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Psychosis

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Psychosis explained
Approximately three in 100 people will experience a psychotic episode at some point in their life. Some people only experience a few episodes of psychosis or a brief episode that lasts for a few days or weeks.

 


Psychosis (Schizophrenia)
What is schizophrenia?
The world of people with schizophrenia
Are people with schizophrenia likely to be violent?
What about suicide and schizophrenia?
What are the causes of schizophrenia?

Psychosis: Sarah's story
Sarah, 19, describes her experience of psychosis. Find out how early help from local services can help young people who live with mental illness.
Psychosis versus psychopath ...

Psychosis
Related Category: Psychology and Psychiatry
(sk´ss), in psychiatry, a broad category of mental disorder encompassing the most serious emotional disturbances, often rendering the individual incapable of staying in contact with reality.

Psychosis
Contributing risk factors
Psychosis: Overview
There are a number of psychological disorders that come under the general title of the psychoses.

Psychosis is a loss of contact with reality, usually including false ideas about what is taking place or who one is (delusions) and seeing or hearing things that aren't there (hallucinations).
Causes, incidence, and risk factors: ...

ICU Psychosis
Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci (VRE) »
What are vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE)?

Dysmnesic psychosis
Means the same thing as Korsakoff's syndrome.
Contact MedFriendly.com ...

Dysmnesic Psychosis, Alcohol-Induced
Medical Dictionary
Definition of medical terminology for Dysmnesic Psychosis, Alcohol-Induced.

Brief reactive psychosis is triggered by extreme stress (such as a traumatic accident or loss of a loved one), and is followed by a return to the previous level of function. The person may or may not be aware of the strange behavior.

Alternate Names : Disintegrative psychosis, Heller syndrome
Definition
Childhood disintegrative disorder is a condition occurring in 3- and 4-year-olds who have developed normally to age 2.

Psychosis
As well as mania or depression, you may have delusions (false beliefs), hallucinations (hearing, seeing, smelling or feeling things that aren't there), and you may find it hard to communicate with people.
Cyclothymia ...

Psychosis-A condition where a person's ability to recognize reality and cope with everyday life is severely affected.
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Licensed from: ...

Psychosis
A serious mental disorder in which a person loses touch with reality and has hallucinations or delusions. Schizophrenia is a type of psychotic disorder.

Psychosis
Psychosis is a mental disorder which has delusions or significant hallucinations but without any understanding as to why they occur pathologically.
Psychostimulants ...

ICU psychosis: A disorder in which patients in an intensive care unit (ICU) or a similar hospital setting may experience anxiety, become paranoid, hear voices, see things that are not there, become severely disoriented in time and place, ...

Manic psychosis is a more extreme manifestation, with psychotic symptoms that may be difficult to distinguish from schizophrenia.

Organic Psychosis
Related Terms
Delirium
Dementia
Metabolic Encephalopathy
Organic Brain Syndrome
Organic Brain Syndrome with Psychotic Features
Organic Mental Syndrome
Senile Organic Psychosis ...

Psychosis, or a psychotic disorder, is believed to be more of a symptom than a diagnosis. As a psychiatric term, psychosis refers to any mental state that impairs thought, perception, and judgement.

Psychosis
Hyponatremia is a metabolic condition in which there is not enough sodium (salt) in the body fluids outside the cells.
Causes ...

Psychosis. For hallucinations or extremely aggressive behavior, antipsychotic drugs, particularly haloperidol (Haldol), may be administered.

Psychosis and hallucinations - Psychosis is defined as a disorder of thinking that causes the person to lose touch with reality. Psychotic symptoms occur in 20 to 40 percent of people treated with medications for Parkinson disease.

Psychosis
Mood disorder
Change in personality
Delusional disorder
Organic hallucinosis - usual visual or auditory
Obsessive-compulsive disorder ...

Psychosis
Definition
Beriberi is a disease in which the body does not have enough thiamine (vitamin B1).

Psychosis.
Hallucinations.
Paranoia.
Agitation.
Anxiety.
Panic.
These events have been reported in patients with or without a history of psychiatric illness. It is not known whether nicotine withdrawal is a factor in these psychiatric events.

PSYCHOSIS: An extreme derangement of the mind, due to mental illness, with total loss of judgment, memory and insight. It may be a temporary, intermittent or permanent condition.

Psychosis
A severe mental disorder, with or without organic damage, characterized by derangement of personality and loss of contact with reality and causing deterioration of normal social functioning. [Heritage].
Pubic Lice ...

psychosis
Mental state involving hallucinations (disturbances of perception) and/or delusions (false yet strongly held personal beliefs that result from an inability to separate real from unreal experiences).

PSYCHOSIS: a serious mental illness.
PSYCHOSOCIAL: a term used to refer to factors that affect the psychological or social realm.

psychosis (sy-KOH-sis)
A severe mental disorder in which a person loses the ability to recognize reality or relate to others. The person is not able to cope with the demands of everyday life.

Psychosis: Psychosis is a thought disorder characterized by impaired ability to distinguish reality from fantasy, personality changes and deterioration of normal social functioning.

Korsakoff psychosis; Alcoholic encephalopathy; Encephalopathy - alcoholic; Wernicke's disease
Causes, incidence, and risk factors
Wernicke's encephalopathy and Korsakoff syndrome are believed to be two stages of the same condition.

seizures, psychosis and other neuropsychiatric problems
mouth or nose ulcers
pericarditis (chest pain caused by inflammation of the heart lining) ...

Postnatal psychosis is an uncommon, but severe, form of depression that can occur after childbirth.

Postpartum Psychosis is the most severe of all the postpartum depressive illnesses. However, although this is the most serious, it is also the rarest, affecting between 1 and 2 in every 1000 women after childbirth.

Symptoms of Psychosis and Schizophrenia are generally divided into two types: Positive and Negative.

Postnatal psychosis
This is a rare complication of childbirth, occurring in 1 in every 500 women or so.

Drug-induced psychosis. Psychosis is a serious condition in which the person has lost the ability to recognize reality, think rationally, or communicate with others.

POSTPARTUM PSYCHOSIS. In some susceptible women, dramatic hormonal changes in childbirth and shortly afterward can result in a form of brief psychotic disorder often referred to as postpartum psychosis.

Postpartum psychosis
Postpartum psychosis requires immediate treatment — often in the hospital. When your safety is assured, treatment may begin with antidepressants or hormone therapy. Other options may include: ...

amfetamine psychosis A disorder characterized by paranoid delusions, frequently accompanied by auditory or tactile hallucinations, hyperactivity, and lability of mood, ...

postpartum psychosis
Severe postpartum depression that may include withdrawal from reality, delusions, hallucinations, and, in some cases, murderous attacks on the newborn.

Myxedematous psychosis
A severe mental illness characterized by depression and watery swelling of the body's tissues brought on by failure of the thyroid gland, which is in the throat near the larynx, to secrete its thyroid hormone.

disintegrative psychosis (Also called childhood disintegrative disorder.) - one type of pervasive developmental disorder that is characterized by a marked regression in multiple areas of functioning following a period of at least two years of ...

Manic Depressive Psychosis: A bipolar depression in which the sufferer has phase of both 'downs' and 'ups' i.e. of both high and low mood.

Manic-depressive psychosis
A mental illness characterized by alternating periods of depression and mania.
Manubrium ...

Miscarriage (285 causes), Placenta symptoms (6 causes), Ectopic pregnancy (15 causes), Postpartum thyroiditis (1 cause), Postpartum psychosis (4 causes), Postpartum depression (6 causes), Low-birth-weight (199 causes), Abortion (33 causes), ...

", "amnesia ", "amniocentesis ", "amplification ", "ampoule ", "baroreceptors ", "basic life support ", "bronchiectasis ", "constrictive bronchiolitis ", "cholesterol ", "chorea ", "choroid ", "psychology ", "psychopharmacology ", "psychosis ", ...

By definition, dementia is not due to major depression or psychosis. Alzheimer's disease is the most common cause of dementia in older adults. Dental caries cavities or holes in the outer two layers of a tooth--the enamel and the dentin.

Disintegrative Psychosis (Childhood Disintegrative Disorder)
Dissociative Identity Disorder (Multiple Personality Disorder)
Dissociative Disorder
Down Syndrome
Drug Abuse and Addiction
Dual Personality Disorder (Multiple Personality Disorder) ...

Manic Depressive Psychosis
Manic episode prevention for your child with bipolar disorder
Manic episode prevention with bipolar disorder
Manic-Depressive Disorder
Mannosidase, Alpha B, Lysosomal
Mannosidosis
Mannosidosis, Alpha B, Lysosomal ...

Sirois F: Psychosis as a mode of exitus in a cancer patient. J Palliat Care 9 (4): 16-8, 1993 Winter.
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Davis-Ali SH, Chesler MA, Chesney BK: Recognizing cancer as a family disease: worries and support reported by patients and spouses.

The suppression of movement, regarded as a side effect when neuroleptics are used to treat psychosis, is the desired effect when they are used to treat chorea.

Jacob Kasanin in the year 1933 and it is basically a psychiatric diagnosis which describes the mental ailment having features of two conditions including schizophrenia (psychosis) and mood disorder (bipolar or depressive).

Originally thought to be at the "borderline" of psychosis, people with borderline personality disorder (BPD) suffer from a disorder of emotion regulation.

Psychological disorders such as anxiety, depression, psychosis and paranoia.
Risk of hepatitis, HIV or AIDS from shared needles or injecting this substance.
Reduced immunity to colds, flu and other similar illnesses.

A third type of postpartum phenomenon to consider is postpartum psychosis. Postpartum psychosis, although less common, is a serious mental illness. It occurs within a few days to three weeks after birth.

Schizophrenia is a psychosis, a type of mental illness in which a person cannot tell what is real from what is imagined. At times, people with psychotic disorders lose touch with reality.

Postpartum psychosis-Postpartum psychosis is a rare, but severe condition. Symptoms include difficulty thinking and thoughts of harming the baby. If you feel this way, call our doctor right away.

For mental health problems such as depression, anxiety, psychosis, or other behavioral changes, see your family medical doctor or internist, or a psychiatrist.

See also: Symptom, Depression, Stress, Anxiety, Death