Prev
Next
Failure to recognize one's own functional impairment
Inability to identify objects by touch using the contralateral hand (called Astereognosis when both hemispheres/hands affected)
Lack of will or initiative; inability to act or make decisions independently
Partial paralysis often resulting from an injury to the spinal cord that does not result in its severation
Inability to properly move the muscles of the tongue and mouth to produce speech; involves articulation, not word finding or grammar
Whole body spasms
Rapid eye movements
Constant pacing or an inability to sit still
Slow movements, indifference to stimuli, constricted emotions
Deficits in writing, calculating, left-right disorientation, and finger-naming
Belief that a familiar person has been replaced by an imposter who has an identical or similar appearance
Loss in ability to perform motor acts
Loss of the ability to create new memories after the event that caused the amnesia
Characterized by reduced fear and aggression; hyperphagia; hypersexuality; hyperorality; and visual agnosia
Insertion of inappropriate objects in the mouth
Over-eating
General inability to recognize objects, persons, sounds, shapes, or smells while the specific sense is not defective
Comments