Paranoia Alcohol

Paranoia, or alcoholic (P. alcoholica): symptoms, causes and consequences

One of the common mental disorders associated with alcohol consumption is alcoholism, or paranoia. It manifests itself in the emergence of dangerous and inadequate ideas and actions that cause harm both to the person himself and to the people around him. Symptoms of alcoholic paranoia may include fear of alcoholic beverages, panic, hallucinations, auditory and visual illusions, paranoia, delusions and aggressive behavior.

Causes of alcoholism Paranoia is a condition caused by chronic consumption of large doses of alcohol, usually with continued use for several years. Although every alcoholic needs a different amount of alcohol to fall into a state of alcohol paranoia, one day of drinking normally does not mean that the same thing will happen to him the next day.

Essentially, a chronic alcoholic paranoid person can be diagnosed if the following criteria are met: - regular alcohol consumption - high doses - lack of critical thinking about drinking alcohol (for example, while intoxicated). But drinking alcohol alone is not enough, the alcoholic must return to at its usual rate of use only to create a state of paranomy. There can be many reasons for the development of paranoia, some of the most typical are given below: * Psychological - the presence of traumatic events in the past and present . Usually such people are forced to drink in other ways, including psychoactive drugs. * Social (internal) reasons - there is an indifference of a member of society to everything that happens around him. Gradually, a person develops indifference to himself and others. This starts the paranoid process. * Intellectual impairments - these can be detected by MRI of the brain. The ventricles of the brain expand, white matter is destroyed, degenerative processes appear in all