Psychosis Health Dictionary

Psychosis: From 3 Different Sources


A severe mental disorder in which the individual loses contact with reality. Three main categories of psychosis are recognized: schizophrenia, manic–depressive illness, and organic brain syndrome (see brain syndrome, organic). The main feature of psychotic illnesses is that they cause a person to have a distorted view of life.

Symptoms include delusions, hallucinations, thought disorders, loss of affect, mania, and depression. The cause is most likely to be a disorder of brain function. Antipsychotic drugs are usually effective in controlling symptoms. Long-term treatment, rehabilitation, and support are often needed.

Health Source: BMA Medical Dictionary
Author: The British Medical Association
One of a group of mental disorders in which the affected person loses contact with reality. Thought processes are so disturbed that the person does not always realise that he or she is ill. Symptoms include DELUSIONS, HALLUCINATIONS, loss of emotion, MANIA, DEPRESSION, poverty of thought and seriously abnormal behaviour. Psychoses include SCHIZOPHRENIA, MANIC DEPRESSION and organically based mental disorders. (See also MENTAL ILLNESS.)
Health Source: Medical Dictionary
Author: Health Dictionary
n. one of a group of *mental illnesses that feature loss of contact with reality. The psychoses include *schizophrenia, major disorders of affect (see bipolar affective disorder), major *paranoid states, drug intoxication, and organic mental disorders. They can be chronic or transient. Psychotic disorders manifest some of the following: *delusions, *hallucinations, severe thought disturbances, abnormal alteration of mood, poverty of thought, ego disturbances, and inappropriate *affect. Many cases of psychotic illness respond well to *antipsychotic drugs. —psychotic adj.
Health Source: Oxford | Concise Colour Medical Dictionary
Author: Jonathan Law, Elizabeth Martin

Korsakoff’s Psychosis

See Wernicke– Korsakoff syndrome.... korsakoff’s psychosis

Puerperal Psychosis

a *psychosis that is triggered by childbirth and usually arises in the first two weeks after giving birth. It affects 1 in 200 women; those suffering from bipolar affective disorder or schizophrenia or those who have a history of puerperal psychosis are at particularly high risk. The symptoms develop very rapidly and the patient needs to be hospitalized, ideally in a mother and baby psychiatric unit to avoid separation; most patients respond well to *antipsychotic medication.... puerperal psychosis

Windigo Psychosis

a delusion of having been transformed into a windigo, a mythical monster that eats human flesh. It is often quoted as an example of a culture-specific syndrome (confined to certain North American Indian tribes).... windigo psychosis



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