrome is easily recognized and highly consistent in its characteristic features, the underlying pathophysiology has remained elusive. Proposed mechanisms include focal ischemic lesions or local nonischemic energy failures.
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Transient global amnesia syndrome was initially described more than a century ago. Although the clinical syndrome is easily recognized and highly consistent in its characteristic features, the underlying pathophysiology has remained elusive. Proposed mechanisms include focal ischemic lesions or local nonischemic energy failures.
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Retrograde amnesia during transient global amnesia
Neurocase, 1996Abstract Two patients who met Hodges' clinical criteria for transient global amnesia (TGA) were given anterograde and retrograde memory tests during and after the attack. A SPECT scan was performed during TGA in one case, showing a reduced blood flow confined to the bilateral medial temporal lobes, which resolved on the next day.
N. Yamada+6 more
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Neuroimaging in transient global amnesia
Practical Neurology, 2013A 68-year-old woman presented following an episode of witnessed sudden-onset memory loss after lifting a heavy plant while gardening. Her husband's description of the event suggested that there was retrograde and anterograde amnesia with repetitive questioning. Speech, motor function and vision were unaffected.
Pooja Dassan+3 more
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Thalamic Amnesia Mimicking Transient Global Amnesia
The Neurologist, 2015Transient global amnesia is a benign syndrome and one of the most frequent discharges from the emergency department that can hardly be distinguished from other mimicking diseases. No consensus in the evaluation of transient global amnesia has yet been found in the emergency setting.We describe a 69-year-old woman who presented to our emergency ...
Giannantoni N. M.+9 more
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