abnormal thought control

Introduction

Introduction Normal people's thinking is subjectively controlled by themselves, and some schizophrenia patients feel that their thinking is not under their control, or that their own thinking is no longer their own, but is controlled by an external force. It means that the patient feels that his or her mind is not his or her own, that the thinking activity loses autonomy, or that it is controlled by external forces. For example, the experience of deprivation of thinking, insertion of thoughts, and dissemination of thoughts. Thinking is inserted, thought is taken, and thought is spread. It is common in the early stages of schizophrenia and in the full development of symptoms.

Cause

Cause

Thinking is inserted, thought is taken, and thought is spread. It is common in the early stages of schizophrenia and in the full development of symptoms. Because patients do have such experience and lack the ability to understand their own diseases, they often feel pain, crying and complaining to the doctor. Pay attention to check to see if there is an abnormal medical history, the history of parental inheritance, and the problem of personal emotions.

Examine

an examination

Related inspection

Brain CT examination EEG examination

1 Some patients feel that their minds are not their own and are imposed on themselves by others. Therefore, they feel that their own thinking is not subject to their own control and control. This is called thinking is inserted.

2 Some people with schizophrenia feel that their thinking is suddenly taken away by external forces. This is called thinking being taken.

3 Other schizophrenic patients feel that their thoughts are being broadcast. As is well known, this is called thinking dissemination, also called thinking being broadcast.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

1 thinking speed barriers, such as speeding up the thinking process (intentional erratic) or slow.

2 The barrier of thinking form, also known as the association barrier, mainly shows the relaxation of the association structure. Lack of purpose, symbolic misuse, illogical. For example, thinking is sloppy. Pathological symbolic thinking.

3 thinking control obstacles, that the patient feels that thinking is not his own, thinking activities lose autonomy, or feel that external force control. For example, thinking deprivation, thinking insertion, thinking dissemination and other experiences.

4 thinking content barriers, such as delusions, imaginary concepts, obsessions, etc. This classification is suitable for clinical diagnosis needs, but it is more focused on the study of schizophrenia thinking disorder, with less attention to organic brain disease or other mental thinking disorders.

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