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. 1998 Apr 28;95(9):5413–5416. doi: 10.1073/pnas.95.9.5413

Table 1.

All 11 cases of long-term visual memory loss found in the literature

Reference Etiology Damage Amnesia RA > AA Gradient
Brown and Chobor (37) CHI Bil. occ., R. front. Yes Yes No
O’Connor et al. (39) Encephalitis R. occ., par., front., MT, IT, AT Yes Yes No
Ogden (26) CHI Bil. occ. Yes Yes No
Trojano and Grossi (43) CHI Bil. occ., front, temp, MT, ∼IT Yes Yes No
Ratcliff and Newcombe (40) Encephalitis or CVA Bil. occ., par., MT, IT Yes Yes ?
Albert et al. (35) CVA Bil. occ. Yes No Yes
Gomori and Hawryluk (38) Cyst Bil. occ., IT Yes No Yes
Beyn and Knyazeva (36) CVA ? Yes ? ?
Shuttleworth et al. (41), case 2 CHI Bil. occ., MT Yes ? ?
Taylor and Warrington (42) Atrophy Bil. occ., ∼IT Yes ? ?
Wapner et al. (44) CVA L. occ., temp., MT Yes ? ?

The 11 cases listed met the three criteria for visual memory deficit. The five cases with RA > AA are listed first. CHI, closed-head injury; CVA, cerebrovascular accident; occ., occipital; par, parietal; front, frontal; temp, temporal; MT, possible medial temporal damage; IT, inferotemporal damage; AT, anterior temporal damage; RA > AA, is the retrograde amnesia reported as more severe than the anterograde amnesia; gradient, is there a temporal gradient; ?, case study provides no information; ∼, deficit is marginal or report is equivocal.