Objective: Even though the first awareness of confabulations is often based on observations, only questionnaires and structured interviews quantifying provoked confabulations are available. So far, no tools have been developed to measure spontaneous confabulation. This study describes and validates an observation scale for quantifying confabulation behavior, including spontaneous confabulations, in clinical practice.
Method: An observation scale consisting of 20 items was developed, the Nijmegen-Venray Confabulation List-20 (NVCL-20). This scale covers spontaneous confabulation, provoked confabulation, and memory and orientation. Professional caregivers completed the NVCL-20 for 28 Korsakoff (KS) patients and 24 cognitively impaired chronic alcoholics (ALC). Their ratings were related to the Dalla Barba Confabulation Battery (DBCB), Provoked Confabulation Test (PCT), and standard neuropsychological tests.
Results: The categories of the NVCL-20 have "good" to "excellent" internal consistency and inter-rater agreement. The KS patients confabulated more (both spontaneously and provoked), and more memory and orientation problems were observed. Correlations with neuropsychological test scores showed that confabulations were associated with memory deficits, but not with intrusions or tests of executive dysfunction.
Conclusions: The NVCL-20 is the first instrument that includes items addressing spontaneous confabulation. Administration is reliable, valid and feasible in clinical practice, making it a useful addition to existing confabulating measures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13854046.2015.1084377 | DOI Listing |
Cortex
June 2024
Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest Health Sciences, Canada; Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Canada; Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, Canada. Electronic address:
Humans perceive their personal memories as fundamentally true, and although memory is prone to inaccuracies, flagrant memory errors are rare. Some patients with damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) recall and act upon patently erroneous memories (spontaneous confabulations). Clinical observations suggest these memories carry a strong sense of confidence, a function ascribed to vmPFC in studies of memory and decision making.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
September 2023
King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, London SE5 8AF, UK.
This paper begins with a short case report of florid, spontaneous confabulation in a 61-year-old man with an alcohol-induced Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. His confabulation extended across episodic and personal semantic memory, as well as orientation in time and place, as measured on Dalla Barba's Confabulation Battery. Five other brief case summaries will then be presented, followed by a summary of the clinical, neurological, and background neuropsychological findings in three earlier series of Korsakoff patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci
January 2024
Department of Neurology, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, N.C., and Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, Salisbury VA Medical Center, Salisbury, N.C. (Bateman); Department of Neurology and Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston (Ferguson, Fox); Behavioral Neurology Section, Department of Neurology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora (Anderson, Arciniegas); Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque (Arciniegas); Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest Health Sciences and Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto (Gilboa); Department of Neurology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Va. (Berman).
Objective: Spontaneous confabulation is a symptom in which false memories are conveyed by the patient as true. The purpose of the study was to identify the neuroanatomical substrate of this complex symptom and evaluate the relationship to related symptoms, such as delusions and amnesia.
Methods: Twenty-five lesion locations associated with spontaneous confabulation were identified in a systematic literature search.
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