Delusion is a mental disorder characterized by disturbances in perception, thinking, understanding of reality and behavior. One of the most severe types of delusion is delusional disorientation or delusional erroneous perception of the surrounding reality. It consists of the patient's false ideas and misconceptions about the real world.
Delusional disorientation occurs in people with mental disorders such as schizophrenia, paranoid schizophrenia, or other psychotic conditions. Often this type of delusional disorientation manifests itself in the form of hallucinations and mirages. A person may experience various illusions or distorted perceptions of the world around him.
Delirium is the result of long-term and severe disturbances in thinking and perception of surrounding reality. Patients complain that people around them do not treat them the way they would like, or generally try to deceive and confuse them. When a patient is in a state of delirium, he needs constant attention from those around him, who should provide him with clarification on any topic and help him get rid of bad thoughts. This condition is dangerous for others and requires urgent medical intervention.
Signs of delusional disorientation may include the following symptoms: - Vivid, vivid hallucinations. Hallucinations are false sensations observed by the patient in a normal state.
Delusional disorientation is a very common behavioral defect. They cause a clear decrease in mental function - even if the condition is identical or identical to the duration of full health and memory, but distorts the general idea of the patient’s personality. Disorientation can be of three main types: delusional, affectively delusional (delirium of insanity) and paranoid. The severity of psychosis can be assessed using this criterion.
Delusional disorientation is a form of human mental activity in which differentiation between the internal and external world is lost. The term was introduced by P. Bleuler. Distinguishes b. “Aggravation” - the desire to exaggerate subjective disorders (characteristic of schizophrenia, narcolepsy