Causes of the hazy state of consciousness

Patients in the hazy state of consciousness have a narrow range of awareness, concentrating on certain inner experiences without paying attention to things in the environment and with diminished response to the outside world. Thoughts are unclear and sometimes confused. Anxious or euphoric moods may be expressed. Etiology of Hazy State of Consciousness: The hazy state is more commonly seen clinically in epileptic mental disorders and hysteria, but can be seen in reactive psychosis craniocerebral injuries, infections poisonings as well as physical illnesses. Focused attention is given to certain inner experiences without paying attention to things in the environment, and reactions to the outside world are diminished. The hazy state is more commonly seen clinically in epileptic mental disorders and hysteria, but can be seen in reactive psychosis craniocerebral injury, infectious poisoning, and physical illness. Hazy state is one of the most common episodic mental disorders, the seizure is sudden, with varying degrees of impaired consciousness, the patient’s ability to recognize the environment is reduced, there is a certain degree of mental blurring, such as in a dream state, absent-mindedness, and the experience of past encounters. The patient’s movements are slow and dull, and his or her comprehension and reactions are slow. Sometimes it takes a long time for him or her to understand what is being asked and to answer questions, and he or she is accompanied by persistent speech and repetitive speech. There are often rich and vivid hallucinations, mainly hallucinations. The patient may sometimes be disoriented and completely unable to comprehend the environment, presenting a state of delirium. There may be emotional outbursts, most typically panic attacks or explosive impulses. The delirium lasts for hours to days, and in some cases for weeks, before the patient suddenly becomes conscious and may have no recollection of the attack. However, sometimes the attack can be recalled vaguely and piecemeal when the person is just awake, but after a period of time, it cannot be recalled at all. The occurrence of hysteria is closely related to psychological factors, social and cultural factors, and individual character traits, so the performance is mostly functional. Organic lesions of the disease mostly have positive findings in neurological and laboratory tests, which can lead to a clear diagnosis.