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Query: UMLS:C0002622 (
amnesia
)
5,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 51-year-old man developed muscle weakness of the bilateral upper extremities, and mental changes beginning with
personality change
. There was no history of mental illness in his family. A neurological examination 1 year after the onset revealed muscle atrophy and fasciculation of his bilateral upper extremities Neuropsychological examination revealed concrete speech, paraphasia, and lack of judgment. Disorientation,
amnesia
, dyscalculia, and spatial agnosia, however, were not recognized. These neuropsychological findings were compatible with dementia of frontal lobe type. EMG and muscle biopsy revealed neurogenic muscular atrophy. There was no abnormal findings in the brain X-CT and the brain MRI. PET study using C15O2 and 15O2 revealed reduction of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2) in the bilateral medial frontal cortex, the left temporal cortex and the bilateral thalamus. From these these findings the patient was diagnosed as having motor neuron disease with dementia. Muscle atrophy and dementia worsened gradually. A second PET study 2 years and 6 months after the onset revealed severe reduction of CBF and CMRO2 in the bilateral temporal cortex and the thalamus. These PET findings suggested that dysfunction of the temporal cortex and the thalamus related to dementia in this case.
...
PMID:[A case of motor neuron disease with dementia--cerebral blood flow and cerebral oxygen metabolism]. 162 37
Survival from significant closed head injury (CHI) is frequently associated with cognitive defects, physical impairment,
personality change
, interpersonal difficulty and, in general, some degree of social dependence. Here we report a multidimensional assessment of quality of life of a sample of 131 male head-injury patients suffering a range of severities of insult with specific emphasis on vocational outcome. Of those patients who sustained a severe injury and were employed full-time prior to the CHI, only 55% were able to return to this level of employment. No differences were found between the moderate and severe groups in pre- or post-CHI occupational status, as measured by the Blishen (1967) quantitative social economic index, although both groups declined from pre- to post-CHI. Lower post-CHI occupational status was associated with lower GCS on admission and longer lengths of post-traumatic
amnesia
, with patient self-report of physical, cognitive and psychosocial difficulties, including spousal reports of confusion, belligerance, verbal expansiveness and the decreased ability to perform socially-expected activities. Stepwise multiple regression analysis accounted for 38% of variance in post-injury vocational status, with lower pre-injury vocational status, greater age, high physical and psychological difficulties and lower admission Glasgow Coma Scale score variables forming the regression equation. Implications are discussed in terms of rehabilitation issues, including vocational programming and planning.
...
PMID:Effects of mild, moderate and severe closed head injury on long-term vocational status. 233 48
We studied 11 patients with
amnesia
and
personality change
after surgical repair of ruptured anterior communicating artery ( ACoA ) aneurysm. CT and clinical evidence suggested that infarction in the territory of the ACoA was responsible for
amnesia
and
personality change
. The medial septal nuclei, the paraventricular nucleus of the anterior hypothalamus, and the medial forebrain bundle are the primary areas of potential interest in these cases. Gross infarction in the frontal lobes is not a requirement for the syndrome.
...
PMID:Amnesia after anterior communicating artery aneurysm rupture. 653 37
A close relative of 55 severely head injured adults rated the personality of the patient at 3, 6 and 12 months after injury, using a Yes/No judgement, and analogue scales comprising bipolar adjectives. The relative assessed the "current" as well as the "premorbid" personality at each time.
Personality change
was associated with many negative scores on the analogue scale, and increasing negative scores were associated with high "subjective burden" on the relative. Severity of injury (post-traumatic
amnesia
) was of no significance in predicting the extent or pattern of
personality change
.
...
PMID:Personality and behavioural change after severe blunt head injury--a relative's view. 684 46
We studied 8 patients with frontal or temporolimbic neoplasms who had psychiatric presentations to clarify diagnostic criteria for distinguishing psychiatric disease from structural brain lesions and to examine brain-behavior relationships associated with cerebral neoplasms using modern neuroimaging techniques. Medical records were retrospectively reviewed for evidence of neurobehavioral and neurologic manifestations, tumor histologic features, and the results of treatment. Clinical presentations were correlated with tumor location as determined by computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging. Patients with frontal lobe tumors presented with abulia,
personality change
, or depression, whereas those with temporolimbic tumors had auditory and visual hallucinations, mania, panic attacks, or
amnesia
. After treatment, neurobehavioral syndromes abated or resolved in 7 of 8 patients. We recommend that any patient 40 years of age or older with a change in mental state, cognitive or emotional, should have neuroimaging of the brain. Any patient with a psychiatric presentation who has specific neurobehavioral or neurologic findings or an unexpectedly poor response to psychopharmacologic treatment should also have brain imaging. These case reports extend and update observations on the importance of frontal and temporolimbic systems in the pathogenesis of neurobehavioral disorders.
...
PMID:Neurobehavioral presentations of brain neoplasms. 766 78
A case with splenial astrocytoma that showed various neuropsychological symptoms after disappearance of tumor due to chemo- and radiation therapies. A 40-year-old right-handed truck driver visited the Neurosurgical Clinic with complaints of memory disturbance and loosing his way during truck driving. Under diagnosis of protoplasmic astrocytoma chemotherapy and radiation treatments were carried out. These treatments were satisfactorily effective, but the patient showed marked memory deficits and
personality change
. He was hospitalized, therefore, into the Neuropsychiatric Clinic 20 months after the above mentioned treatments. Aside personality changes such as lack of inhibition and shameless acts, the patient showed interhemispheric disconnection symptoms (dyslexia in the left visual hemifield), memory deficits, and visual perceptual disturbances. His memory deficits consisted of anterograde and retrograde amnesia and disorientation of time and place, indicating that he had typical amnesic syndrome. In other words he had so-called retrosplenial
amnesia
. His visual perceptual deficits were impaired performance on many tasks already described as tests of visual perception.
...
PMID:[A case of splenial astrocytoma with various neuropsychological symptoms]. 829 68
We report a case with bilateral paramedian thalamic infarcts. The patient showed a dramatic
personality change
characterized by childish behavior and euphoria; which remained unchanged for 2 years after the onset. 'Vorbeireden' characterized by approximate answers was also observed. Anterograde amnesia had quite improved after 2 years, while retrograde amnesia for 1 year prior to the stroke onset and vertical gaze palsy remained unchanged. An MRI scan demonstrated bilateral medial thalamic and right midbrain infarcts without other lesions in the brain. A position emission tomography study showed that cerebral metabolic rate for glucose was markedly decreased in both thalami and in the cerebellum, and only slightly decreased in the parietal and occipital cortical regions. Cerebral metabolic rates of glucose in the frontal and temporal cortices were within normal range. The paramedian thalamic lesions per se may be responsible for the patient's
personality change
, 'Vorbeireden', and
amnesia
.
...
PMID:Persisting childish behavior after bilateral thalamic infarcts. 920 63
Ruptured and repaired anterior communicating artery (ACoA) aneurysm can result in devastating impairments involving memory, executive function, confabulation and
personality change
. Importantly, traditional cerebral areas implicated in
amnesia
are not damaged, yet
amnesia
can still be manifested. While ACoA patients show normal visual-constructional skills (i.e. copy scores) on the Rey-Osterrieth complex figure test, recall is often impaired. What is unclear is whether impaired recall is attributable to problems in encoding, accelerated rates of forgetting, retrieval or some combination. To disentangle these issues, we examined 10 patients with ruptured aneurysms of the ACoA, using the Rey-organizational and extended memory procedure which uses an organizational procedure for enhancing immediate recall and provides added sensitivity by combining recall with non-recall measures (e.g. recognition, spatial discrimination and spatial assembly). The major findings were: (i) immediate recall in amnesics was improved by providing an organizational strategy; (ii) following the organization trials, amnesics and non-amnesics retained information to a comparable extent over a 30-min delay; (iii) two subgroups of amnesics emerged, those subjects impaired in acquisition and a second group with impaired retrieval; (iv) all subjects showed preserved memory on non-recall measures. These findings have important implications with respect to using organizational strategies in cognitive treatments and in using non-recall measures in improving the validity and reliability of patient assessment.
...
PMID:Memory and executive functions in amnesic and non-amnesic patients with aneurysms of the anterior communicating artery. 921 85
An implicit question in every pre-hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) scenario is 'what will be the quality of life if a save is achieved?' This issue has implications for doctrine, policy, training and post-CPR counselling of both resuscitator and victim. Post-salvage neurological syndromes in surviving victims include
amnesia
,
personality change
, cognitive loss, depression, Parkinsonian syndromes, decorticate and decerebrate states and permanent brain damage with vegetative existence. Children who are salvaged by CPR rarely have pre-existing co-morbidities; but 75% of adults have pre-existing cardiac disease, cancer or diabetes. Such, of course, continue after a successful resuscitation. In the case of children who are resuscitated from acute hypoxic insults, the quality of life is generally good and, in the specific instance of survivors from near-drowning, some 95% will lead lives relatively unmodified. Although successful CPR resuscitation rates remain low in adults, the quality of life of those who leave hospital remains generally high. CPR involves two feature subjects, the resuscitator and the victim. Just as for the victim, so too the resuscitator's life is modified by CPR and its aftermath, whether immediate salvage has been achieved or not. This review addresses these issues, as a successful CPR (dramatic as it is) is not a conclusion but the beginning of a new phase of life for both resuscitator and victim.
...
PMID:Successful cardiopulmonary resuscitation outcome reviews. 1111 62
Personality changes
are not uncommon after paramedian thalamic infarction, but usually bilateral or relatively large lesions, often complicated by other neurological or neuropsychological deficits, are present. 'Pure' cases of unilateral lesions are extremely rare. We report that a right-handed, 48-year-old man, who was hypertensive and diabetic but had no prior psychiatric history, developed severe personality changes and a frontal-like syndrome after recovery from acute-onset impairment of consciousness at the age of 43. Other neurological and neuropsychological disturbances, especially verbal and visual
amnesia
, were unremarkable. MRI showed a very small infarct in the left paramedian area of the thalamus, mainly involving the dorsomedial nucleus.
...
PMID:Severe personality changes after unilateral left paramedian thalamic infarct. 1191 53
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