Article Text
Abstract
Acute-onset amnesia is a dramatic neurological presentation that can cause considerable concern to both patient and clinician. The patient typically presents with an inability not only to retain new memories but also to access previously acquired memories, suggesting disturbance of hippocampal function. Transient global amnesia (TGA) is the most common cause of acute-onset amnesia, and is characterised by a profound anterograde and retrograde amnesia that typically lasts for up to 24 hours. Although TGA has a strikingly stereotypical presentation, it can be challenging to distinguish from other causes of acute-onset amnesia, including posterior circulation strokes, transient epileptic amnesia, psychogenic amnesia, post-traumatic amnesia, and toxic/drug-related amnesia. Here, we describe the general approach to the patient with acute amnesia; summarise the clinical and neuropsychological differences between the potential causes; and, provide practical recommendations to aid diagnosis and management of acute amnesia. Regardless of cause and the dramatic presentation, non-ischaemic acute-onset amnesia generally has a favourable prognosis.
- amnesia
- stroke
- epilepsy
- cognitive neuropsychology
- MRI
Data availability statement
No data are available.
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Data availability statement
No data are available.
Footnotes
Contributors The manuscript was desgined by TM and CB. The authors contributed to drafting and revision of the manuscript for intellectual content.
Funding TDM is supported by the Wellcome Trust (2229/Z/21/Z).
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; externally peer reviewed by Adam Zeman, Exeter, UK, and John Baker, Truro, UK.
Linked Articles
- Editors’ commentary
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Transient epileptic amnesia: a description of the clinical and neuropsychological features in 10 cases and a review of the literature
- Transient global amnesia: implicit/explicit memory dissociation and PET assessment of brain perfusion and oxygen metabolism in the acute stage
- Transient epileptic amnesia
- The dynamic time course of memory recovery in transient global amnesia
- Episodic memory in transient global amnesia: encoding, storage, or retrieval deficit?
- Classical diseases revisited: transient global amnesia
- Transient semantic amnesia: a new syndrome?
- Autobiographical amnesia and accelerated forgetting in transient epileptic amnesia
- 002 Clinical varieties of memory disorders
- Confused after spirometry: a unifying diagnosis