Results 291 to 300 of about 64,470 (350)
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Hippocampal Amnesia

Neurocase, 2001
This article reviews 147 cases of amnesia following damage including the hippocampus or fornix as reported in 179 publications. The aetiology, mnestic abilities and reference(s) are tabulated for each case. Consistent findings across cases include the association of bilateral hippocampal damage with a deficit in anterograde episodic memory combined ...
H J, Spiers, E A, Maguire, N, Burgess
openaire   +2 more sources

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.
openaire   +1 more source

Retrograde amnesia

Hippocampus, 2001
In humans, the phenomenon of temporally graded retrograde amnesia has been described in the clinic and the laboratory for more than 100 years. In the 1990s, retrograde amnesia began to be studied prospectively in experimental animals. We identified 13 published studies in which animals were given equivalent training at two or more separate times before
L R, Squire, R E, Clark, B J, Knowlton
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RETROSPLENIAL AMNESIA

Brain, 1987
A 39-year-old man developed retrograde and anterograde amnesia following haemorrhage from an arteriovenous malformation situated near the splenium of the corpus callosum. MRI studies demonstrated damage to the splenium, and to a region containing the retrosplenial cortex and the cingulate bundle.
E, Valenstein   +5 more
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Amnesia

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1987
This paper describes the clinical features of selected examples of organic and psychogenic amnesia, and it discusses the nature of the dysfunction that these amnesias entail. The anterograde component of organic amnesia involves a severe impairment in acquiring (or learning) new information, rather than accelerated forgetting, and this may reflect an ...
Daniel B. Hier   +2 more
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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 ...
H B, Coslett   +3 more
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Two types of posthypnotic amnesia: Recall amnesia and source amnesia

International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 1966
Abstract Posthypnotic recall amnesia traditionally refers to Ss inability to recall, when challenged posthypnotically, the events which occurred during hypnosis. Posthypnotic source amnesia, only indirectly alluded to in the literature, occurs when S subsequently remembers the experiences of hypnosis, but has no recollection of acquiring the ...
F J, Evans, W A, Thorn
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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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Retrograde amnesia during transient global amnesia

Neurocase, 1996
Abstract 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.
openaire   +1 more source

Transient Global Amnesia

Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery, 1987
Transient global amnesia (TGA) is a transient, benign neurological syndrome, characterized by global loss of memory, preserved consciousness and self-awareness, associated with some behavioral changes (in particular, repetitive questioning). It generally resolves within 24 h.
openaire   +2 more sources

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