Disorders of Thought
Disorders of Thought
Disorders of Thought
GROUP 4 PRESENTATION
INTRODUCTION
Thought generally refers to any mental or intellectual
activity involving an individuals subjective
consciousness.
Most available information about thinking comes from
the study of language as it reflects thought
A great deal of thinking takes place preverbally
Thinking occurs in images, music, and in symbols other
than linguistic ones
INTRODUCTION
Human thought takes place in a multitask fashion
Various processes working simultaneously and in
parallel to assess, solve problems, and contribute in all
ways to thought
INTRODUCTION
Thinking also refers to language-associated thought in
which the sequence of time is appreciated, statements
are causally linked and clearly delineated with deductive
rules of logic.
Disorders of thought includes disorders of:
stream of thinking
form of thinking
content of thinking
coherence of thinking
Disorders of stream of
thought
They are divided into two groups:
i. Disorders of the thought tempo (speed)
-Flight of ideas
-circumstantiality
PRIMARY DELUSION
New meaning arises in the connection with
some other psychological events.
-Ultimately un-understandable
-diagnostic of schizophrenia
-May occur in epileptic psychosis
Types of primary delusion
Delusional mood
o Person has the knowledge that there is something
going on around him which concerns him but does not
know what its.
Delusional perception
o Normal percept is interpreted with delusional
meaning
o Example, a person sees a red car and knows that this
means their food is being poisoned by the police.
Sudden delusional ideas
o Delusion appears fully formed in the persons mind
o Eg person says that he is of royal descent because
when he was taken to a military parade as a little boy
the king saluted him.
.
SECONDARY DELUSIONS
-Those that arise from some other morbid experience.
-Can be understood from the persons
cultural/emotional
background.
-Often transient
-can occur in schizophrenia , other psychotic
conditions
Classification of delusions by content
Delusion can also be divided based on
the content
Delusions of reference
Delusions of persecution
Grandiose delusion
Delusions of guilt (false feeling of remorse
or guilt)
Hypochondriacal delusions
Delusions of love (erotomania, de
clarambault syndrome)
Delusions of infidelity (Othello syndrome)
Nihilistic delusions (contard syndrome)
Delusions of doubles (capgras syndrome)
Shared delusions (folie a deux)
Delusion of reference
Delusion of persecution:
A person believes that people want to harm him.
Loved ones are about to be harmed
People wants to poison him
Some force wants to influence him: demonical possession,
radio waves, atomic rays...
.
Delusion of infidelity/jealousy:
Often the patient has been suspicious, sensitive
and mildly jealous before the onset of the
illness. Eg: delusion of marital infedility.
Delusion of love:
Convinced that a certain person is in love with
him/her although the alleged lover may never
have spoken him /her
Grandiose delusion:
-Is a fixed false belief that one possesses
superior qualities such as genius, fame,
omnipotence or wealth.
-Found in schizophrenia, dementia and psychotic
and bipolar
.
Delusion of guilt
-A feeling of guilt. Eg: A person may believe that he has committed a serious crime and
deserves to punished severely.
-A person becomes self-critical.
Delusion of ill-health
-A false belief whereby one is preoccupied by a fear of having or the idea that one has
a serious disease based on the personal interpretation of bodily symptoms.
Delusion of doubles
-A false belief that different people are in fact a single person who changes
appearance.
.
Delusion of infidelity/jealousy:
-Often the patient has been suspicious, sensitive
and mildly jealous before the onset of the illness.
Delusion of love:
-Convinced that some person is in loved with
them although the alleged lover may never have
spoken to them
Grandiose delusion:
-Conviction that one is specially important
Disorders of form of thought
Are disorders of conceptual thinking.
Disturbances in form are disturbances in the logical
process of thought or logical connection between ideas.
These include word incoherence, circumstantiality,
tangetiality, derailment
Tangentiality
It is a disorder in which a person wanders away from the
intended point, moving to areas that are less and less
relevant and never return to the original idea.
References
KAPLAN & SADOCKS SYNOPSIS OF PSYCHIATRY-11th
Edition
Fishs Clinical Psychopathology-3rd Edition
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