Oneirophrenia
Oneirophrenia and "φρήν" ) is a hallucinatory, dream-like state caused by several conditions such as prolonged sleep deprivation, sensory deprivation, or drugs. Oneirophrenia is often confused with an acute case of schizophrenia due to the onset of hallucinations. The severity of this condition can range from derealization to complete hallucinations and delusions. Oneirophrenia was described for the first time in the 1950s but was studied more in the 1960s. Although it is still cited in diagnostic manuals of psychiatry, such as DSM-IV and in the International [Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems], oneirophrenia as a separate entity is out of fashion nowadays.
History
Oneirophrenia was studied in the 1950s by the neurologist and psychiatrist Ladislas J. Meduna, also known as the discoverer of one of the forms of shock therapy, using the drug metrazol. Although oneirophrenia was recognized as a specific condition in the 1950s, it was not studied in depth until the 1960s. During its beginning stages oneirophrenia was studied very closely with schizophrenia as an acute form due to the relationship between their symptoms. It wasn't until greater research that oneirophrenia became its own mental disease.Meduna identified apperception disturbance as a core symptom of oneirophrenia, with primary impacts on sensory modalities: vision, proprioception and interoception, hearing, smell, and difficulty with central vision. Patients often experience a sense of unreality, which they struggle to accept for an extended period. Their reactions to the disorder are influenced by their pre-existing personality, typically beginning with fear and confusion. Oneirophrenia is characterized by "exogenous hallucinations," similar to those seen in delirium or states induced by psychoactive substances, as opposed to the "endogenous hallucinations" associated with schizophrenia. He proposed that "oneirophrenia, a primary illusionary psychosis, is the clinical result of a disturbance of the carbohydrate metabolism of the brain."