Publications by authors named "C T Anterion"

Article Synopsis
  • - Neurodevelopmental disorders are common and can persist throughout life, often being concealed by coping strategies, making them frequently overlooked in adults, even if diagnosed in childhood.
  • - These disorders can interact with neurodegenerative disorders, suggesting that a holistic view during memory clinic assessments can enhance our understanding of a patient's cognitive path through life.
  • - To improve diagnostic accuracy and develop personalized care, it's essential to consider both neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative factors in assessing each individual's unique neurocognitive trajectory.
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Background And Aims: Diabetes and impaired fasting glucose, as well as cognitive impairment, are common in the elderly. Although several cross-sectional studies have demonstrated the influence of diabetes on cognitive impairment, only a few longitudinal studies have assessed the relationship between diabetes, impaired fasting glucose and cognitive decline in non-demented elderly community dwellers, by means of extensive neuropsychological batteries. The present study assesses the relationship between baseline diabetes, impaired fasting glucose (IFG) and 2- year evolution of memory, attention and executive performance in a sample of non-demented elderly subjects.

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Background: Previous studies have assessed the relationship between subjective cognitive complaints and objective impairment. While some of them found that cognitive complaints were explained by affective disorders, other researches found a relationship between cognitive complaints and neuropsychological performance. Most of them focused on memory functioning.

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Public events and Flashbulb memories were investigated in 12 non-demented patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and 12 controls. Knowledge of public events and flashbulbs memories were assessed using a Famous Events Test (EVE 30). Contributions of semantic, episodic, as well as executive functioning and anterograde memory were examined.

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We describe a patient who developed acute reversible amnesia characterized by impaired recollection of past events with preserved anterograde memory. This occurred after a mild head trauma and in the context of occupational stress. Isolated retrograde amnesia affected autobiographical memory (with lost of identity lasting a few days) and semantic knowledge.

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