Here is a piece on a website I found and then I gave the website address you can read more on it: There are types of it also. HYSTERICAL NEUROSIS - Symptoms and Signs
Conversion symptoms: Almost any organ disease symptom can be simulated on an hysterical basis; eg, symptoms mimicking the illness of a deceased relative. A variety of sensorimotor symptoms have been considered to be specific to and characteristic of hysterical neurosis. Weakness and paralysis of muscular groups are common; spasms and abnormal movements, less frequent. The motor disturbances are usually accompanied by altered sensibility, especially those involving touch, pain, temperature, and position sense. Especially characteristic are the "glove and stocking" distribution of the motor and sensory disturbances when these affect the limbs; ie, the distribution is determined by the body-image concept of a functional arm and leg rather than the dermatome innervation of the area affected. Another common distribution is complete hemianesthesia, which extends exactly to the midline of the body fore and aft. Less frequently, special senses and functions may be affected, such as in hysterical blindness, deafness, and aphonia; both visual and auditory hallucinations may occur.
Dissociative phenomena: A variety of altered states of consciousness may result from the dissociative process. In somnambulism, the patient appears to be out of contact with his environment, is seemingly unresponsive to external stimuli, and in many cases appears to be living out a vivid, hallucinated drama, often the memory of some past emotionally traumatic event. In amnesia, the most common form of dissociative hysteria, the patient typically has a complete loss of memory for all past events covering a period of several hours to several weeks. Anterograde amnesia may occur, wherein the amnesia covers the memory of events as they are experienced, the patient forgetting continuously from moment to moment what he has just been thinking, feeling, and doing. For a discussion of amnesia as a functional syndrome in organic cerebral disease.
2006-10-12 15:09:02
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answer #1
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answered by Stephanie F 7
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incorrect link. yet i'm getting that that's what? some documentary approximately how Obama is a fraud? i do no longer understand, i do no longer watch youtube video clips that purport to tell the "fact" the two from the left or the right. they're all very biased and are not held to any style of standards of journalistic integrity. regrettably, a lot of human beings take them heavily and become delusional because of the fact the video is telling them precisely what they like to pay attention. ----------- ok I watched fairly some the actual link. I watched to the factor the place Joe Rogan became quoted as announcing finacial establishments pull each and every of the strings. he's the host of maximum suitable battling for Chrissake!
2016-10-02 06:07:33
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answer #2
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answered by wheelwright 4
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Hysteria is an extremely old term. It isn't considered a valid diagnosis anymore. It is now an aged term for what could be many anxiety, depressive and psychotic disorders. Sorry I can't be more helpful, but that term is not used anymore.
2006-10-12 15:09:09
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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