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Encoding in anterograde amnesia
Neuropsychologia, 1980Abstract Amnesic patients were induced to engage in semantic, phonemic or graphic encoding and were then assesed with a recognition memory test. Depressed patients receiving electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and the patient N.A. did more poorly than controls, but exhibited a similar pattern of performance including superior retention of semantically ...
Larry R. Squire, C. Douglas Wetzel
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Scopalamine-induced anterograde amnesia
International Journal of Neuropharmacology, 1967Abstract Forty rats were trained in a pole climbing ☐ under scopolamine (5 mg/kg) or placebo conditions. Groups were subdivided and tested for retention under scopolamine or placebo conditions. The learning curves of scopolamine trained rats indicates an impairment in rats of CR acquisition.
David R. Reed+2 more
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Cued recall in anterograde amnesia
Brain and Language, 1982Abstract After a single presentation of a word list, normal subjects exhibited better retention when prompted with semantic cues than with rhyme or letter cues. Alcoholic Korsakoff patients, patients receiving electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), and the patient N.A.
C. Douglas Wetzel+3 more
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A Teenager With Acute Anterograde Amnesia
Pediatric Emergency Care, 2018AbstractIsolated amnesia is an uncommon presenting complaint in the pediatric age group. We report the case of an 18-year-old woman who presented with the acute onset of memory difficulty and an otherwise normal neurologic examination. Brain magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated inflammation in the bilateral temporal lobes.
Richard G. Bachur+2 more
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Is anterograde amnesia a special case of retrograde amnesia?
Behavioral Neuroscience, 1983In anterograde amnesia, memory loss is obtained for events that occur subsequent to the traumatic insult. But because the effects of an anterograde agent or treatment usually last for minutes, or even hours, after the nominal training event, processing of information may be altered during the postacquisition period as well as during acquisition.
David C. Riccio+2 more
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[Psychogenic Retrograde and Anterograde Amnesia].
Brain and nerve = Shinkei kenkyu no shinpo, 2018Patients with dissociative retrograde amnesia, under the influence of high stress, lose access to past autobiographical event memories that should have been remembered. Patients with dissociative anterograde amnesia cannot recall extremely emotional experiences.
Haruo Yoshimasu+2 more
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Anterograde amnesia and memory for temporal order
Neuropsychologia, 1981Abstract Because amnesic patients have great difficulty remembering the order in which events occur, anterograde amnesia has sometimes been considered to be a selective defect in this ability. The present study showed that temporal order information is fragile in normal subjects to the same extent as it is in amnesic patients. It is suggested that in
Pamela C. Slater+5 more
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Anterograde amnesia induced by hyperthermia in rats.
Behavioral Neuroscience, 1987Anterograde amnesia (AA), forgetting of events that occur following a traumatic episode, has recently been demonstrated by using a mild decrease in temperature (hypothermia) as the amnestic agent. However, no data currently exist to indicate if an increase in body temperature (hyperthermia) might affect memory processing in a similar manner ...
Stephen T. Ahlers, David C. Riccio
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Remote memory in chronic anterograde amnesia
Behavioral Biology, 1977A marked impairment in the ability to recall events that occurred in recent years (1960–1975) was demonstrated by objective remote memory tests in a case of chronic anterograde amnesia (case N. A.). Prompted recognition of information about these events improved scores of the amnesic patient, but it improved scores of a matched control group to an even
Larry R. Squire+3 more
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Anterograde Amnesia Linked to Benzodiazepines
The Nurse Practitioner, 1992Benzodiazepines, shown to affect memory, can produce anterograde amnesia (i.e., a loss of memory for events occurring forward in time). Following the ingestion of a benzodiazepine, short-term memory is not affected, but long-term memory is impaired. The memory loss may occur because events are not transferred from short-term memory to long-term memory ...
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