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Neuropsychiatry and Memory Disorders Clinic, Division
of Psychiatry and Psychology, United Medical and Dental Schools of
Guy's and St Thomas's Hospital, St Thomas's Campus, London, UK
Correspondence to: Dr M D Kopelman, Academic Unit of Psychiatry, United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy's and St Thomas's Hospital, St Thomas's Campus, Lambeth Palace Road, London SE1 7EH, UK.
Received 6 October 1997 and in revised form 28
May 1998;
Accepted 15 June 1998
OBJECTIVE
Previous studies have attributed
accelerated forgetting rates on recognition memory tasks to temporal
lobe pathology, but findings in some patient groups may have been
attributable to metabolic disruption. Findings in psychiatric disorders
such as schizophrenia are conflicting. The purpose of the present study was to compare forgetting rates in patients with confusional states (post-elecroconvulsive therapy (post-ECT), delirium), with those obtained in schizophrenic patients (with putative temporal lobe pathology), non-ECT depressed patients, and healthy controls. The
findings could also be compared with previous reports in patients with
head injury, focal structural lesions, and Alzheimer's dementia.
METHODS
Two studies employed a picture recognition
task to examine forgetting rates, the first between delays of 1 minute,
15 minutes, and 30 minutes, and the second between delays of 10 minutes, 2 hours, and 24 hours.
RESULTS
There were no significant differences in
forgetting rates between 1 minute and 30 minutes, but the ECT group
showed accelerated forgetting between 10 minutes and 2 hours compared
with healthy controls, associated with a rapid decline in "hit
rate". This was not attributable to differential changes in either
depression or severity of memory impairment. There were no differences
in forgetting rates across the other subject groups.
CONCLUSION
Post-ECT confusional state patients
(similarly to "within post-traumatic amnesia" patients with head
injury) show accelerated forgetting on a recognition memory task and,
in this, they contrast with patients who have focal structural lesions
or widespread cortical atrophy. Accelerated forgetting may reflect the
effect of disrupted cerebral metabolism on either "consolidation"
or memory "binding" processes.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. D. Kopelman Disorders of memory Brain, October 1, 2002; 125(10): 2152 - 2190. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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