Case 7 - Amnesia Flashcards
Anterograde Amnesia (AA):
Impaired recall and recognition of recent episodic and semantic information, suggesting a problem in acquiring new long-term memories.
Retrograde Amnesia (RA):
Impaired recall and recognition of information experienced before brain damage, indicating a deficit in retrieving pre-trauma memories.
Clinical causes of amnesia:
Strokes: Infarctions or aneurysm rupture, especially in the anterior communicating artery.
Chronic Alcoholism (Korsakoff’s Syndrome): Damage to the midline diencephalon due to thiamine deficiency.
Head Injury: Frequent in blunt and penetrating traumas, often leading to frontal lobe damage.
Viral/Bacterial Brain Diseases: Damage to medial temporal lobes; exemplified by Clive Wearing’s case.
Hypoxia and Toxins: Resulting in damage to medial temporal lobes.
Neurosurgery: Especially for epilepsy.
Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer’s Disease: Memory disorders but not strictly amnesia.
Preserved Functions in Amnesia:
Intelligence: Often unaffected, suggesting relatively normal encoding of incoming information.
Working Memory: Typically preserved; phonological loop and visuospatial scratchpad remain intact.
Perceptual Processing: Generally normal.
Attention: Usually unaffected.
Skill Learning: Preserved in many amnesiacs.
Conditioning: Preserved in most cases.
Dual Process Model of Recognition Memory:
Recognition and familiarity are separate processes manipulated by different stimulus variables.
Detecting and Measuring Amnesia:
Standard Neuropsychological Protocol includes orientation, working memory, immediate and delayed memory (recall and recognition), semantic memory, and remote memory.
Selective Amnesia:
A form of amnesia where some aspects of explicit memory are spared while others are impaired, like selective deficit in recall, recollection, or familiarity.
Memory and the Medial Temporal Lobe (MTL):
The MTL structures, including hippocampus, perirhinal, entorhinal, and parahippocampal cortices, are critical for episodic and recognition memory.
MTL Functional Heterogeneity:
Agreed upon, but specific contributions of each structure in recognition memory remain unconfirmed.
Determinants of Heterogeneity:
(a) Inputs each structure receives.
(b) Processes each structure carries out.
Complex MTL System:
A functionally heterogeneous hierarchical system with diverse memory types.
CRAFT - Convergent Recollection and Familiarity Theory:
MTL model combining lesion data, fMRI, computational models, and input/cytoarchitectonics information.
Testing CRAFT:
Lesion studies, especially with patients having selective lesions, are crucial for testing the model.
Case Study: YR
YR, with focal hippocampal damage, displayed normal intelligence but impaired associative memory, recollection, item memory, and familiarity.
Associative vs. Item Memory:
While associative memory depends on recollection and involves the hippocampus, the relationship between item memory and the hippocampus is not straightforward.