1987
DOI: 10.1016/s0010-9452(87)80030-8
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Neuropsychological Aspects Of Disorientation

Abstract: Patients were asked twelve orientation questions before ECT and during the recovery period (the postictal confusional state) following ECT. Disorientation was more severe in the elderly. The different orientation items did not recover simultaneously; different recovery times may enable patients to give responses that are logical contradictions. While certain models (e.g., "person" versus "place" versus "time") may be useful in describing the differential recovery of orientation items, other models based on mem… Show more

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Cited by 57 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…That is, the older a memory is, the more resistant it is to loss due to head injury. Although some researchers have used this "law" as a theoretical framework within which to present their findings (Albert, Butters, & Levin, 1979;Daniel, Crovitz, & Weiner, 1987;, it is more descriptive than explanatory. Ribot proposed no mechanism whereby this resistance to forgetting/disruption occurred.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…That is, the older a memory is, the more resistant it is to loss due to head injury. Although some researchers have used this "law" as a theoretical framework within which to present their findings (Albert, Butters, & Levin, 1979;Daniel, Crovitz, & Weiner, 1987;, it is more descriptive than explanatory. Ribot proposed no mechanism whereby this resistance to forgetting/disruption occurred.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Flat RA: Dall'Ora, Della Sala, & Spinnler (1989); Daniel, Crovitz, & Weiner (1987); R. Wilson, Kaszniak, & Fox (1981).…”
Section: Measurement Of Raunclassified
“…On the other hand, disorientation may be limited to one specific domain -space, time, or person (2, [36][37][38][39][40]. In addition, patients with traumatic brain injury or after electro-convulsive therapy regain their orientation gradually, from personal to spatial and temporal orientation (41,42) whereas patients with Alzheimer's disease typically lose orientation in time first, then in place, and then in person, suggesting that partially separate systems underlie orientation in each domain.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The absence of a beneficial effect of naloxone on the speed of orientation recovery was congruent with the findings regarding retrograde amnesia. There is evidence linking the magnitude and persistence of retrograde amnesia following ECT to the speed of postictal orientation recovery (Daniel et al 1987;Sobin et al 1995). Thus, the beneficial effects of high dose naloxone were restricted to aspects of cognitive performance assessed during the postictal period, and did not extend to memory for information learned just prior to ECT.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%