Literature DB >> 29050993

Psychological causes of autobiographical amnesia: A study of 28 cases.

Angelica Staniloiu1, Hans J Markowitsch2, Andreas Kordon3.   

Abstract

Autobiographical amnesia is found in patients with focal or diffuse brain damage ("organic amnesia"), but also without overt brain damage (at least when measured with conventional brain imaging methods). This last condition is usually named dissociative amnesia at present, and was originally described as hysteria. Classically and traditionally, dissociative amnesia is seen as a disorder that causes retrograde amnesia in the autobiographical domain in the aftermath of incidents of major psychological stress or trauma. In the present study one of the probably largest published collections of patients (28) with psychogenically caused autobiographical amnesia, who were assessed with comprehensive neuropsychological tests, will be described and documented in order to identify variables which are central for the occurrence of dissociative amnesia. The presented cases demonstrate that autobiographical amnesia without direct brain damage can have very mixed clinical presentations, causes and consequences. The described cases of psychogenic amnesia are clustered according to a number of manifestations and features, which include a reduced effort to perform cognitively at a normal level, a forensic background, anterograde (instead of retrograde) autobiographical amnesia, the fugue condition, concurrent somatic diseases, and their appearance in childhood and youth. It is concluded that autobiographical amnesia of a psychogenic origin may occur within a variety of symptom pictures. For all patients, it probably serves a protective function by offering them a mechanism to exit a life situation which appears to them unmanageable or adverse.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anterograde amnesia; Culture; Effort; Forensic context; Fugue; Mild traumatic brain injury; Stress

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29050993     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2017.10.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  4 in total

1.  United states of amnesia: rescuing memory loss from diverse conditions.

Authors:  Clara Ortega-de San Luis; Tomás J Ryan
Journal:  Dis Model Mech       Date:  2018-05-18       Impact factor: 5.758

2.  Natural recovery from long-lasting generalised dissociative amnesia and of cerebral blood flow.

Authors:  Nobuyuki Mitsui; Yuka Oyanagi; Yuki Kako; Ichiro Kusumi
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2019-12-11

Review 3.  The Return of the Repressed: The Persistent and Problematic Claims of Long-Forgotten Trauma.

Authors:  Henry Otgaar; Mark L Howe; Lawrence Patihis; Harald Merckelbach; Steven Jay Lynn; Scott O Lilienfeld; Elizabeth F Loftus
Journal:  Perspect Psychol Sci       Date:  2019-10-04

4.  Increased Pupil Size during Future Thinking in a Subject with Retrograde Amnesia.

Authors:  Claire Boutoleau-Bretonnière; Estelle Lamy; Mohamad El Haj
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-01-15
  4 in total

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