When a person experiences dissociative amnesia, one main type of memory is usually affected. which?

Dissociative amnesia is a type of dissociative disorder that involves inability to recall important personal information that would not typically be lost with ordinary forgetting. It is usually caused by trauma or stress. Diagnosis is based on history after ruling out other causes of amnesia. Treatment is psychotherapy, sometimes combined with hypnosis or drug-facilitated interviews.

In dissociative amnesia, the information lost would normally be part of conscious awareness and would be described as autobiographic memory.

Although the forgotten information may be inaccessible to consciousness, it sometimes continues to influence behavior (eg, a woman who was raped in an elevator refuses to ride in elevators even though she cannot recall the rape).

Dissociative amnesia is probably underdetected. Prevalence is not well-established; in one small US community study, the 12-month prevalence was 1.8% (1% in men; 2.6% in women).

The amnesia appears to be caused by traumatic or stressful experiences endured or witnessed (eg, physical or sexual abuse, rape, combat, genocide, natural disasters, death of a loved one, serious financial troubles) or by tremendous internal conflict (eg, turmoil over guilt-ridden impulses or actions, apparently unresolvable interpersonal difficulties, criminal behaviors).

Symptoms and Signs of Dissociative Amnesia

  • Localized

  • Selective

  • Generalized

Localized amnesia involves being unable to recall a specific event or events or a specific period of time; these gaps in memory are usually related to trauma or stress. For example, patients may forget the months or years of being abused as a child or the days spent in intense combat. The amnesia may not manifest for hours, days, or longer after the traumatic period. Usually, the forgotten time period, which can range from minutes to decades, is clearly demarcated. Typically, patients experience one or more episodes of memory loss.

Selective amnesia involves forgetting only some of the events during a certain period of time or only part of a traumatic event. Patients may have both localized and selective amnesia.

In generalized amnesia, patients forget their identify and life history—eg, who they are, where they went, to whom they spoke, and what they did, said, thought, experienced, and felt. Some patients can no longer access well-learned skills and lose formerly known information about the world. Generalized dissociative amnesia is rare; it is more common among combat veterans, people who have been sexually assaulted, and people experiencing extreme stress or conflict. Onset is usually sudden.

In systematized amnesia, patients forget information in a specific category, such as all information about a particular person or about their family.

In continuous amnesia, patients forget each new event as it occurs.

Most patients are partly or completely unaware that they have gaps in their memory. They become aware only when personal identity is lost or when circumstances make them aware—eg, when others tell them or ask them about events they cannot remember.

Patients seen shortly after they become amnestic may appear confused. Some are very distressed; others are indifferent. If those who are unaware of their amnesia present for psychiatric help, they may do so for other reasons.

Patients have difficulty forming and maintaining relationships.

Depressive and functional neurologic symptoms are common, as are suicidal and other self-destructive behaviors. Risk of suicidal behaviors may be increased when amnesia resolves suddenly and patients are overwhelmed by the traumatic memories.

Dissociative fugue

Dissociative fugue is an uncommon phenomenon that sometimes occurs in dissociative amnesia.

Dissociative fugue often manifests as

  • Sudden, unexpected, purposeful travel away from home

  • Bewildered wandering

Patients, having lost their customary identity, leave their family and job. A fugue may last from hours to months, occasionally longer. If the fugue is brief, they may appear simply to have missed some work or come home late. If the fugue lasts several days or longer, they may travel far from home, assume a new name and identity, and begin a new job, unaware of any change in their life.

Many fugues appear to represent disguised wish fulfillment or the only permissible way to escape from severe distress or embarrassment, especially for people with a rigid conscience. For example, a financially distressed executive leaves a hectic life and lives as a farm hand in the country.

During the fugue, patients may appear and act normal or only mildly confused. However, when the fugue ends, patients report suddenly finding themselves in the new situation with no memory of how they came to be there or what they have been doing. They often feel shame, discomfort, grief, and/or depression. Some are frightened, especially if they cannot remember what happened during the fugue. These manifestations may bring them to the attention of medical or legal authorities. Most people eventually recall their past identity and life, although recalling may be a lengthy process; a very few remember nothing or almost nothing about their past indefinitely.

Often, a fugue state is not diagnosed until patients abruptly return to their pre-fugue identity and are distressed to find themselves in unfamiliar circumstances. The diagnosis is usually made retrospectively, based on documentation of the circumstances before travel, the travel itself, and the establishment of an alternate life.

  • Clinical criteria

Diagnosis of dissociative amnesia is clinical, based on presence of the following criteria in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5):

  • Patients cannot recall important personal information (usually trauma- or stress-related) that would not typically be lost with ordinary forgetting.

  • Symptoms cause significant distress or significantly impair social or occupational functioning.

Diagnosis requires a medical and psychiatric examination to rule out other possible causes. Initial evaluation should include

  • MRI to rule out structural causes

  • EEG to rule out a seizure disorder

  • Blood and urine tests to rule out toxic causes, such as illicit drug use

Psychological testing can help better characterize the nature of the dissociative experiences.

Sometimes memories return quickly, as can happen when patients are taken out of the traumatic or stressful situation (eg, combat). In other cases, amnesia, particularly in patients with dissociative fugue, persists for a long time. The capacity for dissociation may decrease with age.

Most patients recover their missing memories, and amnesia resolves. However, some are never able to reconstruct their missing past.

The prognosis is determined mainly by the following:

  • The patient’s life circumstances, particularly stresses and conflicts associated with the amnesia

  • The patient’s overall mental adjustment

  • To recover memory, a supportive environment and sometimes hypnosis or a drug-induced semihypnotic state

  • Psychotherapy to deal with issues associated with recovered memories of traumatic or stressful events

If memory of only a very short time period is lost, supportive treatment of dissociative amnesia is usually adequate, especially if patients have no apparent need to recover the memory of some painful event.

Treatment for more severe memory loss begins with creation of a safe and supportive environment. This measure alone frequently leads to gradual recovery of missing memories. When it does not or when the need to recover memories is urgent, questioning patients while they are under hypnosis or, rarely, in a drug-induced (barbiturate or benzodiazepine) semihypnotic state can be successful. These strategies must be done gently because the traumatic circumstances that stimulated memory loss are likely to be recalled and to be very upsetting. The questioner must carefully phrase questions so as not to suggest the existence of an event and risk creating a false memory. Patients who were abused, especially during childhood, are likely to expect therapists to exploit or abuse them and to impose uncomfortable memories rather than help them recall real memories (traumatic transference).

The accuracy of memories recovered with such strategies can be determined only by external corroboration. However, regardless of the degree of historical accuracy, filling in the gap as much as possible is often therapeutically useful in restoring continuity to the patient’s identity and sense of self and in creating a cohesive life narrative.

Once the amnesia is lifted, treatment helps with the following:

  • Giving meaning to the underlying trauma or conflict

  • Resolving problems associated with the amnestic episode

  • Enabling patients to move on with their life

If patients have experienced dissociative fugue, psychotherapy, sometimes combined with hypnosis or drug-facilitated interviews, may be used to try to restore memory; these efforts are not always successful. Regardless, a psychiatrist can help patients explore how they handle the types of situations, conflicts, and emotions that precipitated the fugue and thus develop better responses to those events and help prevent fugue from recurring.

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What does dissociative amnesia mainly affect?

Dissociative amnesia disorder is a condition that causes memory loss. It often results from stress or trauma, and doctors diagnose it when they cannot link the amnesia to other causes, such as brain injury or dementia. People with dissociative amnesia may struggle to remember information about themselves.

What part of the brain is affected by dissociative amnesia?

Amnesia can result from damage to brain structures that form the limbic system, which controls your emotions and memories. These structures include the thalamus, which lies deep within the center of your brain, and the hippocampal formations, which are situated within the temporal lobes of your brain.

What is dissociative amnesia associated with?

Dissociative amnesia has been linked to overwhelming stress, which may be caused by traumatic events such as war, abuse, accidents or disasters. The person may have suffered the trauma or just witnessed it.

How does dissociation affect memory?

Dissociation is a disruption in the integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, and perception. Dissociative symptoms include derealization/depersonalization, absorption, and amnesia. These experiences can cause a loss of control over mental processes, including memory and attention.