Lundborg Psychoclonic Response

I. Introduction

Lundborg Psychoclinic Reaction is a mental condition that occurs in a person after prolonged use of psychoactive substances such as drugs or alcohol. This condition can be caused by either serious trauma or brain damage or drug overdose. This article describes the Lundaborg psychoclone reaction and its causes, as well as methods for diagnosing and treating this condition.

II. Description of Lundaborg's mental reaction

The Lundborg psychlonic reaction is an extreme emotional, behavioral and motivational change that occurs in severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder or major depressive disorder. The famous psychiatrist Daniel Lundborg introduced this concept into psychiatric literature. The term reflects a huge number of disorders of thinking, the emotional state of the individual and the function of the will in psychiatry.



Lundborg Adolf Vincent is a Swedish psychiatrist who developed the concept of the psychoclonic reaction. One of his most important works relates to the analysis of patients with various types of non-affective psychoses.

The author of the theory was the first to define the concepts of “diffusion” and “confluence” in relation to the symptoms of mental illness. He analyzed the connection between symptoms and other speech disorders of the patient, thereby confirming the synthesis of these concepts in psychiatry. Lundborg's original views on the boundaries between personality and psychosis, as well as the results of his research, led to a new approach to the problem of schizophrenia. He used the words “psychomania” for schizophrenia and “schizophrenia” for autism as synonyms.