Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia

Many specialist clinicians divide mental disorders into two main groups: schizophrenic disorders and mood disorders

In general, mental illness is considered to be temporary in nature and the people who suffer from it usually return to the normal state between these seizures. This is not the case for most schizophrenic patients

The characteristic symptoms of schizophrenia are the disorder of thinking and perception, sensory changes such as nervous tension, or depression, and behavioral disorders ranging from vaporous fainting to violent agitation, dysfunctions with loss of connection to reality. The person with schizophrenia appears to be withdrawing to his own world and there may be hallucinations

The most common form of schizophrenia is schizophrenia. The most common form of schizophrenia is schizophrenia. Chronic schizophrenia is associated with life traumas. Often, the real causes of schizophrenia are unknown. However, there are many theories that some believe that schizophrenia is hereditary and that some cases are caused by inheritance in chemistry The body has brain chemistry called neurotransmitters that operate abnormally
Others adopt the theory that schizophrenia is caused by external factors such as complications during childbirth. Head injury in response to a virus or toxins in the environment that reaches and destroys the brain

There is a high incidence of head injuries in childhood and complications of childbirth in people with schizophrenia, and there is a wide range of drugs that cause symptoms of schizophrenia