Schizophrenia
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Schizophrenia is generally believed to be a brain
disorder, like other disorders such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's or Multiple
Sclerosis. The word"schizophrenia" comes from the Greek roots
schizo (split) and phrene
(mind). A person with schizophrenia has an altered perception of reality.
Schizophrenia appears to be a failure of the brain's chemical or electrical
systems to function properly, resulting in a variety of unusual neural
twists, such as disjointed ideas, confused or disconnected thoughts, and
sounds or other sensations experienced as real when they exist only in the
person's mind.
Symptoms-
The
list of signs and symptoms mentioned in various sources for Schizophrenia
includes::
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Fig:Schizophrenia
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Hallucinations -
most commonly hearing voices
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Delusions -
incorrect and irrational beliefs that are deeply held and genuinely
believed to be correct.
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Delusions of
grandeur
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Paranoid
delusions
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Emotional
symptoms
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Inappropriate
emotional responses
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Reduced emotion
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Loners
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Personal
suffering
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Behavioral
symptoms
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Odd behavior
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Difficulty
concentrating
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Inappropriate
behavior
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Catatonia
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Aggression
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Violent behavior
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Cognitive
symptoms
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Disordered
thinking
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Tormented
thinking
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Social
withdrawal
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Poor personal
hygiene
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Loss of
motivation
Complications-
The
list of complications that have been mentioned in various sources for
Schizophrenia includes:
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Suicide
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Aggression
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Violence
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Violence against others
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Auditory hallucinations
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Delusion
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Mood alteration
Remedies-
Following homoeopathic medicines cover
symptoms of various types and stages of schizophrenia:
1. Belladonna. [Bell]
The three great remedies of the Solanacae family have an important action on the
mental state, and are possibly more often thought of and indicated in mental
affections than other remedies. Belladonna is a remedy for delirious states, and
must be given where there is wildness, restlessness, and a desire to cut or tear
the clothing. The patient springs out of bed and strikes those around him. He
appears frightened and sees objects when he closes his eyes. Speech and actions
are hasty. It thus becomes a valuable remedy in acute mania, in fact, the
highest form of mania , with great determination of blood to the head,
hyperaesthesia of the senses, wild eyes and dilated pupils. Such patients may
even bark like dogs and are most violent and pugnacious. No other remedy is more
frequently indicated and a frequent mistake here is to give it too low; the
higher potencies act better and more promptly. Violence is characteristic, great
noisiness, the patient sings, screams and curses. Delusions of every conceivable
variety may be present, in fact , it suits well a bowfins instantly with
ridiculous actions. Butler says the Belladonna melancholic is exceedingly
depressed, fearful and subject to violent attacks of weeping. Opium has also a
fantastical insanity. Cocaine has a sensation as if foreign bodies were under
the skin; this is in reality a hallucination. It has also hallucinations of
hearing.
2. Hyoscyamus. [Hyos]
This is also a remedy in acute mania with extreme excitation of the sensorium
and abnormal impulses. Talcott says that Hyoscyamus "paints the mental town of
its victim a brilliant and luminous red and stimulates him to sing in merriest
and most vociferous tones the songs of Venus and Bacchus combined." The
Hyoscyamus patient will perhaps imagine he is pursued by some demon or that some
one is trying to take his life; and he runs away from an imaginary foe. He is
talkative and, like Lachesis, constantly jumping from one subject to another.
The face is only slightly flushed, not the violent congestion of Belladonna. He
may see ghosts and demons, but the mania of Hyoscyamus is rather an acute
non-inflammatory mania. Kali bromatum suits the acute mania of children where
patient thinks he will be murdered or that people intend to strike him. Camphor
has maniacal excitement, suicidal impulse. It is a splendid remedy in exhaustion
psychoses with maniacal outbursts and vital powers at a low ebb. The Hyoscyamus
patient acts silly and idiotic; is lascivious and lewd; throws the bed-clothes
off and makes lewd and ridiculous gestures. Persists in stripping herself and
uncovering the genitals. Nymphomania. It is a good remedy for the bad effects of
extreme jealousy, fright, disappointed love, etc. moschata has occasional
outbreaks of silly laughter and a delusion of having two heads. There is also a
condition of depression found under Hyoscyamus with debility and prostration
where questions are answered slowly or irrelevantly; there is a quick pulse,
accumulation of sordes on the teeth, snoring breathing and dropping of the lower
jaw. There is a great characteristic of the remedy usually present in these
cases, namely, a constant picking at the bedclothes or objects in the air. There
is also the great and characteristic symptoms of constant fear of being poisoned
by the attendants, which Rhus also has. Cantharis. Here we have terrific
outbursts of rage, the patient barks, and bites those around him. It is
exceedingly destructive. Patient are filled with hallucinations and converse
with people long dead. Such conditions are curable by Cantharis when reflex from
sexual or bladder troubles. There is an overpowering sexual excitement with this
remedy and the patients are desperate and excessive masturbators and manias with
this symptom corresponds to it.
3.
Stramonium. [Stram]
This remedy. like the two preceding members of the same family, has mania,
and it is wild and most terrifying , filled with hallucinations: he sees
rats, mice, snakes and other animals approaching him and he retires in
terror. He is also loquacious; he becomes religious, prays, laughs, talks
foolishly and tries to escape; again he becomes Satanic, and has outbursts
of violence with ideas of persecution. It corresponds well to many phases of
erotic mania, nymphomania, and the mania of masturbation. The keynote of its
symptomatology is terror. There is also a mania for light and company.
Hallucinations of hearings, hears music and men talking in foreign
languages. The symptoms are changeable, full of joy, and then full of range.
Proud and then dull. Veratrum album might properly be compared with
Stramonium. Here the patient may be restless and wild looking, and be
violent ; but with this remedy there is much physical prostration indicated
by the cold surface of body , cold sweat, blue rings under eyes, etc.
Veratrum may also be well indicated in melancholia; the patient sits
brooding all the time, distrusts every one. In religious melancholia, where
the patient prays a great deal, is anxious about recovery, and despairs of
salvation, it also has a curative action. Lilienthal says the Veratrum
patient combines the wildest vagaries of the religious enthusiast, the
amorous frenzies of the nymphomaniac and the execrative passions of the
infuriated demon, each struggling for the ascendancy, and causing him to
writhe and struggle with his mental and physical agonies. The following is a
practical resume: Aconite, fear. Stramonium, terror. Belladonna, violence.
Cantharides, madness. To this also add Veratrum, frenzy.
4.
Aurum metallicum. [Aur]
Our great remedy for melancholia where there is an actual disgust for life,
a longing for death and a tendency to suicide; this tendency is only mental,
the patient rarely, yet sometimes, attempting it. Dr. Talcott believes that
Arsenicum oftener relieves suicidal tendencies than Aurum. Arsenicum also
relieves tendency to self mutilation found in such patients. There is
feeling of worthlessness and despair; she thinks she has lost the affection
of friends and that she is doomed to complete damnation. The memory is weak;
anger or dispute makes the patient furious ; there is a tendency to rush of
blood to the head with these melancholic states. Argentum nitricum.
Impulsive, always busy, errors in perception, dreads to pass a certain
corner, makes mistakes as to distances. Glonoine. Well known streets seem
strange.
5.
Sulphur. [Sulph]
The typical Sulphur patient is irritable, a chronic, constitutional grumbler
or else a "ragged philosopher," life having been a failure. Its usefulness
in mental conditions is extensive and it corresponds closely to religious
mania or melancholia; he becomes most anxious about his own salvation, but
different to that of others, an egotistic condition often seen in our
asylums and sometime out of them. These patients will dress themselves up in
rags and imagine that they are clad in gorgeous attire; they will wear paper
crowns with the majesty of a king, prince or potentate. Sulphur also has a
forgetfulness and patients will stop a long time to think how words are
spelled Aconite being an acute Sulphur is most useful in mania and
melancholia where there is a nervous excitement, fear of death, predicting
the day thereof., and restlessness due to mental anxiety. It is particularly
useful in sudden, and acute cases, which are worse in the evening. The
patients are tortured by fears; afraid of darkness, ghosts. Convulsions of
paresis may suggest Aconite. Pulsatilla. Religious melancholia, despair of
salvation, constant prayer, folds the hands sits like a statue; sleepless,
restless and changeable mania.
6.
Anacardium oriental. [Anac]
A most valuable remedy in mental disease, and its guiding characteristic is the
well-known sensation of having two wills, one urging him on to do what the other
forbids. It is a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde remedy. Another characteristic is the
irritability of the patient , with an irresistible desire to swear and curse;
this is not from a low moral of religious education, but from mental disease,
usually a chronic mania. Anacardium has loss of memory, a condition for which
the drug was used long before Homoeopathy established its scientific basis;
again, the patient will imagine that he hears voices afar off talking to him, or
he has a fixed idea that he is possessed of a devil, that he is double, or a
woman will fancy that her child is not here own. Nitric acid. With this remedy
there is a disposition to swear, the patient often imagining that she has a
devil within her, that her mind and body are separate, or that her child is not
her own. This remedy has also inclination to commit suicide by shooting.
Anacardium is a remedy much used in low melancholic conditions, and its clinical
record is a brilliant one. It is an excellent palliative in the dementia of old
age. Butler sums up as follows: Antimonium crudum, peevish; Chamomilla, cross;
Belladonna, pulgilistic; Nux vomica, ugly; Anacardium, cussed. In chronic manias
it is more often curative than any other remedy.
7. Cimicifuga. [Cimic]
In depressed states this is one of our best remedies. The patient is weak,
depressed, "shrouded in a dark, heavy, mental atmosphere "; suspicions people
and objects appear strange and unnatural, the brain feels too large. This
sensation of a pall of gloom, or horrible sadness, settling over her is
characteristic of the remedy. It is often expressed as a feeling as if something
were about to happen, or as if they were going crazy. It thus becomes an
important remedy in suicidal melancholia, melancholia of pregnancy in hysterical
, rheumatic and neuralgic subjects, and especially in puerperal mania. Vision of
rats and mice are sometimes seen, and the remedy has been successfully used in
delirium tremens. Calcarea carbonica. The patient sees objects on closing the
eyes which vanish when they are opened ; like Cimicifuga, it has an apprehensive
state of the mind, the patient fearing she will go crazy , and that people will
observe her. Alumina. Low spirited, apprehensive, fear of going crazy. Iodine.
Fear of going crazy, shuns the doctor , has a dread of people, fears every
occurrence will end seriously. Calcarea phosphorica. Dementia from masturbation
in the young and senile dementia are often benefited by this remedy. Delirium
from drink or uterine troubles in rheumatic subjects will often suggest
Cimicifuga.
8. Natrum muriaticum. [Nat-m]
The patient requiring this remedy is melancholic, hypochondriacal, sad and
hopeless about the future, easily angered, in fact, consolation aggravates.
There is emaciation and a prematurely aged look. The periodic nature of the
attacks of the attacks may suggest a malarial basis. Overheating in the sun as a
causal indication is a prominent symptom. Patient sheds floods of tears. With
this remedy there is a persistent recalling of past unpleasantnesses and
grievances. His memory is poor, conversation disconnected, has hallucinations of
hearing and delusions. It has awkwardness, like Bovista, Lachesis, Aethusa,
Apis, Ignatia and Nux vomica. Pulsatilla. Mild, gentle and tearful,seeks
consolation; not introspective like Ignatia. Natrum carbonicum. Hypochondriacal,
dependent on gastric disturbances. The patient for whom Natrum muriaticum is
suitable is apt to have unjustifiable antipathy against certain people.
9. Sepia. [Sep]
Another melancholic remedy is Sepia, which has dark forebodings about her
disease, weak memory, sense of helplessness and great susceptibility to
excitement, and still more to terror; despair; she dreads to be alone, wants
company, but has an aversion to her own friends and is indifferent to her
household affairs. It is especially useful in women with leucorrhoea and organic
disease of the uterus or ovaries. Stannum. Low spirited in lung affections---an
uncommon state; a tearful disposition ; fears he will go into a decline. Thuja.
Patient hurried ; trifles make him angry; fixed idea of being brittle and will
not permit anyone to approach, or that she is under the influence of mesmerists
or spiritualists. Soul and body separated. Music causes weeping and trembling of
feet.
10. Ignatia. [Ign]
Most cases of melancholia at some period of their treatment require Ignatia; it
suits women better, while Arsenicum and Nux vomica are more suitable to men. The
Ignatia patient is melancholic, given to sighing, with a tendency to weep. she
hides her grief, is introspective, changeable and silent. It is a remedy full of
disappointments, and jealousy, and is most suitable to complaints arising from
fear, grief, shock, or prolonged brooding over real or imaginary troubles. They
refuse sympathy, but fancy themselves neglected by friends. The patient has a
disposition to brood over her sorrows, has remorse about imaginary crimes, is
intolerant to noise and tends to fixed ideas. Lasciviousness is a symptom that
should not be overlooked.
11. Phosphoric acid. [Ph-ac]
This remedy suits conditions of long lasting effects of grief rather than the
acute forms. A great characteristic is indifference, homesickness; is not
irritable, but slow of comprehension ; shows no interest in anything , a don't
care condition. Another characteristic is failure of memory. Picric acid is a
rival of Phosphoric acid in threatened dementia praecox, with utter prostration,
burning in spine, weakness of legs, pains in back and occiput. Desire to sit
still without taking interest in surrounding things.
12. Nux vomica. [Nux-v]
This remedy suits overworked fidgety business men of sedentary habits; they
cannot bear to be opposed, are irritable and irascible, easily put out, quick to
act; those of a fitful temper and where there is a great disinclination to
mental work. In conditions of resistive melancholia and negativism where the
patient resists everything done for her, with no interest in anything, offensive
breath, etc., it is often productive of beneficial results. The most
disagreeable of maniacs with "pure cussedness," difficult to manage, apposed to
everything , is the Nux vomica patient. Hypochondriasis in the sedentary is met
well by the remedy. Lycopodium has a torpor of the mind; the patient is
melancholic and hypochondriacal, dependent mostly on digestive and hepatic
troubles. The Nux patient is oversensitive; every harmless word offends and
every little noise frightens. They are anxious and "besides themselves."
13. Cannabis Indica. [cann-i]
This remedy produces marvelous kaleidoscopic visions and illusions as to time
and space; a minute seems thousands of years, and a thing a short distance off
seems yards away. He imagines he is swelling and his body is becoming large,
that he hears numberless bells ringing; a multitude of images crowd the brain
and he feels as if he were somebody else. Voices come from a great distance and
seem to enchant him.
14. Lachesis. [Lach]
The snake poisons all have poisoned minds. With Lachesis there is great
loquacity, the patient jumping from one subject to another; jealous, fear of
being poisoned and refuses both medicine and food. Has to think how words are
spelled. Muttering delirium, with dropping of the lower jaw and illusions, such
as imagining that he is under some superhuman control or that he is dead.
Melancholia at change of life. Delusion that he is persecuted, worse after
sleeping Neurasthenia.
15. Agaricus. [Agar]
A menacing frenzy causing patient to assail himself and other. Incoherent
talking, delusions of power and personal importance; a tremulousness is often
present which terrifies the patient. Mania complicated by chorea.
16. Platinum. [Plat]
The proud, egotistical mental state of this remedy is too well known for
comment. The patient has illusions, everything is inferior to her in body and
mind, and she looks down on everybody with contempt. Objects look smaller or
strange, there is indifference, everything seems too narrow. There is a great
dread of death which seems near. It is a useful remedy in hysterical mania,
where things seem horrible, and all serious thoughts are displeasing. Palladium.
Music excites, constantly getting slighted, is easily offended and scolds
continually. Women with tendency to nymphomania and excitement of the genitalia
indicate well Platinum. |