Anterograde amnesia: Difference between revisions

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imported>Robert Badgett
(New page: In neurology, '''anterograde amnesia''' is "loss of the ability to form new memories beyond a certain point in time. This condition may be organic or psychogenic in origin. Organically...)
 
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz
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In [[neurology]], '''anterograde amnesia''' is "loss of the ability to form new memories beyond a certain point in time. This condition may be organic or psychogenic in origin. Organically induced anterograde amnesia may follow craniocerebral trauma; [[seizure]]s; anoxia; and other conditions which adversely affect neural structures associated with memory formation (e.g., the [[hippocampus]]; [[fornix]] (brain); [[mammillary body|mammillary bodies]]; and anterior [[thalamic nucleus|thalamic nuclei]])."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>
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In [[neurology]], '''anterograde amnesia''' is "loss of the ability to form new memories beyond a certain point in time. This condition may be organic or psychogenic in origin. Organically induced anterograde amnesia may follow craniocerebral trauma; [[seizure]]s; anoxia; and other conditions which adversely affect neural structures associated with memory formation (e.g., the [[hippocampus]]; [[fornix]] (brain); [[mammillary body|mammillary bodies]]; and anterior [[thalamic nucleus|thalamic nuclei]])."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>


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Latest revision as of 08:44, 27 March 2009

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In neurology, anterograde amnesia is "loss of the ability to form new memories beyond a certain point in time. This condition may be organic or psychogenic in origin. Organically induced anterograde amnesia may follow craniocerebral trauma; seizures; anoxia; and other conditions which adversely affect neural structures associated with memory formation (e.g., the hippocampus; fornix (brain); mammillary bodies; and anterior thalamic nuclei)."[1]

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