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Long term memories are those that last
for years or even decades. Long term memory differs structurally and
functionally from short term and working memory. Short term memories
move into long term memory via the process of long-term potentiation,
the process of strengthening the connections between existing neurons
to improve the effectiveness of their communication. Long term
memories fade as part of the natural forgetting process, which
increases with age, stress and illness. Serious loss of long term
memory, however, is the result of either traumatic brain injury or a
neurodegenerative disease.
Traumatic
brain injury: Depending on what part of the brain has been
affected, the ability to remember tastes, smells, appearances, or
sounds may be affected. A head injury that causes swelling in the
brain reduces the brain's ability to process incoming information.
Additionally, once such incoming information is processed and stored
in the appropriate area of the brain, the brain may have difficulty
retrieving the information when needed. If you suffer from traumatic
injury to the head and forget where you had been or what you had been
doing for a few days before the accident, you suffer from retrograde
amnesia.
Neurodegenerative
Disease: the most prevalent neurodegenerative diseases that cause
memory loss are Alzheimer’s Disease, Dementia, Huntington’s
Disease, Multiple Sclerosis and Parkinson’s Disease. Although none
of these conditions act specifically on memory, memory deterioration
is a casualty of general cognitive decline.
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