Results 271 to 280 of about 134,064 (294)
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DIENCEPHALIC AMNESIA

Brain, 1990
Abstract The anatomical basis and cognitive profile of diencephalic amnesia remain unclear. We report a two-part study. First, we studied four patients with bilateral medial thalamic infarctions using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and comprehensive neuropsychological testing. All patients were followed for more than one year.
N R, Graff-Radford   +3 more
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Amnesia

Southern Medical Journal, 1978
Amnesia is a common clinical problem characterized by four features: (1) normal immediate recall, (2) impaired ability to learn, (3) relatively spared ability to retrieve previously learned material, and (4) preserved cognitive and personality characteristics.
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Milk of Amnesia Leche de Amnesia

TDR (1988-), 1995
When I became a citizen, I had to throw my green card into a bin along with everybody else's green cards. I didn't want to. I was born on an island. I came here when I was seven. I didn't like it here at first. Everything was so different. I had to change. Acquire a taste for peanut butter and jelly. It was hard. I liked tuna fish and jelly.
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Whiplash amnesia

Neurology, 1982
A 67-year-old woman was in the front seat of a stopped car that was struck from the rear by a truck. She was wearing a seat belt, and it was observed that her head did not strike the windshield. She immediately became amnesic and recovered in 72 hours. It is postulated that the transient amnesia was the result of a whiplash insult to the brain.
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Frontal Verbal Amnesia

Archives of Neurology, 1991
Although aphasic patients with frontal lobe damage may demonstrate impaired retention of verbal material, significant anterograde memory disturbances have not, to our knowledge, been reported with a minor Broca's aphasia. We describe a patient with minor Broca's aphasia who exhibited an unusual and profound anterograde memory disturbance, especially ...
Mieke Verfaellie   +3 more
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Amnesia and driving

Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 2007
Two experienced drivers who developed severe amnesia due to bilateral hippocampal lesions participated in a series of standardized challenges of driving performance and knowledge of driving rules. During drives in a high fidelity simulator and on the road in an instrumented vehicle, they demonstrated vehicle control similar to that of normal drivers on
Hanna Damasio   +6 more
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Memory and amnesia

Behavioural Brain Research, 1995
Brain damage can cause several distinct disorders of explicit memory as well as several disorders of implicit memory. Organic amnesia is the best studied explicit memory disorder. It is a syndrome that can be caused by lesions in (a) the medial temporal lobes, (b) the midline diencephalon, or (c) the basal forebrain.
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Amnesia and the hippocampus

Current Opinion in Neurology, 2006
Long-term memory impairments have great medical significance and a considerable health and economic burden. Understanding their cognitive and neuroanatomical underpinnings is of crucial importance. Severe amnesia is usually observed following bilateral hippocampal pathology.
Chris M. Bird, Lisa Cipolotti
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Thalamic Amnesia Mimicking Transient Global Amnesia

The Neurologist, 2015
Transient 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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Ictus and Amnesia

1968
Disturbances of memory commonly accompany series of therapeutically induced or spontaneous convulsions. Much scientific attention has been devoted to these phenomena, particularly in psychiatric patients receiving electroshock treatment. These investigations have shown that postictal memory loss is not greatly influenced by premedications, the ...
Iver F. Small, Joyce G. Small
openaire   +3 more sources

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