Amnesia

Amnesia is loss of memory caused by brain damage, disease, or mental injury. Amnesia can likewise be caused temporarily by the utilization of different sedatives and sleep inducing drugs. The memory can be either wholly or partially lost due to the extent of damage caused. There are two categories of amnesia: retrograde amnesia and anterograde amnesia. Retrograde amnesia is the inability to recover information that was procured before a specific date, more often than not the date of accident or operation. At times the memory loss can reach out back decades, while in others the individual may lose just a couple of long term memory. Anterograde amnesia is the failure to exchange new data from the transient store into the long haul store. Individuals with this kind of amnesia can't recollect things for long period of time. These two kinds are not fundamentally unrelated; both can happen simultaneously.


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