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  1. Research Outputs

Consciousness and Dementia: How the Brain Loses Its Self

Chapter
Publication Date:
2009
Short description:
Consciousness and Dementia: How the Brain Loses Its Self / P., Pietrini; E., Salmon; Nichelli, Paolo Frigio. - STAMPA. - (2009), pp. 204-216. [10.1016/B978-0-12-374168-4.00016-2]
abstract:
Consciousness is based on the ability to rapidly integrate information and requires the optimal functioning of neural networks widely distributed between the thalami and the whole cortical mantle. Neurodegenerative processes that occur in dementing disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal dementia and Lewy Body Disease, lead to a progressive disruption of the brain functional and anatomical connectivity that sustains complex mental activity in the human brain. Not only different dementia syndromes affect the brain in differentways but also patients with the same disease may show distinctive clinical features. By combining clinical, neuropsychological and functional brain imaging studies in selected patients, scientists are gaining new insights on the cerebral bases of conscious mental activity and of the neural events that make awareness of the surrounding world and of ourselves to dissolve.
Iris type:
Capitolo/Saggio
Keywords:
Consciousness; Dementia; Alzheimer; Positron Emission Tomography
List of contributors:
P., Pietrini; E., Salmon; Nichelli, Paolo Frigio
Authors of the University:
NICHELLI Paolo Frigio
Handle:
https://iris.unimore.it/handle/11380/592072
Book title:
The Neurology of Consciousness
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