hebephrenia การใช้
- She is eventually diagnosed with hebephrenia, a form of schizophrenia.
- The Heebs consist of people suffering from hebephrenia ( disorganized schizophrenia ).
- Kraepelin continued to equate dementia praecox with hebephrenia for the next six years.
- It was during this period that Hecker developed the concepts of hebephrenia and cyclothymia.
- His brief clinical report described the case of a person with a psychotic disorder resembling hebephrenia.
- At that time, the concept corresponded by and large with Ewald Hecker's hebephrenia.
- Together Kahlbaum and Hecker were the first to describe and name such syndromes as dysthymia, cyclothymia, paranoia, catatonia, and hebephrenia.
- People with paranoid schizophrenia are often more articulate or " normal " seeming than other people with schizophrenia, such as hebephrenia-afflicted individuals.
- In their analyses of mental disorders, Kahlbaum and Hecker introduced a classification system that used descriptive terms such as dysthymia, cyclothymia, catatonia, paraphrenia and hebephrenia.
- He described hebephrenia as a disorder that begins in adolescence with erratic behaviour followed by a rapid decline of all mental functions, and cyclothymia as a cyclical mood disorder.
- According to Strauss, catastrophic schizophrenia took a similar course to catatonic schizophrenia and hebephrenia, with all three ending in the total collapse into psychosis within two to four years.
- In the second half of the century, Karl Kahlbaum and Ewald Hecker developed a descriptive categorizion of syndromes, employing terms such as dysthymia, cyclothymia, catatonia, paranoia and hebephrenia.
- Schizophrenia is sometimes also referred to as hebephrenia, stemming in etymology from the Greek god Hebe who was associated with adolescence and as it was thought the onset of schizophrenia came at adolescence.
- The Latinized term " dementia praecox " was first used by German alienist Heinrich Schule in 1886 and then in 1891 by Arnold Pick in a case report of a psychotic disorder ( hebephrenia ).
- Prognosis ( course and outcome ) began to feature alongside signs and symptoms in the description of syndromes, and he added a class of psychotic disorders designated " psychic degenerative processes ", three of which were borrowed from Kahlbaum and Hecker : " dementia paranoides " ( a degenerative type of Kahlbaum's paranoia, with sudden onset ), " catatonia " ( per Kahlbaum, 1874 ) and " dementia praecox ", ( Hecker's hebephrenia of 1871 ).