persecution delusion

Introduction

Introduction The patients lack of security leads to extreme distrust of the outside world, and an illusion arises from the elderly or some people who have been hit by a range beyond self-sustainability. The patient will be convinced that someone (or a group) will monitor, attack or persecute themselves, their loved ones, and their families. These persecution activities include conspiracy, stalking, poisoning in food, etc. Under the circumstance, the patient refuses to eat, escape, and accuse, causing self-injury or injury. Such patients are usually very nervous. More common in schizophrenia, paranoid mental illness.

Cause

Cause

1. The main obstacle is the lack of basic trust for others. It is characterized by the use of negative effects and external action to deal with their psychological difficulties, leading to a systemic delusion.

2. The personality is more sensitive, easy to suspicion, and more selfish and self-satisfied.

3. Usually, you can't look down on your own boundaries, you can't distinguish between yourself and others, and you don't have the ability to know your motivations and attitudes.

Examine

an examination

Related inspection

Brain nerve examination EEG examination

The patient will be convinced that someone (or a group) will monitor, attack or persecute themselves, their loved ones, and their families. These persecution activities include conspiracy, stalking, and poisoning in food. Under the circumstance of delusion, the patient refuses to eat, escape, and accuse, causing self-injury or injury. Such a patient is usually very nervous.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

Injury delusion: also known as the paranoia, is a manifestation of persecution paranoia, wants to harm others after being persecuted.

Exaggerated delusion: a morbid belief in content of self-sufficiency, self-sense greatness or superiority. Often accompanied by other imaginative delusions, can be used as symptoms of paranoia, schizophrenia (often paranoid), mania and brain organic diseases (especially paralytic dementia).

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