Anerograde Amnesia In Memento

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Introduction The film titled, Memento (Todd & Nolan, 2001), follows a man named Leonard Shelby. Shelby suffers from a lack of short term memory, causing him to relive daily experiences. Throughout the film, Leonard narrates the events of his wife 's assault and the trauma caused to him by the attackers. Due to his lack of short term memory, Leonard needs to take photos and write down everything that occurs in his life in order to assure himself the memory occurred. The condition only allows him to live the present, but not register it, meaning his lack of short term memory does not allow him to form new memories, which is considered a form of anterograde amnesia due to head trauma.
History
Before Leonard suffered his trauma, he led a fairly normal life as an insurance investigator who would "pick out the bulshit claims". He was a married man who worked and paid his dues as a husband. Leonard 's job entailed him investigating homes, but he often just let the homeowners do the talking while he examined their body language, in many cases catching them in their own lies. The day Leonard 's wife was assaulted in his home, he killed one of the assailants, but not before the other caused irreversible …show more content…

Patients had hippocampal lesion formations which were associated with the severe anterograde amnesia. The study found that the severity of injury to the hippocampus determined whether patients developed amnesia or not. This associates with Leonard 's injury, in order for Leonard to suffer from anterograde amnesia, the attacker must have hit him hard enough on the head to cause damage to the hippocampus and the frontal lobe. In the scene where Leonard attacks the assailants, he is struck in the front of the head, thus explaining the damage to the frontal lobe and the amplified damage to the hippocampus, located in the center of the

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