Athymhormic syndrome

Athymhormic syndrome

Athymhormic syndrome, or psychic akinesia, is a rare neurological syndrome characterized by extreme passivity, apathy, blunted affect, and a profound generalized loss of self-motivation and conscious thought. For example, a patient with this syndrome might sustain severe burns on contact with a hot stove, due to lacking the will to move away despite experiencing severe pain. The existence of such symptoms in patients after damage to certain structures in the brain has been used to support a physical model of motivation in human beings, wherein the limbic loop of the basal ganglia is the initiator of directed action and thought.[1]

The word Athymhormic is derived from the Greek (Greek: Thumos), which means mood or affect, and (Greek: Horme), which means impulse, drive, or appetite. First described by French neurologist Dominique Laplane in 1982 as ""PAP syndrome" (French: perte d'auto-activation psychique, or "loss of psychic autoactivation"), the syndrome is believed to be due to damage to areas of the basal ganglia or frontal cortex, specifically the striatum and globus pallidus, responsible for motivation and executive functions.[2] It may occur without any preexisting psychiatric condition.

Symptoms

It is characterized by an absence of voluntary motion without any apparent motor deficit, and patients often describe a complete mental void or blank. This is accompanied by reduced affect or emotional concern (athymhormy) and often by compulsions, repetitive actions, or tics. After stimulation from the outside, such as a direct command, the patient is able to move normally and carry out complex physical and mental tasks for as long as they are prompted to continue.

The symptoms may be differentiated from depression because depression requires the existence of sadness or negative thoughts, while athymhormic patients claim to have complete lack of thoughts, positive or negative.

See also

References

  1. ^ Habib, M. (2004). "Athymhormia and Disorders of Motivation in Basal Ganglia Disease [1]". The Journal of Neuropshychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences. 16 (4): 509–524. 
  2. ^ Bogousslavsky, J.; Cummings, J.L. (2000). Behavior and Mood Disorders in Focal Brain Lesions.[2]. Cambridge University Press.. 

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