Title of article
Awareness, dreaming and unconscious memory formation during anaesthesia in children
Author/Authors
Andrew J. Davidson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
15
From page
415
To page
429
Abstract
Recent studies have reported an incidence of awareness in children of around 1%, while older studies reported incidences varying from 0% to 5%. Measuring awareness in children requires techniques specifically adapted to a childʹs cognitive development and variations in incidence may be partly explained by the measures used. The causes and consequences of awareness in children remain poorly defined, though a consistent finding is that many children do not seem distressed by their memories. There are, however, some published reports of persistent psychological symptoms after episodes of childhood awareness. Compared to explicit memory, implicit memory is more robust in young children; however there is no evidence yet for implicit memory formation during anaesthesia in children. Children less than 3 years of age do not form explicit memory, although toddlers, infants and even neonates have signs of consciousness and implicit memory formation. In these very young children the relevance of awareness remains largely unknown.
Keywords
memory , children , Consciousness , Awareness
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Anaesthesiology
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Anaesthesiology
Record number
465148
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