Cases reported "Confusion"

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1/3. Acute confusion and unreal experiences in intensive care patients in relation to the ICU syndrome. Part II.

    The intensive care unit syndrome (ICU syndrome) is defined as an altered emotional state occurring in a highly stressful environment, which may manifest itself in various forms such as delirium, confusion, crazy dreams or unreal experiences. The purpose of this part of a study of patients' experiences is to describe and illuminate patients' experiences of acute confusion, disorientation, wakefulness, dreams and nightmares during and after their stay in the ICU. The data were obtained from 19 ventilated patients, who were interviewed twice and had stayed at least 36 hours in the ICU, the first interview being about one week after discharge from the ICU, and the second 4-8 weeks later. The hermeneutic approach used when interpreting and analysing the text from the interviews revealed that patients' experiences of unreal experiences were often associated with intense fear. Intense or continuous unbearable fear seems to result in frightening unreal experiences, which further increase the level of fear. Care actions or caring relationships with relatives or nurses can reduce this fear, which can help to prevent the occurrence and/or duration and intensity of the unreal experiences. trust and confidence in nurses or significant others and feelings of self-control or trust in self-control seemed to reduce the risk of unreal experiences so that adverse stimuli might only trigger a mild confusion.
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2/3. Sexual confusion among certain college males.

    In dealing with college age (18-22) males, clinical observations have shown a fairly common inability to successfully form intimate relationships with same-age females. This problem often appears to be due to an inability to bond and trust that is rooted in the formative years in the nuclear home. When this happens, the young male frequently develops a fear of being sexually abnormal, perhaps even homosexual. This manifests itself in shame, anxiety, depression, denial, reaction formation, performance anxiety, concern about being found out, isolation, substance abuse and, occasionally, acting out. Getting such persons to admit these fears is generally extremely difficult, requiring gentle and empathetic, but persistent, probing on the part of the therapist. Therapy consists of understanding and acceptance by the client that these fears are most often reactive, that they are commonly held, and that when they are seen in proper perspective, they often diminish. The present paper reviews some of the literature on sexual developmental issues of the adolescent male as a backdrop for this problem. The specific difficulties related to reactive homophobia are explored, and some therapeutic approaches suggested.
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3/3. Combined partial temporal and secondary generalized status epilepticus. Report of a case with fear bouts followed by prolonged confusion.

    A right-handed 32-year-old woman had recurrent combined partial temporal and secondary generalized epileptic states almost constantly related to menstruations. During such more or less prolonged episodes sometimes the patient presented right adversive attacks with short postictal dysphasia. The catamenial status epilepticus observed in this cas was manifested in two clear-cut behavioral phases. The first phase was characterized by frequently recurrent left temporal epileptiform discharges without tendency to diffusion, progressively more prolonged and pseudorhythmic associated with a signalized feeling of intense fear without apparent impairment of consciousness or speech disturbances. The electroclinical features of the first phase suggest a depth origin of the paroxysms, probably due to a primary epileptogenic focus in the left amygdaloid-hippocampal complex. In the second phase the left temporal focal semirhythmic discharges associated with fear bouts became more frequent and prolonged and began to be followed by long-lasting generalized discharges resulting in a trance-like state with severe impairment of consciousness. The diffuse paroxysmal activity regularly preceded by the left temporal focal discharges was interpreted as a form of secondary bilateral synchrony constantly triggered from a focal pacemaker represented by the primary epileptogenic focus. During the very short transient periods of sudden cessation of the epileptiform activity the patient returned immediately to an apparent normal mental state. Good correlation could be established between different seizure patterns and predominant clinical signs. Intravenous diazepam rapidly decreased and then completely stopped the catamenial status epilepticus. Some problems related to the classification of these rare epileptic events are discussed.
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ranking = 1.5
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