Apraxia Associative Bongeffer

**Bonneff's associative apraxia** is a type of motor disorientation in which the patient cannot make the desired movement if the idea of ​​the movement is mixed with the idea of ​​a foreign object. This can be illustrated by the following example: a patient suffering from apraxia of associative Bonneff, the following instruction: “raise the table.” If the patient is watching a picture of a door in the background, he may be disoriented and will not understand what action to take, even if this instruction appears in front of him.

Origins of the disease

Apracesia Bonneff association or apachesia is a violation of higher mental functions: thinking, perception, emotional-volitional processes, which is not associated with pathology of the motor sphere and other mental functions. Classification according to the severity of affective disorders is ambiguous - from an erased, smoothed neurological state with a mild degree of severity of personality deviations to a personality-abnormal form.

The term was first introduced by the German psychiatrist Sigismund Zukunft-Tylevich. This factor results in patients with apraxic Bonnesse being able to perform simple tasks but having significant difficulty performing more complex tasks.