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History of Anosognosia

2019
Even if Babinski (1914) is usually considered as the discoverer of anosognosia, other authors before him contributed to the development of this construct. Von Monakow (1885) and Dejerine and Vialet (1893) gave the first descriptions of patients with cortical blindness who were unaware of their disability, but did not distinguish this unawareness from ...
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THE SYNDROME OF ANOSOGNOSIA

Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry, 1950
WHILE accounts of cases of anosognosia1have mainly concerned descriptions of patients who have denied the existence of left hemiplegia and blindness, there have been reported many instances of denial or unawareness of other defects. Schilder,2Von Hagen and Ives,3Nielsen and Ives,4Nielsen,5Olsen and Ruby,6Sandifer7and Rosenbaum8recorded cases of denial ...
E A, WEINSTEIN, R L, KAHN
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Pontine anosognosia for hemiplegia

Neurology, 1999
Four patients had anosognosia for hemiplegia (AHP) as a manifestation of pontine infarction in the mediolateral region. Patients with AHP syndrome had no mental and neuropsychologic disturbances, and all had involvement of the medial or lateral part of the pons (medial or lateral pontine reticular nuclei).
Evyapan, D, Kumral, E
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Anosognosia during Wada testing

Neurology, 1992
Anosognosia, the verbally explicit denial of hemiplegia, is more often reported after right- than left-hemisphere lesions. However, this asymmetric incidence of anosognosia may be artifactual and related to the aphasia that often accompanies left-hemisphere lesions.
R L, Gilmore   +4 more
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Anosognosia in Alzheimer Disease

Alzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders, 1995
This study evaluated Alzheimer disease (AD) patients' awareness of impairment in several domains, including cognitive, psychiatric, and behavioral functioning. Ratings made by 13 patients with moderate to moderately severe probable AD were compared with ratings made by their relatives using the Cognitive Behavior Rating Scales (Williams et al., 1985 ...
S, Kotler-Cope, C J, Camp
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Negative Emotions and Anosognosia

Cortex, 2005
Patients with anosognosia fail to acknowledge, or feel distressed by, their disability. Given the recent suggestion that right (frontal) systems are selectively involved in negative emotions, it might be claimed that anosognosia results from a disruption in negative emotions.
Oliver H, Turnbull   +2 more
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Anosognosia in neurodegenerative disease

Neurocase, 2011
Patients with neurological disorders are often partially or completely unaware of the deficits caused by their disease. This impairment is referred to as anosognosia, and it is very common in neurodegenerative disease, particularly in frontotemporal dementia.
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Anosognosia

2022
Jehkonen Mervi, Nurmi Laura
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Anosognosia in Parietal Lobe Syndrome

Consciousness and Cognition, 1995
Patients with right parietal lesions often deny their paralysis (anosognosia), but do they have "tacit" knowledge of their paralysis? I devised three novel tests to explore this. First, the patients were given a choice between a bimanual task (e.g., tying shoe laces) vs a unimanual one (e.g., threading a bolt).
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Anosognosia for Hemiplegia: Patient Retrospections

Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 1996
Various competing hypotheses have been put forth to explain how it is possible for patients to be unaware of their own profound weakness. We investigated whether patients' retrospections after resolution of their anosognosia along with their clinical features are consonant with these hypotheses.
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