Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Amnesia
Dissociative Amnesia
Semantic memory
• Memory of objects, facts, and concepts, including words and their meaning
• Ex: learning the skill of reading
Episodic memory
• Memory of specific events and their context
• Ex: the first day of school when I tried to read a book
Procedural memory
• Memory of how to perform different actions and skills
• Ex: riding a bike or tying shoes
Prevalence
Reported around 2 – 6% of general population
Neurobiological
Temporal-/hippocampal-
and occipital areas
associated with
autobiographical memory
are affected
Clinical Manifestation
Large groups of memories, Symptoms of memory loss
perceptions, and associated affects • Fragmentary recall of life history
• Unrecalled behaviour
have become unavailable, usually
• Unexplained possessions
relate to autobiographical information, • Inexplicable changes in relationships
for example: • Fluctuations in skills/habits/knowledge
• Who a person is • Not remembering people who describe
• What he or she did significant interactions with him/her
• Where he or she went • Brief lapses of memory during clinical
interview or other interactions
• With whom he or she spoke
• What was said
• What he or she thought and felt at the
time
Types of Amnesia
Localized amnesia
• Inability to recall events related to a circumscribed period of time
Selective amnesia
• Ability to remember some, but not all, of the events occurring during a circumscribed period
of time
Generalized amnesia
• Failure to recall one’s entire life
Continuous amnesia
• Failure to recall successive events as they occur
Systemic amnesia
• Failure to remember a category of information, such as all memories relating to one’s family ft
to a particular person
DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria
A. An inability to recall important autobiographical information, usually of a traumatic or
stressful nature, that is inconsistent with ordinary forgetting
C. The disturbance is not attributable to the physiological effects of a substance (e.g., alcohol
or other drug of abuse, a medication) or a neurological or other medical condition (e.g.,
partial complex seizures, transient global amnesia, sequelae of a closed head
injury/traumatic brain injury, other neurological condition).
Hypnosis
contain, modulate and titrate the intensity of symptoms, to facilitate recall,
provide support and ego strengthening
Group psychotherapy
Stress management