Difference between visceral discomfort and visceral hallucinations

Visceral discomfort is a disorder of visceral sensation, which is an unbearable feeling of discomfort in the body with an indeterminate nature and location, manifested as a sensation of crawling ants, a feeling of wandering, a feeling of squeezing, and a rather vague nature. Patients with visceral hallucinations feel abnormal perceptual experiences in a certain part of the torso or a certain organ, feeling that the intestines are twisting, liver rupture, heart perforation, and the presence of insect crawling in the abdomen, often accompanied by paranoid delusions, delusions of nothingness, as well as schizophrenia and depression. Internal sensory discomfort and visceral hallucinations, both of which are perceptual disorders, can be treated with anti-anxiety and anti-depressant medications if these symptoms affect the patient’s mood and are accompanied by anxiety and depression, and can alleviate the symptoms of visceral sensation, as well as visceral perception. If the symptoms are not very serious and the impact on oneself is not clear, one can go to live and work with the symptoms. Commonly used anti-anxiety and antidepressants, such as fluoxetine, paroxetine, venlafaxine, have the effect of improving symptoms, but also to increase the effectiveness of the drugs, to be combined with self-regulation and psychological guidance, often have a very good therapeutic effect.