KMID : 0387420050160020287
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Korean Society of Oriental Neuropsychiatry 2005 Volume.16 No. 2 p.287 ~ p.299
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6 Clinical Reports of Temporary Severe Amnesia Patients -focusing on amnesia, hysteric convulsion, dissociative disorder
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Oh Young-Jin
Kim Bo-Kyung
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Abstract
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Dissociative disorder is a psychiatric disorder characterized by a sudden loss of memory, but which has no organic disease or explanation. It usually occurs after heavy psychosocial stress or traumatic experience. A transient cerebral ischemic attack (TIA) is an acute episode of temporary and focal loss of cerebral function of vascular origin. TIAs are rapid in onset; symptoms reach their maximal manifestation in fewer than 5 minutes. Manifestations are of variable duration and typically last 2-15 minutes(rarely as long as 24 h). Most TIA durations are less than 1 hour. Of concern is the careful detection of changes in behavior, speech, gait, memory, movement, and vision. TIAs are uncommon in persons younger than 60 years. I treat 6 cases of Sudden Temporary Amnesia Patients with oriental medicine and they are improved. All of them had amnesia for $6{\sim}10\;hours$. During that time, they show behavioral changes and they are not on the state of unconsciousness. After recovery, they also forget what happen at the time. they have some emotional reason too. In conclusion, 4 cases of them belong to dissociative disorder and 2 other cases, TIA.
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KEYWORD
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amnesia(ËíØÎ), Hysterical convulsion(ñéѨ), Dissociative disorder, TIA
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