{"title":"病感失认症病史。","authors":"Guido Gainotti","doi":"10.1159/000494954","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Even if Babinski (1914) is usually considered as the discoverer of anosognosia, other authors before him contributed to the development of this construct. Von Monakow (1885) and Dejerine and Vialet (1893) gave the first descriptions of patients with cortical blindness who were unaware of their disability, but did not distinguish this unawareness from the rest of the clinical description. Anton (1999) described patients with cortical deafness and cortical blindness, considering these defects of awareness as a symptom independent from the neurological dysfunction. He conceptualized them as a phenomenon in its own right and tried to link this unawareness of a disability with specific neuro-anatomical changes. Finally, Babinski (1914) coined the term \"anosognosia\" to designate the clinical entity conceptualized by Anton (1899) and extended this concept from the unawareness of cortical deafness and blindness to the unawareness of hemiplegia. The choice of the term \"anosognosia\" to denote the observed phenomenon was important, because referring to \"lack of knowledge of the disease\" (anosognosia), he not only emphasized the separation between \"lack of knowledge\" and \"disease, \" but also suggested a general use of this term, because disease can refer to many other disabilities besides hemiplegia. Further investigations have shown that: (a) brain-damaged patients may be unaware of different kinds of disabilities; (b) anosognosia can be selective, in that an affected person with multiple impairments may be unaware of only one handicap, while appearing fully aware of any others; and (c) lack of acknowledgment of a disease may not necessarily be due to a defective awareness, but must sometimes be considered as an extreme but understable pattern of adaptation to stress. For this condition, the term \"Denial of Illness\" seems preferable to that of anosognosia. Anosognosia must perhaps be viewed as a multifaceted phenomenon, resulting from both cognitive and motivational factors.","PeriodicalId":35285,"journal":{"name":"Frontiers of Neurology and Neuroscience","volume":" ","pages":"75-82"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1159/000494954","citationCount":"7","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"History of Anosognosia.\",\"authors\":\"Guido Gainotti\",\"doi\":\"10.1159/000494954\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Even if Babinski (1914) is usually considered as the discoverer of anosognosia, other authors before him contributed to the development of this construct. Von Monakow (1885) and Dejerine and Vialet (1893) gave the first descriptions of patients with cortical blindness who were unaware of their disability, but did not distinguish this unawareness from the rest of the clinical description. Anton (1999) described patients with cortical deafness and cortical blindness, considering these defects of awareness as a symptom independent from the neurological dysfunction. He conceptualized them as a phenomenon in its own right and tried to link this unawareness of a disability with specific neuro-anatomical changes. Finally, Babinski (1914) coined the term \\\"anosognosia\\\" to designate the clinical entity conceptualized by Anton (1899) and extended this concept from the unawareness of cortical deafness and blindness to the unawareness of hemiplegia. The choice of the term \\\"anosognosia\\\" to denote the observed phenomenon was important, because referring to \\\"lack of knowledge of the disease\\\" (anosognosia), he not only emphasized the separation between \\\"lack of knowledge\\\" and \\\"disease, \\\" but also suggested a general use of this term, because disease can refer to many other disabilities besides hemiplegia. Further investigations have shown that: (a) brain-damaged patients may be unaware of different kinds of disabilities; (b) anosognosia can be selective, in that an affected person with multiple impairments may be unaware of only one handicap, while appearing fully aware of any others; and (c) lack of acknowledgment of a disease may not necessarily be due to a defective awareness, but must sometimes be considered as an extreme but understable pattern of adaptation to stress. For this condition, the term \\\"Denial of Illness\\\" seems preferable to that of anosognosia. 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引用次数: 7
摘要
即使巴宾斯基(Babinski, 1914)通常被认为是病感失认症的发现者,在他之前的其他作者也为这一概念的发展做出了贡献。Von Monakow(1885)和Dejerine and Vialet(1893)首次对皮质性失明患者进行了描述,他们不知道自己的残疾,但没有将这种不知道与其他临床描述区分开来。Anton(1999)描述了皮质性耳聋和皮质性失明的患者,认为这些意识缺陷是独立于神经功能障碍的症状。他将其视为一种现象,并试图将这种对残疾的无知与特定的神经解剖学变化联系起来。最后,Babinski(1914)创造了“病感失认症”一词来指代Anton(1899)提出的临床实体概念,并将这一概念从皮质性耳聋和失明的无意识扩展到偏瘫的无意识。选择“病感失认”一词来表示观察到的现象是很重要的,因为在提到“对疾病缺乏了解”(病感失认)时,他不仅强调了“缺乏了解”和“疾病”之间的区别,而且还建议普遍使用这个术语,因为疾病可以指除偏瘫以外的许多其他残疾。进一步的调查显示:(a)脑损伤患者可能不知道不同种类的残疾;(b)病感失认症可以是选择性的,因为患有多种障碍的患者可能只意识不到一种障碍,而似乎完全意识到其他任何障碍;(c)对疾病缺乏认识不一定是由于认识有缺陷,但有时必须被视为对压力的极端但不稳定的适应模式。对于这种情况,术语“否认疾病”似乎比病感失认更合适。病感失认症可能是一个多方面的现象,由认知和动机因素共同导致。
Even if Babinski (1914) is usually considered as the discoverer of anosognosia, other authors before him contributed to the development of this construct. Von Monakow (1885) and Dejerine and Vialet (1893) gave the first descriptions of patients with cortical blindness who were unaware of their disability, but did not distinguish this unawareness from the rest of the clinical description. Anton (1999) described patients with cortical deafness and cortical blindness, considering these defects of awareness as a symptom independent from the neurological dysfunction. He conceptualized them as a phenomenon in its own right and tried to link this unawareness of a disability with specific neuro-anatomical changes. Finally, Babinski (1914) coined the term "anosognosia" to designate the clinical entity conceptualized by Anton (1899) and extended this concept from the unawareness of cortical deafness and blindness to the unawareness of hemiplegia. The choice of the term "anosognosia" to denote the observed phenomenon was important, because referring to "lack of knowledge of the disease" (anosognosia), he not only emphasized the separation between "lack of knowledge" and "disease, " but also suggested a general use of this term, because disease can refer to many other disabilities besides hemiplegia. Further investigations have shown that: (a) brain-damaged patients may be unaware of different kinds of disabilities; (b) anosognosia can be selective, in that an affected person with multiple impairments may be unaware of only one handicap, while appearing fully aware of any others; and (c) lack of acknowledgment of a disease may not necessarily be due to a defective awareness, but must sometimes be considered as an extreme but understable pattern of adaptation to stress. For this condition, the term "Denial of Illness" seems preferable to that of anosognosia. Anosognosia must perhaps be viewed as a multifaceted phenomenon, resulting from both cognitive and motivational factors.
期刊介绍:
Focusing on topics in the fields of both Neurosciences and Neurology, this series provides current and unique information in basic and clinical advances on the nervous system and its disorders.