Dokumentanzeige
- Gredos Startseite
- Wissenschaftliches Repository
- Departamentos
- Ciencias Sociales
- Departamento Psicología Básica, Psicobiología y Metodología de las Ciencias del Comportamiento
- DPBPMCC. Artículos del Departamento de Psicología Básica, Psicobiología y Metodología de las Ciencias del Comportamiento
- Dokumentanzeige
- Gredos Startseite
- Wissenschaftliches Repository
- Departamentos
- Ciencias Sociales
- Departamento Psicología Básica, Psicobiología y Metodología de las Ciencias del Comportamiento
- DPBPMCC. Artículos del Departamento de Psicología Básica, Psicobiología y Metodología de las Ciencias del Comportamiento
- Dokumentanzeige
Compartir
Título
Generalized anosognosia, anosodiaphoria, and visual hallucinations with bilateral enucleation after severe bifrontal brain injury: a case report describing similarities with and differences from Anton syndrome
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Anton syndrome
Anosognosia
Anosodiaphoria
Agnosia visual
Enucleation
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
Springer
Citación
Rodríguez, G., Azariah, A., Ritter, A. M., Esquenazi, Y., Sherer, M., Boake, C., Fernandez, V. L., & Garcia-Garcia, R. (2024). Generalized anosognosia, anosodiaphoria, and visual hallucinations with bilateral enucleation after severe bifrontal brain injury: a case report describing similarities with and differences from Anton syndrome. Neurological Sciences, 45(6), 2769-2774. https://doi.org/10.1007/S10072-024-07323-Z
Resumen
[EN]Visual anosognosia, associated with confabulations and cortical blindness in the context of occipital lobe injury, is known as Anton syndrome. Patients with this syndrome strongly deny their vision loss and confabulate to compensate for both visual loss and memory impairments. In this article, we present a case of a patient with some similarities to Anton syndrome, however, with several differences in clinical presentation. Bifrontal brain injury, bilateral enucleation, affective indifference (anosodiaphoria), generalized anosognosia, and the conviction that vision will resume mark clear clinical differences with Anton syndrome. Differentiating these findings from Anton syndrome will help occupational therapists, neuropsychologists, speech-language pathologists, physical therapists, and physicians when assessing frontal lobe brain injury with total and partial visual loss. This case demonstrates that visual anosognosia and confabulations can occur without occipital lobe dysfunction or cortical blindness
URI
DOI
10.1007/s10072-024-07323-z
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones













