Definition
Disorders of consciousness are therefore disorders of a vital and fundamental function of the human psyche. They are psychopathological symptoms. Disorders of consciousness are formally divided into quantitative and qualitative disorders.
Quantitative disturbances in consciousness | Qualitative disturbances in consciousness |
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(= altered level of consciousness) | (= altered state of consciousness) |
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Quantitative consciousness disorders
1. Dizziness
Gradual slowing down to apathy
Orientation reduced
spontaneous utterances reduced
2. Somnolence
Limited concentration and attention
Tendency to sleep
Easy to wake up
No spontaneous utterancess; if so, then incomprehensible murmuring
Reflexes are preserved
3. Sopor
Sleep-like condition
Difficult to wake up
No spontaneous utterances
Reflexes are preserved
4. Coma
Unconsciousness
Affected cannot be woken up
No defense movements against pain
Increasing reflex failures
Qualitative consciousness disorders
1. Narrowing of consciousness
Fixation on just one experience-related, mental or emotional aspect
Decreased responsiveness
Shifted state of consciousness
Amnesia
Preserved orientation
Usually starts and ends within a short time
Occurrence:
After epileptic seizures
Traumatic brain injury
Brain inflammation
So-called pathological alcohol intoxication
2. Clouding of consciousness
Impairment of the clarity of consciousness with fragmentation of the context of experience:
Disturbed understanding of oneself and the environment
Confused thinking and acting
Disorientation
Anxiety
Hallucinations
Disorder of the sleep-wake rhythm
Possibly life-threatening vegetative disorders
Constantly or only temporarily (“fragmented consciousness”)
Occurrence:
Medication
Poisoning
Drugs
Withdrawal
Metabolic disorders
Tumor and traumatic brain injury
Heart disease
Delirium, like after surgery
Dementia
Schizophrenia
3. Shift of consciousness
Change in awareness with a feeling of an increased
Intensity or
Brightness or
Awareness (expansion of consciousness)
Increased alertness (“hyper-alertness”)
Emotional – “ecstatic” way of life with similarity to the trance, into which it can also pass
Occurrence:
Drugs
Mania,
Schizophrenia
Intensive meditation
4. Delirium
Organic psychotic disorder with the main symptom: clouding of consciousness (and often with vegetative symptoms)
Emergency situation!
Occurrence:
Alcohol intoxication (also other drugs)
Metabolic disorders
Brain diseases
Fever
Sleep deprivation
sensory stimulus suppression (confinement in darkness)
5. Twilight state
Temporary “dream-like” narrowing of consciousness, in which the person concerned remains able to act
Decreased attention
Decreased responsiveness
“Mental blackout” (retrograde amnesia)
Usually starts and ends within a short time
Occurrence:
After epileptic seizures
So-called pathological alcohol intoxication
Brain injuries
psychogenic twilight conditions (fugue state)
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