hallucination

Introduction

Introduction Illusions can be divided into auditory hallucinations, illusions, illusions, and so on. The illusion, the illusion of taste, is an illusory taste perception. There is no smell in the objective reality, but the patient perceives its existence. Less common, often accompanied by illusion or other hallucinations, the patient feels a special taste when eating or drinking, often causing food refusal. Found in temporal lobe epilepsy and schizophrenia.

Cause

Cause

Magical taste is less common in mental patients. Patients often taste food, drinks, and some special, unpleasant, unacceptable tastes. On this basis, patients often have suspicion of harm and affect the behavior of patients. If the disease refuses to eat, there is an attack behavior. The patient tasted a special or peculiar taste in the food, such as a metallic or medicinal taste, and refused to eat. Often combined with other hallucinations and delusions.

1. The taste nervous system is too sensitive.

2, gastrointestinal digestive disorders.

3, the pressure is not good enough to rest.

Examine

an examination

Related inspection

Nasal olfactory function examination Nasopharyngeal MRI examination Otolaryngology CT examination

Magical taste is less common in mental patients. Patients often taste food, drinks, and some special, unpleasant, unacceptable tastes. On this basis, patients often have suspicion of harm and affect the behavior of patients. If the disease refuses to eat, there is an attack behavior. The patient tasted a special or peculiar taste in the food, such as a metallic or medicinal taste, and refused to eat. Often combined with other hallucinations and delusions.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

Illusion is an illusory perception. In the absence of something in objective reality, the patient perceives its existence.

Magic smell: not common in the clinic. The smell of magical smell is mostly an unpleasant, unpleasant smell. Such as rotten food, corpses, feces and other stench. The patient often produces a sinister delusion on the basis of the illusion, which is explained as a toxic substance deliberately released by someone, specifically to poison him.

Fantasy: Phantom is less common in mental patients. Patients often taste food, drinks, and some special, unpleasant, unacceptable tastes. On this basis, patients often have suspicion of harm and affect the behavior of patients. If the disease refuses to eat, there is an attack behavior. The patient tasted a special or peculiar taste in the food, such as a metallic or medicinal taste, and refused to eat. Often combined with other hallucinations and delusions.

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