Psychosis

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    The Pathway to Psychosis

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    therefore it is possible that that childhood stress lead these subjects to develop psychosis. A study published in the journal of Psychological Medicine entitled COMT Val158Met moderation of stress-induced psychosis takes a biological approach to the question at hand. This study sought to examine the question of high reactivity to stress seeming to “represent part of the vulnerability for psychosis” (Stefanis, et al., 2007, p. 1651). The study’s objective was to determine whether

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    Answer: Psychosis Psychosis is most commonly associated with schizophrenia, a severe psychiatric condition that may cause an ongoing loss of contact with reality. Other mental health conditions that may sometimes cause psychosis include major depression and bipolar. Substance abuse and chemical withdrawal have also been known to lead to psychosis, as have some medical conditions such as Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s. Severe infection that has spread to the brain, epilepsy, stroke, and the

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    historical factors create the boundaries of sanity and insanity in which hegemonic, institutional power control minority groups, however, the manner in which these boundaries manifest have shifted over time. Jonathan Metzl in his book The Protest Psychosis: How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease explores the manner in which mental illness is used by institutions to control deviance through his examination of how the anti-psychiatry movement, subsequence

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    Psychosis Case Studies

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    developments in the treatment of psychosis The complexity of treating psychosis is very delicate, as there are many contributing factors to this mental disorder. As theories continue to evolve through research, today’s evidence of biological and psychopathology disturbances support the complication and treatment psychosis (Preston, O’Neal, & Talaga2017). Although anti-psychotic drugs have revolutionized in treatment of psychotic disorders, positive results in treatment of psychosis was noted in first-line

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    Psychosis Research Paper

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    Psychosis is a symptom or feature of mental illness typically characterized by radical changes in personality, impaired functioning, and a distorted or nonexistent sense of object reality. When dealing with psychosis you have to understand that the patient will have impaired reality testing, meaning they are unable to distinguish personal substantial experiences from the real world reality. psychosis patients will also have hallucinations and be delusional that he or she will believe are real.

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    Typical and Atypical Medication The first major development in the treatment of psychosis was first generation antipsychotics, which is known as typical antipsychotics (Guzman & Farinde, 2015). In essence, these medications are used to treat schizophrenia and other associated psychotic disorders. In additions, some of the medications of the first generation include Haldol, loxitane, orap, mellaril, navane, and trilafon to name a few. Furthermore, these antipsychotics are considered cheaper than

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    Psychosis: What It Really Is Essay

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    what psychosis really is. Many define it as crazy or not normal, but really, the illnesses vary. It could be schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, hallucinations and delusions, anxiety, even Alzheimer’s and Dementia. It is characterized in all of these illnesses. Psychosis is usually genetic and passed down through different family members. It is an illness that distorts the brain, making thinking unclear. The main question is what really causes someone to be psychotic? What really defines psychosis?

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    Cocaine-Induced Psychosis Cocaine- A Short History Coca is one of the oldest, most potent and dangerous stimulants of natural origin. It was first extracted from its leaves and isolated into cocaine in 1859. The drug rapidly became popular. But it took over 20 yrs. before it was popular in the medical community. Then, in 1886, coca leaves were an added ingredient Coca-Cola. Sigmund Freud, who used the drug himself, was the 1st person to promote cocaine as a tonic to cure depression and sexual

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    “culture-bound” or “culture specific” syndromes. There are a number of fascinating culture-bound syndromes found around the world, and one such disorder is the Wendigo Psychosis. This mental condition is linked to Native American culture, specifically to certain northern tribes such as; Chippewa, Ojibwa, Cree, and Inuit. The Psychosis was most popular in the 19th century, and was usually found to have developed during winter months when families were isolated due to heavy snowfall, and there was not

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    Law Abiding Citizen: Psychosis

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    is known as Psychosis. Psychosis is a mental condition where a someone becomes delusional or hallucinating. Delusional means to come up with random ideas or falsehoods and is acting upon them while hallucinations are when a person senses things that do not exist ("PubMed Health: Psychosis" 1). Psychosis is a disease unlikely to occur in someone who has not abused any drug, gone through over any traumatic experience, or is going through a mental aging condition ("PubMed Health: Psychosis" 1). It can

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