Alcoholic hallucinosis and schizophrenia: A negative study. From Wordnik.com. [The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry] Reference
I am speaking of what I can call musical hallucinosis, involuntary music in the head. From Wordnik.com. [Dr. Leo Rangell: Music in the Head: Living at the Brain-Mind Border; Part 1] Reference
Carl Zimmer has written a great article for the Sunday Telegraph about a brain disorder called musical hallucinosis. From Wordnik.com. [Boing Boing: March 7, 2004 - March 13, 2004 Archives] Reference
The phenomenon of auditory hallucinations in chronic alcoholism: A critical evaluation of the status of alcoholic hallucinosis. From Wordnik.com. [The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry] Reference
Atypical symptom cluster e.g., depressive syndrome with apathy, not sadness, hallucinosis without other psychopathology, mania with psychomotor features or stereotypy. From Wordnik.com. [The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry] Reference
Alcoholic psychosis, such as alcoholic hallucinosis or organic delusional syndrome, presents hallucinations or delusions as the predominate clinical features, respectively. From Wordnik.com. [Clinical Work with Adolescents] Reference
Although its proper place in psychiatric nosology is unclear see Chapter 11, reactive psychosis is characterized by an acute onset episode of hallucinosis, usually with delusional ideas, following a precipitating event. From Wordnik.com. [The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry] Reference
In particular, he appreciates that the robust differences between dreaming and waking consciousness such as the visuomotor hallucinosis, the delusional belief that one is awake, the distinctive defects in cognition, the heightened emotionality, and the poor memory have their neural correlates in the altered neural activation pattern of REM sleep. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2005-12-01] Reference
Experienced and knowledgeable clinicians, however, can further refine this and other amorphous categories (e.g., hallucinosis secondary to coarse brain disease) by their awareness of the scientific literature, which always runs ahead of the official nosology and offers unofficial, but clinically useful, choices (e.g., catatonia as a treatment-responsive syndrome separate from schizophrenia; various frontal and parietal lobe syndromes). From Wordnik.com. [The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry] Reference
Alcoholic hallucinosis or Werenicke's disease or Korsakoff's syndrome or Jolliffe's encephalopathy. From Wordnik.com. [Thestar.com - Home Page] Reference
In alcoholic hallucinosis the patient has delusions of persecution and hears voices accusing him of all kinds of wrong-doing. From Wordnik.com. [The Foundations of Personality] Reference
Now we understand why the patient in an acute alcoholic hallucinosis almost invariably hears voices making homosexual accusations. From Wordnik.com. [The Journal of Abnormal Psychology] Reference
The only exception to the universality of renal lesions in this group is the case in which religious delusions were probably based upon hallucinations for which hallucinations an isolated brain lesion was found, very probably correlatable with the hallucinosis. From Wordnik.com. [The Journal of Abnormal Psychology] Reference
In point of fact, however, Case IV had hallucinations and religious delusions ( "spirit is here") probably derived therefrom, and Dr. Worcester found an isolated brain lesion correlatable with the hallucinosis; and in any event the emotional state of the patient is in grave doubt. From Wordnik.com. [The Journal of Abnormal Psychology] Reference
From without it may be damaged by the toxins of food, as in the acute toxic psychoses; by the poison of drink, as in the alcohol-produced psychoses, such as acute alcoholic hallucinosis; by lack of muscular exercise, resulting in a deficient supply of oxygen to burn up the accumulated toxins from energy-producing foods; by the infections, which may result in the infection-exhaustion psychoses; by wrong methods of education, and by surroundings which demand too severe a mental strain in the struggle toward adjustment. From Wordnik.com. [Applied Psychology for Nurses] Reference
Alcohol hallucinosis, 308. From Wordnik.com. [The Neuropsychiatric Guide to Modern Everyday Psychiatry] Reference
\ hallucinosis of alcoholism. From Wordnik.com. [Applied Psychology for Nurses] Reference
The horror of "musical hallucinosis". From Wordnik.com. [Boing Boing: March 7, 2004 - March 13, 2004 Archives] Reference
IV), VIII, probably feeble-minded romancer, not deluded in the sense of self-deception (probably best excluded from present consideration); IX, probably not safely to be assigned to the Pleasant or Not Unpleasant Group, feeling passive in somewhat the same sense as Case VI (see above), suffering from auditory hallucinosis (superior temporal atellitosis, data of the late W.L. Worcester); X, delusion of birth to superior station, possibly the object of mixed emotions, probably not pleasant; and XI, manic-depressive exaltation with grandiose utterances, long prior to death (if there had been lung tuberculosis at the basis of the ileac ulcers, it had long since healed). From Wordnik.com. [The Journal of Abnormal Psychology] Reference
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