Psychosis Functional

Functional psychosis is a clinical syndrome that occurs in the absence of external causes and causes, namely pathogenesis in the form of a psychotic disorder resulting from physiological or mental disorders.

Functional disorders occur in the event of serious brain damage, as a result of traumatic brain injury, after brain surgery, if the tissue of the brain vessels is damaged or focal lesions of its tissue develop. It is precisely such damage that leads to the development of extropia syndrome (impaired perception of the body’s real life processes). That is, the sense of perception of what is happening around is impaired, as well as the ability to evaluate events and behave adequately. The behavioral reaction and the reactions of the nervous system to everything that happens around changes. The patient changes from a human to a robot, which is why this condition is called “topographic spatial disorder.”



In the modern world, many people face various mental disorders, including functional psychosis. This is a disorder in which a person experiences symptoms similar to those of a mental disorder, but they do not meet the diagnosis or other criteria and almost never lead to impairment in functioning in daily life. Functional psychosis can be caused by various factors and have various manifestations, such as hallucinations, paranoia, illusions, obsessive thoughts and others. Many people may not be aware of the presence of this disease due to its hidden forms and varied nature. Although functional psychosis is a very complex condition, there are methods that can help patients cope with it. However, this requires timely contact with a specialist and comprehensive treatment.



Functional psychosis is a mental disorder manifested in the form of affective and psychosensory symptoms caused by certain forms of functional psychogenic neurosis in conditions of pathogenically altered reactivity and insubordination of mental processes. The reason for their occurrence is external factors of a traumatic environment, which have unique triggering properties and cause excessively acute and affectively colored experiences. With functional psychosis, there is a sharp discrepancy between the objective significance of the traumatic factor and the content of the accompanying experiences, which are determined by the specifics of the hyperbolically perceived content of the situation, the predominance of personally significant and