Volume 27, Issue 2 p. 91-95

Prosopo-Affective Agnosia Associated with Chronic Organic Brain Syndrome

JANOS KURUCZ MD

Corresponding Author

JANOS KURUCZ MD

Adjunct Professor, Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry

Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, Queens Village, NY

Chief of Psychiatry, Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, Queens Village, NY 11427

Department of Clinical Sciences, St. John's University, Flushing, NY

Department of Psychiatry, State University of New York at Stony Brook, NY.

Northeast Florida S. H., Macclenny, FL 32063.Search for more papers by this author
GABRIEL FELDMAR MA

GABRIEL FELDMAR MA

Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, Queens Village, NY

Psychologist, Department of Research and Evaluation, Creedmoor Psychiatric Center.

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WILLIAM WERNER MD

WILLIAM WERNER MD

Director

Creedmoor Psychiatric Center, Queens Village, NY

Creedmoor Psychiatric Center; Honorary DSc, St. John's University.

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First published: February 1979
Citations: 55

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Impairment of the ability to recognize facially expressed emotions was studied in 14 chronically disoriented patients with chronic organic brain syndrome (CBS). This impairment was named prosopo-affective agnosia (PAA). A diagnostic requirement was relatively intact neurologic functioning in underlying perceptual-verbal-motor processing. A test was designed for facial-affect recognition in the accurate differentiation of normal persons from chronically disoriented CBS patients. No normal subject made any errors in this test. Despite decades of illness and hospital living, patients with a history of schizophrenia or major affective disorders scored almost at a normal level (95 vs. 100 percent) in this test, and significantly higher (95 vs. 66 percent) than did the disoriented CBS patients. The social and therapeutic implications of the findings are stressed. CBS patients may be impaired with respect to receiving and appreciating elementary aspects of social communications such as recognizing a smile, anger, sadness or disapproval on the faces of people who surround them. This disability requires understanding and a special attitude on the part of the therapeutic team toward such patients.