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Título
Generalized and visual anosognosia, Anosodiaphoria after bifrontal injury: symptom length and cognitive outcomes after one year from first report documented
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Visual anosognosia
Generalized anosognosia
Anton syndrome
GAAB syndrome
Brain injury
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
Taylor and Francis Group
Citación
Rodríguez, G., Azariah, A., Quoilin, M., Garcia-Garcia, R., Ladera Fernandez, V., Boake, C., Meurgue Ritter, A., & Gonzalez, A. (2025). Generalized and visual anosognosia, Anosodiaphoria after bifrontal injury: symptom length and cognitive outcomes after one year from first report documented. Brain Injury, 39(1), 35-38. https://doi.org/10.1080/02699052.2024.2396018
Resumen
[EN]Importance: GAAB Syndrome was recently discovered and coined by Rodríguez, Azariah, Ritter, et al..
(2024). It is characterized by bifrontal brain injury, visual pathway damage involving bilateral enucleation,
generalized and visual anosognosia and lack of emotional processing with visual anosognosia being
more prominent in the clinical presentation of the patient given the context of bilateral enucleation. The
syndrome was not explained by delirium nor by amnesia, not either by multiple shunt adjustments or
psychological denial. Objective: To describe the clinical presentation and syndrome length of the patient
one year after injury. Results show that most of the syndrome symptoms are resolved after nine months,
with just visual anosognosia not resolving completely. The patient improved cognitively as shown by the
same tests one year later.
URI
DOI
10.1080/02699052.2024.2396018
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