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What exactly is schizophrenia? That’s a question few people can answer in great detail. Most would simply answer that it was a disease in which a person had “two personalities.” Schizophrenia is a brain disease that tends to run in families. Family members have a 10 percent chance of getting the disease. According to researchers, schizophrenia is a combination of more than one disease. There is no way in which schizophrenia can be reliably measured. There is, however, a proposed list of symptoms which point strongly toward schizophrenia as the diagnosis. Some of the symptoms are: auditory hallucinations where
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Schizophrenia is a terrible disease which is hard on the individual as well as their family members and friends. However, the symptoms of schizophrenia may not appear until later in life. one’s thoughts are spoken aloud, auditory hallucinations in which two voices are arguing, hallucinations of touch, withdrawal of thoughts, insertion of thoughts, insertion of feelings by others, insertion of irresistible impulses, feeling that one’s actions are controlled by others, delusions of perception, and auditory hallucinations with voices commenting on o!
ne’s actions. Since 1935, reports have shown that individuals with schizophrenia have unusual fingerprint and palmprint patterns. The schizophrenic patients who are in the paranoid subtype are associated with a high 12% risk of suicide. Many theories have been explored as to just how this is transmitted to family members. Suspiciousness which thrives in the absence of negative symptoms describes the somewhat elevated risk group. Diseases of the brain, like schizophrenia, which affect the limbic system are more likely to produce schizophreniclike symptoms. The theory that schizophrenia is transmitted by genes has not yet been proved. This disease is a very common, devastating, and tragic mental illness that most often strikes youth people right when they are maturing into adulthood. However, diagnosis can only take place when the following standards have been met: illness symptoms lasting for at least six months, deterioration in everyday function, disease began before the age of 45, symptoms don’t suggest mental disorders or retardation, symptoms don’t suggest the presence of a manic-depressive illness, delusions, or hallucinations. They may not even notice any symptoms.
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