Hallucinosis Acute

Acute hallucinosis is an acute psychotic disorder accompanied by hallucinations and delusions for several days. Hallucinoma can occur in people of all ages and ethnicities, but it is more common in young people between the ages of fifteen and twenty-five. This type of hallucinosis is sometimes called false sense of truth because people tend to believe that the hallucinosis is real. However, unlike schizophrenia, a person can distinguish hallucinations from reality, and this makes the hallucinator think about his health. Psychiatrists diagnose a “hallucinous” state in cases where a patient begins to hallucinate, which develops quickly and does not last long. Acute hallucinations cannot be hereditary and are not transmitted from person to person. Symptoms of acute hallucinosis:

Acute hallucinations require special medications used in critical situations. From a therapeutic point of view, acute hallucinosis syndrome is differentiated as follows: acute mania or paranoia (delusions of persecution or guilt) or acute depression (harmless hallucinations without any logic). These include: micro- or macroheptopes; echophony, that is, an echo inside the head; other paranoid delusions; single-channel auditory hallucinations; pseudohallucinations of pain; hallucinatory (auditory, olfactory, visual) fear syndromes; pseudohallucinorous auditory illusions. The unproductive hallucinogenic syndrome begins to express itself in special religious tension, inexplicable anxiety, unreasonable fear of guilt, remorse, etc.