Huber Senesthetic Schizophrenia

Schizophrenic disorder is caused by a whole complex of biochemical, neuroanatomical and neurological features. Understanding the mechanisms and causes of the disease is difficult due to their diverse combination. The combination of many specific signs of a disease can give rise to a wide variety of, sometimes opposing, opinions about the origin and nature of the disease.

The most common theory of the origin of schizophrenia



Huber-Senetic Schizophrenia.

Canadian psychiatrist Joseph Miller first proposed the term “guber-senestic schizophrenia” in 1972. He argued that these types of mental disorders are related to each other genetically. But how it happened that the violation occurs so rarely, namely one case per 2 thousand people, is still unclear. This nosology belongs to the psychoses of the schizophrenia spectrum and can manifest itself in the following forms and variants:

According to researchers, the first manifestation of the disease may well be associated with a temporary behavioral disorder or autonomic disorders. That is, it may seem to a person that he has become very strange and unusual, but the violation in this case will be short-term and mild. Usually, in this situation, the patient first finds himself far from his place of residence (for example, he went on vacation or on a business trip), and upon arrival he begins to experience the very first signs of schizophrenia. It is quite difficult to distinguish one disease from another, but in most cases the disease has characteristic signs that