Psychosis is a serious mental disorder that often appears in adolescence. This disorder causes disorders in perception, thinking, behavior, emotion, and other aspects that can have a serious impact on the patient's daily life.
There are many types of psychiatric disorders, and the manifestations of each type are also different. One of the types is simple psychosis**, which allows patients to experience subjective fatigue, insomnia, and decreased work efficiency in the early stages. As the disease progresses, patients will have increasingly aggravated symptoms such as withdrawal, withdrawal, emotional apathy, laziness, loss of interest, etc., and social activities will become poor, and life will become purposeless, gradually detached from real life.
The other type is paranoid psychosis**, in which patients are sensitive and suspicious, which gradually develops into delusions. The content of delusions becomes increasingly detached from reality, sometimes accompanied by symptoms such as hallucinations and perceptual syndrome. Emotions and behaviors are often dominated by hallucinations and delusions, and even self-injurious and hurtful behaviors.
Adolescent psychosis is the third type, and this type of patient usually develops between the ages of 18 and 25. The onset of the disease is more acute, the disease progresses rapidly, and the main symptoms include bizarre thinking content, incomprehensible, broken thinking, moodiness, contrived expressions, grimaces, smirks and other mental symptoms. These symptoms often make it impossible for people to communicate with others normally, and can seriously affect the person's social functioning.
Early diagnosis and ** is very important for patients with mental illness. Different types of psychiatric conditions will also have different approaches, so patients should seek professional medical help as early as possible so that the doctor can develop a suitable plan for the specific situation. At the same time, family members and society should also give more support and understanding to patients to help them reintegrate into society.