Amnestic disorders are one of the most common human memory disorders.
Amnesia Amnestic disorder is characterized by an impairment in the ability to store and recall memories. These disorders can be caused by a variety of factors, including injury, illness, and mental disorders. People with amnesia may forget names, faces and events in their lives, and may not remember important events such as the birth of children and achievements. Unlike other types of memory disorders, amnestic disorders can have various causes and consequences, to the point that a person may completely forget who he is and how to live. Amnesia may be accompanied by memory problems, such as forgetfulness or an inability to remember recently occurring events. Amnesia can be common, where a person forgets much of their life. A more serious form of amnesia is called anterograde amnesia, which occurs when a person loses the ability to remember new events after an incident. Anterograde amnesia often occurs after severe head injury, stroke, or brain surgery. In some cases it lasts a few days and has no serious long-term effects, but in others it can last a lifetime and lead to social isolation and depression. Negativistic amnesia Negative memory loss is a common type of memory loss. This occurs when the patient not only cannot remember who they are and what events happened, but also refuses to acknowledge their own disorder. This form of memory loss makes it difficult for patients to realize that their case has been going on for a long time, and often ends in frustration and a feeling of helplessness because they do not understand what is happening to them. Negative loss of consciousness is more common than memory loss in amnesia. The study found that patients who have negativistic memory loss can live as well as they did before the injury. However, the study showed that if a patient with negativistic amnesia finds himself in a stressful situation and again encounters traumatic memories, a relapse is possible.
Amnesia of a negativistic orientation is the inability to reproduce in memory certain events, facts, as well as features of one’s own behavior and reactions to circumstances related to the past. Amnesia is a mental disorder accompanied by the inability to exercise memory. Such people experience deteriorating thinking, spatial disorientation, loss of memory and other skills. The progression of this pathology without treatment can lead to serious consequences: immobilization and complete deautomation of the body.
Amnesia is negative and has a different nature: mental: * dissociative (schizoid); * psychogenic (psychogenic mental amnesia);