Results 161 to 170 of about 7,927 (200)
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Neurology, 1997
In a prospective study of 32 consecutive patients with homonymous visual field defects due to ischemic infarcts we found hemianopic anosognosia (HAN), defined as the unawareness of visual loss in the homonymous hemifield (or hemiquadrant), in 20 patients (62%).
G G, Celesia +2 more
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In a prospective study of 32 consecutive patients with homonymous visual field defects due to ischemic infarcts we found hemianopic anosognosia (HAN), defined as the unawareness of visual loss in the homonymous hemifield (or hemiquadrant), in 20 patients (62%).
G G, Celesia +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Archives of Neurology, 1964
Although a half century has passed since Babinski 1 described anosognosia for hemiplegia, a considerable difference of opinion as to its nature remains. One feature that as yet has not been explained adequately is the great predominance of patients with anosognosia for left hemiplegia over those in whom the right side of the body is involved.
E A, WEINSTEIN +3 more
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Although a half century has passed since Babinski 1 described anosognosia for hemiplegia, a considerable difference of opinion as to its nature remains. One feature that as yet has not been explained adequately is the great predominance of patients with anosognosia for left hemiplegia over those in whom the right side of the body is involved.
E A, WEINSTEIN +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Auditory agnosia with anosognosia
Cortex, 2021A 66-year-old right-handed female medical doctor suffered two consecutive cardioembolic strokes, initially affecting the right frontal lobe and the right insula, followed by a lesion in the left temporal lobe. The patient presented with distinctive phenomenology of general auditory agnosia with anosognosia for the deficit. She did not understand verbal
Maja Klarendić +5 more
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2003
Abstract Anosognosia refers to a state in which patients with brain injury deny their disabilities or lack awareness of their deficits. The relationship of anosognosia to other behavioral disorders is complex. Many authorities view the phenomenon as part of the spectrum of the neglect syndrome.
John C Adair +2 more
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Abstract Anosognosia refers to a state in which patients with brain injury deny their disabilities or lack awareness of their deficits. The relationship of anosognosia to other behavioral disorders is complex. Many authorities view the phenomenon as part of the spectrum of the neglect syndrome.
John C Adair +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Current Neurology and Neuroscience Reports, 2016
Progressive decline in memory (and other functions) is the defining feature of late-life dementia but affected individuals are often unaware of this impairment. This article reviews recent research on anosognosia in dementia, including methods of assessing anosognosia, its prevalence and developmental course in dementia, its occurrence in different ...
Robert S, Wilson +3 more
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Progressive decline in memory (and other functions) is the defining feature of late-life dementia but affected individuals are often unaware of this impairment. This article reviews recent research on anosognosia in dementia, including methods of assessing anosognosia, its prevalence and developmental course in dementia, its occurrence in different ...
Robert S, Wilson +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
1993
Abstract Anosognosia refers to a condition in which brain-injured patients deny or fail to acknowledge their deficits. The term was originally used to describe lack of awareness or recognition of hemiparesis (Babinski, 1914). Subsequent reports applied the term more broadly to unawareness of any neurological or neuropsychological deficit
John C Adair, Anna M Barrett
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Abstract Anosognosia refers to a condition in which brain-injured patients deny or fail to acknowledge their deficits. The term was originally used to describe lack of awareness or recognition of hemiparesis (Babinski, 1914). Subsequent reports applied the term more broadly to unawareness of any neurological or neuropsychological deficit
John C Adair, Anna M Barrett
openaire +1 more source
Anosognosia and Visuoverbal Confabulation
Archives of Neurology, 1994To examine the relationship between verbal confabulation and anosognosia for hemiplegia (AHP).We compared patients with right hemisphere lesions and AHP with a control group with right hemisphere lesions without anosognosia. Patients attempted visual identifications of objects exposed to the left hemifield with brief (condition 1) or prolonged ...
T E, Feinberg +4 more
openaire +2 more sources

