Abstract

During the past 100 years clinical studies of amnesia have linked memory impairment to damage of the hippocampus. Yet the damage in these cases has not usually been confined to the hippocampus, and the status of memory functions has often been based on incomplete neuropsychological information. Thus, the human cases have until now left some uncertainty as to whether lesions limited to the hippocampus are sufficient to cause amnesia. Here we report a case of amnesia in a patient (R.B.) who developed memory impairment following an ischemic episode. During the 5 years until his death, R.B. exhibited marked anterograde amnesia, little if any retrograde amnesia, and showed no signs of cognitive impairment other than memory. Thorough histological examination revealed a circumscribed bilateral lesion involving the entire CA1 field of the hippocampus. Minor pathology was found elsewhere in the brain (e.g., left globus pallidus, right postcentral gyrus, left internal capsule), but the only damage that could be reasonably associated with the memory defect was the lesion in the hippocampus. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of amnesia following a lesion limited to the hippocampus in which extensive neuropsychological and neuropathological analyses have been carried out.

Keywords

AmnesiaHippocampusAnterograde amnesiaLesionRetrograde amnesiaMemory impairmentPsychologyNeuroscienceNeuropsychologyTransient global amnesiaMemory disorderBrain damageMedicineCognitive disorderCognitive impairmentCognitionCognitive psychologyPsychiatry

MeSH Terms

AmnesiaBrain IschemiaCerebral CortexDiencephalonHippocampusHumansMaleMemory DisordersMiddle AgedTemporal Lobe

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Publication Info

Year
1986
Type
article
Volume
6
Issue
10
Pages
2950-2967
Citations
2001
Access
Closed

Citation Metrics

2001
OpenAlex
34
Influential
1434
CrossRef

Cite This

Stuart Zola‐Morgan, LR Squire, DG Amaral (1986). Human amnesia and the medial temporal region: enduring memory impairment following a bilateral lesion limited to field CA1 of the hippocampus. Journal of Neuroscience , 6 (10) , 2950-2967. https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.06-10-02950.1986

Identifiers

DOI
10.1523/jneurosci.06-10-02950.1986
PMID
3760943
PMCID
PMC6568782

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%