Memory
Loss and M.E./CFS/CFIDS
Index
Memory Loss
Research on Memory Loss
IQ Isn't Everything!
Few of the more Interesting Findings
Unscrambling Your Thought Process
How to Improve Your Memory
Cognitive Problems with CFS
Memory
Loss
Taken from
the MEssenger dated April 1992 by Tina Harvey, Editor
In its most complete form, memory implies a capacity to recall events and
experiences that belong to a person's past life. Somehow by a process,
not fully understood, our lifetime is recorded in our brain. It is also
crucical for survival.
Our pattern of existence depends upon memory. What we smell, see, hear,
touch and taste becomes a memory in our brain. Our brain interprets the
world around us using past perceptual activity thus ensuring survival by
optimizing success and avoiding failure. Memory is often a reconstruction
of events and forgetting can occur minutes after learning something new.
hese imperfections must be balanced with losses that can occur because
of fatigue, depression, aging, stress, head injury, illness, alcohol, drug
abuse, etc. When an individual experiences these losses or changes, the
consequences can be alarming.
Research with
computerized assessment of memory and dementia has indicated that memory
loss in M.E. patients was far greater and more specific than initially
assumed. It is the loss of memory, and the intellectual ineffeciency that
follows, that is the most difficult for M.E. patients to accept. Patients
complain that decisions that were once easily made, now have becaome an
insurmountable chore and can be a source of prcrastination. Thoughts get
lost in mid-sentence and blank spots replace missing words. There are feelings
of mental fogginess and mental lethargy.
Even when the physical symptoms of M.E. are in remission, this memory and
concentration loss persists and is often invisible to friends and physicians.
It produces disappointment, frustration and depression. To some it can
be more devastating than a doctor's busy receptionist.
Because of this cognitive dysfunction that most patients experience during
the course of their illness, I have decided to devote a large part of this
issue to memory loss. Part II of the Second Annual Los Angles CFIDS conference
on Current Theory, Treatment and Patient Advocacy in memory impairments
will be presented. Drs. Bastien and Sandman both present evidence
for the involvement of the left temporal lobe in memory disorder.
To quote Dr.Curt Sandman"The cognitive problems of CFIDS are unique,
difficult to diagnose, and a challenge for rehabilitation". In this
issue and the next, Dr. Tarras G. Onischenko presents different strategies,
tasks, theories and games - a cognitive rehabilitation - for patients with
ME/CFIDS/CFS. I will be putting these up later.
As promised
, the finding of hormonal deficiencies found in ME patients, summarized
in a Backgrounder report, are presented here.
HORMONAL DEFICIENCES FOUND IN
CFS
My Emotions with CFS Section delves into the emotions
surrounding chronic fatigue - emotions which all of you have experienced
in whole or in part. However, because of the length of the major points
introduced in this issue, I have not been able to include a section on
Alternative/Complementary Medicine. I plan on continuing it in future issues.
SEE EMOTIONS WITH CFS
Research
on Memory Loss
Second Annual
Los Angeles CFIDS Conference - Research on Memory Loss
Current Theory,
Threatment and Patient Advocacy - Part II Held on May 18-19, this conference
was coordinated and sponsored in part by Jay. A. Goldstein, M.D. This issue
will address the frequent complaints of poor memory and difficulty concentrating,
and then provide a few suggestions on how to overcome these problems. Reproduced
from Fibromyalgia Network (October 1991)
Index
IQ isn't Everything!
Few of the more Interesting Findings
Unscrambling Your Thought Process
IQ
Isn't Everything!
Some say that
the memory impairment in CFIDS patients is non-existent. It's just a smoke
screen for depression, anxiety or whatever problems ails them. But there
were at least two presenteres at the Los Angeles conference who chose to
ignore this claim.
Psychologist Shelia Batien, Ph.D, of Bereley, CA said that she would like
to dispute the recent Canadian study that attempted to show no impairment
in CFS patients' IQ. "I think it depends on what you're looking for".
Then she explained that the IQ test consists of a battery of individual
exams designed to measure several different areas of brain function, such
as verbal and visual recall, spacial perception and other performance skills.
While patients may excel in some areas, they blunder in others. When the
individual tests are plotted on a graph, Bastien says it looks "saw
toothed", with the average value (the IQ score) being within the normal
range.
All of the 85 CFIDS patients in Dr. Bastien's study met the CDC criterai
for this conditon. The clinical and laboratory data for this group will
soon be published in The Annuals of Clinical Medicine due to the collaborative
efforst of well-known researchers Daniel Peterson, M.D., Paul Chaney, M.D.,
Anthony Komaroff, M.D., and others. 71% were women, 77% were college educated
and 57% were professionals or had held high level management positions.
Few of the more interesting
findings:
* Verbal recall was poor
* Visual discrimination was below normal, which means that patients didn't
scan efficiently. "They would be looking at something and not really
see it".
* Spacial perception reasoning was not what it should be. This means that
the individuals may be troubled by the simple task of putting together
blocks into a form-board square when blind-folded.
* Dyscalia was a problem. "Over 50% of the patients couldn't subtract
$7.18 from $15.00" remarked Baetein.
* Patients gave a poor performance on the Draw-A-Person test in which patients
are asked a person. "Some of these drawings look like they were done
by a three or four year old. There was a gross immaturity or drawing, lack
of details, omition of body parts, large or flat heads, scribbled fingers
and sometimes no clothing."
According to Bastien, veral memory is mediated by the left temporal lobe
while visual memory is more likely to be facilitated by the right temporal
lobe. Based on this knowledge of brain function, she concludes that the
left temporal lobe is more significantly impaired than the right side.
This happens to coincide with two other brain imaging studies (BEAM and
SPECT) mentioned in the April 91 issue. (The BEAM test results showed no
difference between FM and CFIDS patients).
"The Draw A Person test", says Bastien, "is valid for it's
organic indicators or right parietal lobe dysfunction". And the lack
of motor skills required to place blocks into foam board square when blind-folded
may hint at a problem in the left temporal lobe.
Summarizing her studies, Dr. Bastien said, " The pattern of impairment
is consistent across the study group, although the levels may vary. It's
not the pattern seen in Alzheimer's disease, head injury, PMS, lupis, anxiety,
personality disorder of situational stress....The most affected areas are
the left temporal, right parietal and left frontal lobes of the brain".
Another study by psycholigist Cur Sandman, Ph.D, of The University of California
at Irvine says "On conventional standardized testing of IQ, CFIDS
patients may do as well as normal controls". However, Sandman has
developed a series of tests that are more sensitive to memory disorders
in general. They can identify problems that may not be picked up on the
IQ score alone.
"CFIDS patients do well to retreive everything that they store in
their brain", says Sandman, "but they just don't seem to get
it all". In other words, they encounter difficulties in making memories
and interference or distractions can further compound this problem. "Many
CFIDS patients can't recall 3 letters after 10 seconds of interference!"
And when it comes to measuring how much information a person can store
before they get confused, "CFIDS patients suffer terribly as the amount
of information that they have to remember increases".
"If there is something wrong with the memory,", Sandman reasoned,
"there should be something wrong with the brain". Sandman has
evaluated the computerized EEG results from 12 CFIDS patients using loud
sounds as stimuli. This test is designed to objectively measure short term
memory function and decision making. Although the study sample was small,
the EEGs were different from normal controls and Sandman hypothesized that
both the temporal lobe and hippocampus (part of the limbic system) are
involved in this disorder.
UNSCRAMBLING YOUR THOUGHT
PROCESS
Drs Bastien and Sandman have both discussed the memory
problems faced by CFIDS patients in a laboratory environment. But,
how can these impairments relate to daily activities?
Pychologist Linda Iger, Ph.D., of Anaheim Hills, CA, says that patients
may get lost or confused when they go to large shopping malls. "This
happens because they are barraged with too much visual information, both
in the background and foreground". The same problem may crop up when
a person attempts to read a page from a book. All those words jump out
of the page at you and it's easy to loose track of where you are at."
"To improve your ability to remember what you are reading, it is best
to focus on what is being read," said Iger. Then she held up a post
card with a 2" wide by 1/4" tall slit cut out of the center and
suggested that patients use such a device to help highlight the section
of words currently being read.
Building upon Dr.Iger's example for reading, patients should make a conscious
effort to filter out the crowd of faces, the bright lights and other distractions
typically encountered in public places such as shopping malls.
As silly as it may sound, those funky looking, then-slit visors that were
popular in the 60's may come in handy for the FM/CFIDS impaired.
In order to record in your memory important items - free of surrounding
static - Sandman says, "You have to do something to amplify the input
to get your attention to register better". This seems like sound advice,
given that most patients are bothered by fatigue that staying alert is
a major task for them. Yet, how does a person go about amplifying the information
that they need?
SEE HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR MEMORY BELOW
How
to Improve Your Memory
In order to
record in your memory important items - free of surrounding static - Sandman
says, "You have to do something to amplify the input to get your attention
to register better". This seems like sound advice, given that most
patients are bothered by fatigue that staying alert is a major task for
them. Yet, how does a person go about amplifying the information they need?
To answer this question, Sandman used the analogy of rats in a maze.
"Throw a cat into the maze of rats and they'll find the way out much
faster"!
This form of jogging the mental processes can work, but may become exhausting
after repeated use. However, the concept of amplifying the stimuli (which
is what the cat does) is certainly valid.
The hippocampus portion of the brain is known to be involved in Alzheimer's
and it is speculated to be involved in CFIDS. "The hippocampus is
very vulnerable to disease", comments Sandman. In additon, "it's
responsive to the environment and highly sensitive to experience".
For example, if you can associate a new acquaintance's name or face
with someone that you already know, you will be more likely to remember
them.
Associating new input with old experiences isn't the only way you can improve
your memory. According to Dr. Iger, you can also make things tand
out by associating them with color, size, shape or proximity. If
you have trouble remembering where you parked your car at the super market,
make a mental note that it's on the left or right hand side of the store
entrance, or that it's near a pole, a tree or other object in the parking
lot.
It is also important to trim down tasks, comments Iger. By doing so, you
can improve your capacity to remember. For example, break down a street
number, such as 1740 into 17 and 40. And if you just happen to be 40 years
old, this latter number can be linked with something already learned to
increase your liklihood of remebering it.
Restructuring the way in which you store information can require a lot
of effort on your part. And, it can be as frustrating as a six year old
in first grade learning how to read for the first time. So, while you're
training your brain to see things in a different light, take full advantage
of writing information down and posting notes for yourself (Post-it pads
are great for this). You'll eventually get the hang of it.
If you are still searching for tips on how to improve your memory, Drs.Sandman
and Iger just published articles on this subject in the August 91 issue
of Physician's Forum - put out by the CFIDS Association. The cost of this
issue is only $6.00 in the US and can be ordered from the Association at:
P.O.220398, Charlotte, NC 28222.
What
types of cognitive dysfunction are associated with CFS?
CFS patients
commonly report one or more symptoms of cognitive dysfunction, including
confusion, difficulty in concentrating, impaired thinking, and forgetfulness.
Patients often regard these symptoms among the most debilitating features
of CFS. This information was taken from the CFS Home Page.
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