Lost in the Present: Anterograde Amnesia and Medical Decision Making Capacity

  • McKelvie J
  • Pierce C
  • Dunn T
  • et al.
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Abstract

Although there have been a limited number of case reports of human bilateral hippocampal injury, none of these have addressed the impact of such injuries on medical decision making capacity. The authors present a case of an elderly man with discrete bilateral hippocampal injury. As a result of his injury, the patient was hopelessly " lost in the present " and only retained the basic cognitive functions necessary to have decision making capacity for a limited period of time. He was unable to appreciate the nature of his injury, the potential risks involved in his decisions, and the recommended course of treatment longer than a few minutes. The patient's resultant neu-rocognitive deficits left him lacking medical decision making capacity, a likely outcome for patients with persis-tent anterograde amnesia.

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APA

McKelvie, J., Pierce, C. A., Dunn, T. M., Weintraub, P., & House, R. M. (2014). Lost in the Present: Anterograde Amnesia and Medical Decision Making Capacity. Open Journal of Medical Psychology, 03(01), 54–59. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojmp.2014.31007

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