Schizophrenia & Dystonia (Incredible Archival Footage) | Dr Syl's Analysis

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 เม.ย. 2024
  • In this video of a man suffering from schizophrenia, there are multiple important psychopathological symptoms described. These include auditory hallucinations, passivity phenomena, made-affect, thought broadcasting and dystonia.
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    ** The information in this video is not intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. All content, including text, graphics, images, and information, contained in this video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a consultation with your own doctor/health professional. If anything in this video was distressing please consider calling LifeLine 131114 **
    Timestamps
    00:00 - Introduction
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ความคิดเห็น • 126

  • @tracyhernandez4312
    @tracyhernandez4312 หลายเดือนก่อน +91

    You don’t talk too much! This was interesting and informative

    • @saintaitchsee
      @saintaitchsee หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I'm with u on that one, good video

  • @zeroequalstwo
    @zeroequalstwo หลายเดือนก่อน +58

    I do appreciate the constant pauses dr Syl! I believe that's why majority of us are subscribed, to learn more about these devastating conditions. Thanks dr!

  • @MrWillyMrBrightside
    @MrWillyMrBrightside หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    You don't pause too often at all, we are here for your expert analysis and input

  • @rohini8084
    @rohini8084 หลายเดือนก่อน +51

    You don't talk too much! this is how we learn from you lol! appreciate the work you put into each video!

  • @rachelleedwards1963
    @rachelleedwards1963 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    I've been diagnosed with trauma-induced psychosis, and it is most terrifying. No longer being able to trust my mind without medication really changed how I view people who don't respond well to treatment. Instead of not understanding what I'm seeing, my heart now has so much compassion for them. Thank you for sharing this video and helping us learn from it. I hope this man was able to respond well to treatment.

    • @rosemadder5547
      @rosemadder5547 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      There's a silver lining to anything ❤ my best friend has bad episodes of psychosis... She's lost every friend other than me over the last 15 years. I have pretty big manic episodes, myself, plus CPTSD, anxiety disorder with OCD, trichotillomania, . I think both situations have made me a better EMT... A better human. Being able to empathize like you can , can be a beautiful gift. I wish you peace (and the perfect combo of meds lol Once we find that, things really can improve! But it's a long process huh?) Sending good vibes your way ❤❤ never lose perspective on how special and vital you are for having that compassion for others. Not everyone knows how.

  • @dawnleemisener4778
    @dawnleemisener4778 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    As the parent of a son with schizophrenia, I find these videos so helpful, yet so sad. Knowing others suffer as my son suffers is heartbreaking for me.

  • @littlemissmisses2981
    @littlemissmisses2981 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I can see how uncomfortable the section with the dystonia made you, like you wanted to immediately help him. You’re a good man Dr Syl ❤

  • @smvogt07
    @smvogt07 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    You definitely don’t talk too much - I’m sure the majority of us LOVE the detailed explanations. So thank you very much for taking extra time to explain everything you’re observing.

  • @swaagaa
    @swaagaa หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Love your explenational videos, Dr Syl!
    I want to say one thing because of the irony. This is not said to change anything, just a "funny" observation in myself. I have schizophrenia and sometimes you look directly into the camera while you're watching the other videos, and make some expressions that really make it feel you're assessing me through the screen if I'm particularly "vulnerable" that day. Just a little funny, and probably just a thing that's great for me to work on.

  • @GlitterBomber
    @GlitterBomber หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    You don't talk too much. I appreciate that you pause and explain so often. I want to understand what's going on, even though I don't work in the medical field or with mental health at all. I just find it interesting.

  • @user-jq2gw2ve7j
    @user-jq2gw2ve7j หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Ramble away. Your commentary is very informative.

  • @ajpthequeen
    @ajpthequeen หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    Thank you for your commentary and explanations. These are such important topics for everyone to learn more about. There is so much stigma around mental illnesses and disorders and the more educated we all are, the better for everyone

  • @BenjiJames
    @BenjiJames หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I know you're more for short-form reactions, but if possible - i'd recommend the true crime story 'Snowtown' - aka, 'The Snowtown Murders'. It's an Australian True Crime film about the South Australian serial killer where the headlines called it the "Bodies In A Barrel Murders". The film itself is extremely close to what happened in real life and not only shows the side effects of those affected by the killers behaviour, but the lengths the lead teenager would go to try to make the killer stop or prevent him from being abused in some way, shape or form. Not sure if that's explained properly, but it's an excellent watch for psychological purposes.

  • @Gwenx
    @Gwenx หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I don't mind the pausing at all, and i love the "rambles"! I feel like i am learning so much!
    I am also super surprised to hear that the DSM5 dosen't use "paranoid schizophrenia" as a description.. As that was my original diagnosis, 7 years ago, despite me not having ANY real or big symptoms - i had previously as a teen been diagnosed with a bad depression and anxiety, so the anxiety had just grown as i was traumatized more and more during my teenage years.. Its so interesting to learn what requirements you need to meet, and how the frick my doctor got to that decision is a mystery for us all.
    I have Autism - and because of my trauma, depression and anxiety, i guess it can look like a mild case of schizophrenia, when i am stressed to the max..

  • @pasteljoy282
    @pasteljoy282 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have a diagnosed schizophrenia spectrum disorder, and I didn't know passivity phenomena included affect.
    I have had a notion, since I was little, that emotions are essentially spirits that inhabit you around certain stimuli, and also some times they can possess you. But luckily I haven't had the possession experience (yet).

  • @sarahk802
    @sarahk802 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I really appreciate your videos. I work as a clinical social worker in a setting without any psychiatrists, and the information you share helps me understand the complexities of psychotic symptoms and disorders. Thank you so much! I would love to hear your thoughts on the relationship between delusional beliefs, misattribution of value, and hoarding disorder.

  • @user-wb2yv7ll9d
    @user-wb2yv7ll9d หลายเดือนก่อน

    Why is it that all pains felt by patients with scizophrenia (headache, toothache, etc) are more often that not considered somatic? There must be times that these pains are not somatic and yet these poor patients are never believed.

  • @yar8564
    @yar8564 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    9:25 I didn't understand what the patient said there, but since they were talking about thought transmission devices in his teeth: how would one differentiate between a patient experiencing medication-induced dystonia and (something like) him testing his teeth for the devices? Especially given that the doctor just suggested that the experience must've been very distressing. Being preoccupied with checking one's front teeth for devices would probably look awkward on anyone, no?

  • @oliviasawrey4335
    @oliviasawrey4335 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    8:45... interesting ethics there. People not getting compulsory treatment unless they are deemed dangerous puts family who want them to be treated in harm's way. If the only way to get someone treated is to demonstrate that they are dangerous, you have no choice but to provoke them 😢😢😢

    • @TheNurseWhoLovedMe89
      @TheNurseWhoLovedMe89 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I have complicated feelings about this because I understand why they don’t force treatment if someone is still functional and not dangerous, but I do actually have PTSD from someone who was schizophrenic, violent, and dangerous *and* also non-compliant with medication. I won’t go into details obviously, but even after I had to get a VRO because of his escalating violence and threats on my life, he still wasn’t forced to be treated. Admittedly, this was about 15 years ago so things are probably different now in the hospital system, and I appreciate that the majority of people with schizophrenia aren’t violent or dangerous, I found myself in the firing line of one of the very few who are and I nearly lost my life. So, yes.. I definitely have complicated feelings about this subject…

    • @spicyphilly
      @spicyphilly หลายเดือนก่อน

      I can relate. My Mom is Schizophrenic and was a violent one. On top of that she was a stay at home Mom while my Dad was an interstate truck driver who was gone a week or so at a time. He had no idea what was happening while he was gone.
      I was about 12 when she was finally diagnosed, yet she didn't have to get treatment even though it was recommended and the doctors were aware she was violent and abusive at times.
      Now I suffer from cptsd and keep choosing unhealthy partners that treat me similar to how she did even though I've been to years of therapy. While it has helped me tremendously, I feel I would've been much better off if the source of the abuse had been removed and therapy for me had began when I was a child. I was a complete mess and wanted to unalive myself in my teens and early adulthood thanks to her untreated mental illness.
      I absolutely hated my Mom growing up because she was so scary, cruel, and unpredictable.

    • @margodphd
      @margodphd หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@spicyphillyI'm so sorry. My friend had to fight to get her father commited - it was a long route, but ultimately he was hospitalised long term and is living in a facility where he's happy and safe. It's incredibly cruel to have a child be, ultimately, main caretaker for an adult, no matter the illness. Was she behaving "better" around your dad and he didn't believe you or he didn't know how to help? I share similar kind of trauma with similar effects (although in my case, it was my mother's cluster b personality disorder) - I've decided to just stay single not to be re-victimised. I hope I can one day, heal enough but for now, I keep my animals close and people at a distance.I wish you the best ❤

  • @sandracandelaria2055
    @sandracandelaria2055 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you for your educational videos relating to mental illnesses. My 19 year old grandson was recently diagnosed with an intellectual disability with signs of Autism early on that was overlooked. A few years ago he was diagnosed with schizophrenia. I’ve been reading his undiagnosed Autism can lead to a misdiagnosis of schizophrenia. Can you address this in future videos. Thank you.

  • @InvertedGoblin
    @InvertedGoblin หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Is it normal to ask such leading questions in an interview? I would imagine you'd want to get an unbiased version of what the patient is experiencing by asking more open-ended questions and then asking more pointed questions afterwards.
    I guess maybe they're just trying to cover things for the video that they've already discussed, though
    Edit: I hadn't watched the entire video when I posted that. So I hadn't seen that you brought this up later. Thanks!

  • @amyherrera3980
    @amyherrera3980 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I enjoy the pauses and the thoughtful feedback as you see it. Great work. I love watching these videos. Question about them asking questions about his psychosis, could they actually introduce new psychosis that wasn’t there before? Or is that not a risk? Like asking… “do other people listen through their teeth?” - if that wasn’t something he was thinking before is he at risk to start believing now? Hope that question makes sense.

  • @mihaipopescu5538
    @mihaipopescu5538 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Very interesting👏🏼

  • @annemorgan2064
    @annemorgan2064 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Your rambling is great, that’s why I’m here!

  • @hollehpazouki7623
    @hollehpazouki7623 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you Dr.

  • @boopdooper
    @boopdooper หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Pause as much as you want! We're here for the tidbits. Great work

  • @Levienna
    @Levienna หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you for pausing and delivering your thoughts and professional opinions. Thats what im here for🤩

  • @adriagalvarez
    @adriagalvarez หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I appreciate all of your explanations! They seem thorough and are very helpful for understanding what is really happening with the people that are going through these experiences.

  • @rosemadder5547
    @rosemadder5547 หลายเดือนก่อน

    His postured face reminded me of my trichotillomania. Like he felt the compulsion to do that with his tongue and mouth right then, especially with his belief he has transmitters in his teeth, and was so compelled to do it, he just had to do it. Couldnt stop just to speak. Dystonia of course makes more sense, but it just struck me as similar. Like when I need to use my hands for something but i cant stop to use them, bc im being so compelled to do what im doing.

  • @user-mn8zr5fu6t
    @user-mn8zr5fu6t หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Br Syl your doing amazing 👍
    That's the point of your videos to point out all those things so we can learn.
    I love hearing what you have to say.
    Keep up your great work!

  • @patdogggg
    @patdogggg 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I look forward to your analysis Doc!

  • @Aicha___
    @Aicha___ หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love watching your videos after a long day of university or work. You give such insightful and interesting commentary, and your calm yet lively and bright demeanor is very enjoyable. I love learning from you!

  • @Abril766tf
    @Abril766tf หลายเดือนก่อน

    you definitely do not talk too much! these videos are extremely informative :)

  • @isobelchubb4729
    @isobelchubb4729 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Hi Dr Syl, Just a thank you for your videos. I'm a training psychotherapist and I find your content really helpful!

  • @amandahowe4353
    @amandahowe4353 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'd like to echo several other commenters and say that you definitely don't talk too much and even if you did, that's what we're here for! Your brilliant and sympathetic explanation and insight is why we watch. I'm always interested in what you add to these archival interviews.

  • @amirachokri4084
    @amirachokri4084 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you, very informative as usual ! More of chatting and driving videos please :)) it's good to listen to your reflexions 👋 drive safely 😀

  • @curly__headed
    @curly__headed หลายเดือนก่อน

    Really really love your insights into all aspects of these diseases! I had no idea about dystonia and feel like I’ve seen it possibly a lot particularly in unhoused people in my city.

  • @london_liv5539
    @london_liv5539 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A side note: is the interviewer Australian too? Very interesting archival footage. I really appreciate your informed commentary 🙏🏽

  • @TaliaMellifera
    @TaliaMellifera หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    9:59 - I had the impression, the client was maybe feeling physically taken over (as you suggested as a possible symptom just before) and distressed, putting his tongue out like that did not seem very comfortable.

  • @dakute4986
    @dakute4986 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi Dr Syl! I am currently a medical student based in Victoria, and I am really enjoying watching your videos as I am super keen to train in psychiatry following my internship. I was wondering whether it would be possible for you to make a video on how much psychiatry registrars and consultants earn on average in Australia (in different states), and also talk about the future scope of psychiatry in Australia (urban vs rural)? Thank you so much and please keep making this amazing content ✌

  • @henrygingercat
    @henrygingercat หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    One thing has long intrigued me: I don't doubt that most of us believe animals or at least mammals are prone to neuroses; depression, anxiety, phobias etc. But are they prone to psychoses? OK, I admit it can't be easy to tell if Tiddles behaves as though she's controlled by radio waves from Venus but I've never encountered any "psychotic" mammalian behaviour that didn't have an obvious physical cause such as mad cow disease. So is psychosis a purely human phenomenon?

    • @dionysusapollo
      @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน

      Also blind people don't get schizophrenia, maybe because it starts as a condition of sensory overwhelm and they don't have the sense of sight.

    • @spicyphilly
      @spicyphilly หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I'm curious about this as well.

    • @dionysusapollo
      @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน

      I dunno, but I have two sibling cats with the same upbringing since kittens. One hides under the bed all day and does ocd licking behaviour and is scared of all visitors, her sister is very curious and open, follows the humans around, sits on visitors laps and calls on the neighbours. I have them since five weeks old, it's called the nature nurture debate.

    • @margodphd
      @margodphd หลายเดือนก่อน

      It's very interesting question, but likely it's long time until we'll know for sure. There are animals known to willingly consume substances that cause hallucinations in human beings (not for purpose of nutrition, scientist confirmed) so they seem to have capacity to experience their effect. That being said, a lot of psychosis, like delusional beliefs is based on aspects of life unique to humans (religion, politics, culture) so in animals,at most they would experience is heightened fear reaction.

    • @henrygingercat
      @henrygingercat หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@margodphd Thanks for such an interesting answer. I wish I could remember his name but I recall reading an English psychiatrist who hypothesised about 20 years ago that when it started to develop language the human brain started to render itself liable to psychosis.

  • @sandracairney6007
    @sandracairney6007 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Inspirational and extremely understandable explanations. Even when you geeked out ( love geeking out myself) I understood and followed, I kind of likened it to the wiring in a house ,if you disrupted some wires certain lights could flicker or conduct overcurrent,? I dont know what you think but I simplified the explanations with that metaphor. I just love when professionals who are also emotionally healthy,explain the informational facts that are generally hard to find,unless you had studied with other people in lectures etc. again,thanks for sharing. I know a few people who suffer to varying degrees with schizophrenia,one a neighbour and the other was my father. I like to understand so I can know best how to reassure and comfort, especially because it mental illness tends to be a lonely condition.
    I had psychosis last year as i stopped diazepam suddenly,however i was aware that I was having auditory hallucinations,delusions but the positive were ironically the delusions, I actually had been subject to domestic violence of the narcissistic kind,the stalking and stress triggered delusions,i could hear the voices of my son who was psychologically abducted by fear and force, I heard the voice of my abuser saying nice things that he would typically say,trauma bonding turned brain damage quite literally. I was being stalked at one point,i was being attacked by different authorities where false reports to police etc were being made ( i dont know if youre aware of the cluster b disorders as they seem to be sane but are the truly evil cruel individuals with no access to empathy making them extremely sadistic,controlling and incapable of being anything but in their grandiose delusions permanently. This person managed to make a sane person go crazy as they literally pull you into their delusion by mirroring you,followed by abuse,exploitation,envy,pathological lying etc im sure you know what i mean but very few people understand that internal consciousness abuse,manipulating perceptions,deliberately being put in double binds,accussed because of their psychotic paranoia. It needs to be broken down and given to young people so they are aware how fragile consciousness is,literally the 12year of entrapment in a relationship that involved serious emotional and physical abuse,control and a chipping away of ego boundaries,literally caused me the worst breakdown of. My life. I thought i was stalked on every video,i saw bright flashes like i was having photos taken at a distance,as i said,i heard voices but knew it was not real, still,as you said,having experienced a voice its like back ground noise is misinterpretated at least i think, by my brain. The voices were quite quiet,like being in a busy mall,lots of voices but amidst that cacophony of random voices,i literally heard either my son whod been kidnapped or my ex. I would talk to myself endlessly but still,i knew there was noone there. I barely slept ,ate or had any relevance to time or life,all the while the terror was overwhelming,each time the car door closed outside i thought police were coming to arrest me as I literally was bullied voiceless,when i literally said you are abusing me,please dont ever approach me or my family again,,the new female hed decieved into thinking i was the problem and of course he encouraged jealousy as it made him feel powerful,this female relayed that to police as i was threatening her and they enabled their endless smear campaigns to go on until i had a severe nervous breakdown. I tried everything to reason and fawned to just make the abuse stop but again and again,police in scotland meant to put a stop to dv,enabled it. I as the victim was telling the truth over and over and yet being subjected to these year and a half terror campaigns where they found petty charges to foul my record,had me up and down to a court multiple times for no reason, ultimately in the end the lawyers and judges,police and social workers even teachers all abused a victim and made their wages..only for it to be thrown out. The point was not the charges but the nights in a prison cell are psychological torture in themselves,then the humiliation and betrayal trauma of nobody believing the truth. I still hope i can report the abuse i suffered and see if theres any educational awareness that could be brought to ayr police,kyle academy ayr, the social services whove neglected to look into the accussers of child crimes even as they are guilty themselves. It looked to me that each arrest or abuse was an admition of what they were doing..ie i was a jealous stalker..it was i who was being followed,even to the point of trying to track elderly people i had helped,for information,the oddest thing was it was the two together. I wonder if anyone could give me any insight,surely if this female was neurotypical,,she wouldnt help a man she was having a relationship with,stalk his ex wife? Surely i was thinking she must be mentally ill too? It may just have been for oersonal gain as they eventually after being given contact,just failed to return my 12year old and I lost six years of his life as his father and new wife viciously attacked me in every way they could. I think they tried to orovoke suicide instead it made me neurotic and addicted to tranquilisers. I was tied up bound and gagged,i felt like a fugitive and truth wasnt working. I think everyone needs to know about psychopathic abuse and narcissistic abuse as they turn victim into criminal as theyre abusing. So i was left penniless,childless,my ex husband was scamming me with his evil wife and I was totally alone. Was this enough to cause all those perceptual hallucinations,talking to myself though i knew i was doing it. Imagining cameras in ceiling lights everywhere,watched 24/7 and yet god knows when this evil maniac who had me so controlled and confused actually started to achieve that level of damage. They both deserve to be arrested and charged with severe battery,to drive somebody insane,take their only child and selfishly allow no contact while showing off with this mistress at the time, overpowering my son and usurping my authority as a mum,to the point she refused me access after the abduction?! Police did not a thing,infact they treated me like i cared that an evil man had been taken off my hands. I never thought a sound mind could be shattered like this,i saw my dead father on the chair as i stopped the diazepam suddey, couldn't sleep for many days and then my body had a huge seizure. They could have killed me,i was so desperately injured but this kind of person has no conscience or care for the violent damage he causes on ,im sure not just me but his five children ,half hers, one was mine and they even went on to destroy another family by claiming their little girl was abused,also,once again it would mean making money from this child ànd deliberately lying. I dont understand how social workers didnt identify past sick behaviours and instead of just believing allegations,they stake...i consider that the worst battery ive had in my life,they say severe emotional abuse can cause the same in injuries as blunt force head trauma. Hence ive written my story here.
    Girls,never trust a man that says he loves you after a week,wants to move in and mirrors all you like/do. Watch for arrogance and grandiodsity,no manners and goal orientated. They will take everything,including your mind,money is nothing compared to that and I really thought stalking wouldnt be soo psychologically damaging but nope,every bit of my illness is based on not being able to protect my own awareness of truth from very well planned malevolence. ( I might write this properly with the evidence and call it narcissistic abuse a victims fight for sanity and freedom , I could have been put in real jail as they are so skilled at confusion and abusing to the point one self defends only to end up portrayed the problem
    Thanks for videoxxmmcc

  • @sameoldsonganddance
    @sameoldsonganddance หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I have to admit I didn’t watch the whole thing before making this comment but I find it interesting that pre-“transmitter“ people didn’t talk about these things so if you look at the 1950s schizophrenia video they’re not talking about these things the person is aware of updated worldly devices

    • @jeremymaez5311
      @jeremymaez5311 24 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Hallucinations/delusions/etc are always dependent on the imaginary of the person affected, it is just as how we do not have hallucinations or delusions regarding things no longer inhabiting the general sphere of consciousness in the population, or determinately, the person affected by the psychosis. Psychosis can only go off of the factors it is dependent on and spawns from. It is a condition of the mind and affects the structure and content of thoughts but also is simultaneously dependent on and composed of them. No matter how bizarre the content of delusions appears to be, it has a root in the real, underlying nature of things and the infinite attributes that the imagination exhibits.

    • @sameoldsonganddance
      @sameoldsonganddance 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jeremymaez5311 Right, so it’s based on things the person has either heard of or experienced in the “ real life world “ correct? Unfortunatelyy for new patients the world has so many more things to obsess over. ALTHOUGH, I would imagine worries about a horse of field of vegetables growing could be just as upsetting. It’s all in the perspective I suppose. 👍🏻

    • @jeremymaez5311
      @jeremymaez5311 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@sameoldsonganddance certainly! I have schizoaffective disorder and my delusions have been very complex and bizarre because of the sorts of content I've grown up on, having had unrestricted internet access since I was 8 years old.

    • @sameoldsonganddance
      @sameoldsonganddance 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@jeremymaez5311 Very well spoken and great descriptions stay happy!

  • @evavazne604
    @evavazne604 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hey ☺️. Nope please keep pausing and talking! I have learnt so much from your videos and I get quite excited when I know you've posted another one, especially if it is a commentary one. It is super helpful for my work as a nurse. Interesting you said a third respond well, then a third respond partially and another third just doesn't respond that well. I have seen all three variables and it's very sad and frustrating when you get to the third that don't respond and are very young people with the whole life ahead of them. Trial and error right, hopefully we will see some advances in this field in the next couple of decades 😬.
    Questions I have and don't worry if you don't respond. Do most people remember being psychotic and do they recognise that what they thought was 'odd'? And thought blocking - can you as a professional describe someone as being thought blocked or does the person need to tell you that they think someone is blocking their thoughts for yourself to be able to describe this person experiencing thought blocking? Sorry confusing :)

  • @nicki9356
    @nicki9356 หลายเดือนก่อน

    To your question. Perhaps he’s trying to block the transmission from his teeth, and talk to the therapist at the same time.

  • @torgeist.
    @torgeist. หลายเดือนก่อน

    The vine has some good points, imho!

  • @jean2479
    @jean2479 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My son's diagnosis is paranoid schizophrenia, and that does sound so scary! But every person with Sz present in their own way, there are many "symptoms" that do seem like the same, it's such a serious disease. My son is sweet and loving as always but he doesn't really DO anything except wander around the house smoking pot and cigs. Heartbreaking.
    Something in the video, now if I can remember lol something to do with psychosis, the salience part, reminds me of when my son said he had a message. An important message he needed to share but what is the message? No idea, although there's the feeling there was a message. Very bizarre. Idk if I can explain how it seemed to me.

  • @sophiegolden
    @sophiegolden หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you Dr for those videos. Yes I have a question : do those patients have some relief times ? Or are they constantly in that state ?

  • @dionysusapollo
    @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I grimace, I rang my psych nurse and told him I wasn't taking my meds anymore because I was convinced it was the cause of it. But then I noticed it only happens when cars go past and I'm in busy places like shops. The neurologist says I have sensory processing disorder and it causes functional neurological disorder, so it's the sensory overwhelm eg from the cars sounding so loud or the busy visual stimulus. I try and cover my mouth so nobody sees. I thought I had tardive dyskinesia but in any case, quetiapine is meant to work for FND too. So I take my meds again for now, it's such a confusing tangle of symptoms but FND is harmless so I'm ignoring my numb half a face at the moment because I know it's benign and temporary.

  • @EmberCrow
    @EmberCrow หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    A lot of the things in this video in particular remind me of myself.

  • @christianboeckh3449
    @christianboeckh3449 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It's great if you pause at the moment that something happens. The context is already there.
    Otherwise, we'd have to go back to the moments later on. People can watch the entire video anyway. And, if you change to discuss everything after the video, you'll have the same amount of comments the other way around 🤷‍♂️

  • @boneitch
    @boneitch หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The tongue movement was so interesting, since I've seen this exact thing in people I know who deal with psychosis.
    So is dystonia a side effect of medication, and not a symptom of psychosis? And how does that differ from catatonia?

    • @mobee9181
      @mobee9181 หลายเดือนก่อน

      its a horrible effect of the practically useless medication. Almost all the stereotypical "crazy" stuff: drooling, twitching, eye rolling (oculogyric crisis!) tongue sticking out, teeth grinding, pacing shit is from the horrible, horrible medications that we are punished with for being accused of mental illness. Seeming mentally slow? Also the meds, or drugs as they really should be called.

    • @bigfatpoo
      @bigfatpoo 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Antipsychotics and ssri’s can cause dystonia

  • @bestwishes2455
    @bestwishes2455 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Would you be able to make a video on similarities between schizophrenia and Parkinson disease...

  • @karmacomacure
    @karmacomacure หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Before I see the explanation about why his speech changed, my guess is he was trying to block his teeth while speaking because he believes someone far away can hear him speak as well .. ?

    • @karmacomacure
      @karmacomacure หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wow I was totally wrong, okay. So interesting.

    • @dionysusapollo
      @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Great point

    • @mglassco4
      @mglassco4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think you were touching on a large root that played a big role in triggering the the dystonic movements.
      Fear and or trauma can cause and or exasperate various kinds of Dystonia including Focal Task Specific Dystonia such as musician’s Dystonia or be more global such as cervical dystonia(ie. Spasmodic Tortícolis).
      Musician’s Dystonia, whether hand or Embouchure, is absolutely able to be successfully overcome and has been by many including myself. However- any musician who seeks advice from a traditional neurologist will be told it’s incurable and to sell their horn.
      Tardive dyskinesia, just as Dr. Syl explains, is medication induced, and can be caused by several kinds of medications, however, it is often most associated with antipsychotics. Gen2, SGA, have a higher-risk than 1st gens and newer antipsychotics.
      For clarification- the tortícolis Dr. Syl mentions in this wonderful analysis is a subset of Tardive dyskinesia.
      Merck Manuals quote: “In many cases, an emotional stressor or an abnormal core of beliefs is identified as a trigger. In such cases, a multidisciplinary team, including a neurologist, psychiatrist, and psychologist, is necessary.”
      I’m sure there are exceptions, however there is usually a psychosomatic origin usually rooted in fear, anxiety, and or distress.
      I don’t have the specific article- 3-5 years ago a doctor published his clinical findings regarding his diagnosis observation that the majority of the patients he treated for hand dystonia, a FTSD, that occurred from cell phone use and holding the device in their hands, had OCD traits if not diagnosable OCD.
      IMO- depending on how long the patient had been on antipsychotics with consideration to dosage… whether or not medication played a part, there is absolutely a connection to the fear, uncertainty, and emotional/cognitive distress from his severe struggle with his delusions(a.k.a- HIS very real "perceived" reality).
      GREAT JOB @ picking up and understanding things as you did.
      @DrSyl- thank you for your knowledge, competence, kindness and compassion. Please help facilitate a change in the field of psychiatry and demonstrating the power of curiosity & connection.

    • @dionysusapollo
      @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@mglassco4 Functional Neurological Disorder can cause dystonia too, which is similar. So hard to tease everything apart when there's a lot going on.

  • @hello_sunshine19
    @hello_sunshine19 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    My nephew has been diagnosed with early onset psychosis. He's refusing meds and therapy. We're in Sydney too. Let me know if you are seeing clients.

  • @joanferinga
    @joanferinga หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hi Dr. Syl, you sometimes mention the percentage of population that suffer or struggle with particular kinds of disorders. Is there actually a source that outlines these percentages I ask because people so often exaggerate or underestimate the kind of numbers that likely have research and evidence to indicate accurately with the numbers should be estimated at. I’d love to hear global numbers and I know there are disputed areas for these kinds of answers!

  • @bethechangebevegan853
    @bethechangebevegan853 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    People who say to stop pausing the video so much, are completely clueless.

  • @typedbyben
    @typedbyben หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Man that one could have filled an hour for sure. Should have kept on

  • @oppressednolonger1497
    @oppressednolonger1497 หลายเดือนก่อน

    where is the link you mentioned you would put in description at 13. 45 minutes in? thanks! As an aside, Im in an MA programme at the moment

  • @terricrowe8944
    @terricrowe8944 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Keep talking and pausing the videos to talk. If people would like to watch uninterrupted, they can watch the link you provide.
    Good case analysis. Love the education about the pathophysiology of the likely medication he was on causing the dystonia/torticollis.

  • @helifynoe9930
    @helifynoe9930 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    If you seem to be experiencing events that others are totally unaware of, and then they instantly conclude that you are seeing and/or hearing things that are not actually real at all, you need to find a psychiatrist that is in touch with reality. Now if one is in touch with reality, then obviously one knows of what it is that one is in touch with. With this being the case, one can therefore educate today's physicists, since they have not yet managed to be in touch with reality, hence there are still roughly 15 different interpretations concerning what quantum mechanics really is all about. Thus they, in their delusional state of mind, are seeing 15 different things, while each one of them is not actually connected to reality at all.

  • @dionysusapollo
    @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Schizophrenic people seem very passive and vulnerable a lot of the time, kind of bewildered by what they are experiencing I guess.

  • @stclare58
    @stclare58 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Pause away Doc! So, the dystonia seemed to pass quickly, is that typical? If left untreated would you expect them to frequently recur?

  • @alphadog3384
    @alphadog3384 22 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Could you find an old video from the 1960s or 1970s with personality disorder (Borderline Personality)?

  • @dionysusapollo
    @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน

    All the respectful 'yes sir's' even from someone in psychosis. I wonder how we have got from there to the abuse people throw at medical professionals and teachers now.

  • @bestwishes2455
    @bestwishes2455 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Isn't that a person suffering from schizophrenia is trying to make sense out of those invaluable things as their filter in the brain responsible for choosing what's valuable is compromised?

  • @jameslewis5131
    @jameslewis5131 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thought create the illusion of self and time all perception of reality is hallucination freewill and self don't really exist you ownley know that your hand belongs to you though the constant repetitive use of thought with out thoughts there is no separation between anything.

  • @TheNurseWhoLovedMe89
    @TheNurseWhoLovedMe89 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m wondering, Dr Syl, do psychotic patients have a sense of whether they’re believed or not? Thinking about how the patients will be asked to describe the bizarre symptoms they’re experiencing, I know these symptoms feel real to the patient, but do they believe everyone experiences these things (ie that it’s common, factual knowledge), or are they aware that it isn’t actually something everyone experiences? I’m assuming it’ll vary from patient to patient but I was curious because these lines of questioning to me could seem odd from a patients perspective if they believe it’s common knowledge or experience to all people (or a lot of people at least) 🤔

    • @dionysusapollo
      @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน

      A lot of people go on Redditt who seem to be aware they are psychotic and are looking for reality testing or shared experiences from other people going through the same thing. I asked a neurologist if the sound I hear is real, and he said, well it's real to you and you aren't delusional about it. When they say that phrase 'it's real to you' I interpret it as it's not real.

  • @SambaBall-nn9ce
    @SambaBall-nn9ce หลายเดือนก่อน

    talk about mental automatism.

  • @poeticserenade
    @poeticserenade หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Is this dystonia the reason for that viral cashier at a fast food place doing weird faces and sticking her tongue out randomly and bulging her eyes?

    • @zoeyelh
      @zoeyelh หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      might be tardive dyskinesia or tourettes 🤷‍♀️

  • @patriciahollis9803
    @patriciahollis9803 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Tardiness dyskenesia?

  • @amyyoung2804
    @amyyoung2804 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is it tardive dystonia ?

  • @Sonieta03.
    @Sonieta03. 23 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I think there's a genetic condicion or maybe different ones that causes this illness, i would like to know the commodities.

  • @mj-ls7qr8xp3n
    @mj-ls7qr8xp3n 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

    ?? What is considered "functioning at a level society deems is acceptable"??

  • @sadchimp8567
    @sadchimp8567 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is that Bob Lazar with a southern accent?? Everything he’s ever said makes sense now!

  • @andreasobuaculla9511
    @andreasobuaculla9511 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I do apologise,if I was being a bit unfiltered about picking at your eye brow no offence was meant ,sorry!

  • @Trevonski5
    @Trevonski5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sounds bizarre to others.

  • @tracyhernandez4312
    @tracyhernandez4312 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The hospital gave my husband Haldol and it was for a short time - why? Bipolar depression and the med was chosen for metabolic purposes. But this medication is hellish. He’s been off it for months and still has some involuntary muscle movements like a chewing movement and hand jerks. And it made him a zombie. I hate that medication

    • @too_tired_for_this
      @too_tired_for_this หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Haldol is a really strange route for bipolar depression as a first line treatment. I wonder what made them choose that.

    • @tracyhernandez4312
      @tracyhernandez4312 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They said it was considered less metabolically impactful - it was a hellish nightmare and he still has lingering symptoms and he stopped taking this in November so they may be permanent 🤬

  • @swingria3154
    @swingria3154 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Maybe I' very wrong, but I think that when he stuck out his tongue, he did it because he was bored of the doctor's questions. He was trying to entertain himself by doing something silly like that.

  • @glenngray675
    @glenngray675 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It's like stdyimg a wreck after the collision. It's not what it was meant to be. Prevention is the cure to brain damage during childhood development. We are not all the same and shouldn't be raised as if we were all the same..

  • @ernexwise2263
    @ernexwise2263 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The segment with the tongue poking out doesn’t look continuous either the rest of the interview

  • @TheYokaiRadio
    @TheYokaiRadio หลายเดือนก่อน

    Here I am, staring at the plant, wondering if it's plastic or real😅I just have ADHD brain. My Mom thought a bottle of sand I got from the beach on vacation had a recording device & poured it out in the sink🥴
    It's worth noting that it takes you 5 seconds to have all these thoughts but if it were anyone else..

  • @grifixed
    @grifixed หลายเดือนก่อน

    Td

  • @lovebug11768
    @lovebug11768 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Play the entire video for the audience and then do your lecture with the pauses.

  • @spooktoken
    @spooktoken หลายเดือนก่อน

    🫶🏻....

  • @jean2479
    @jean2479 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm back. I have to comment that the interviewer absolutely does have to do all the talking and there will be no spontaneous conversation on the part of the patient. One word answers etc.

  • @drumstruck751
    @drumstruck751 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm a patient of schizophrenia can i ask you about changing the definition. I'm not vibing with hallucination.
    Ludiation:chemical bonds breaking between molecules because of nutrients diminishing (ludiating)
    Ludiance:nutrient bonds between biological molecules. (NOT A DOCTOR) (but this is for doctors)
    Your using hallucination wrong by the way that's not true to definitional sense easy to mix up. Paranoia Dellusion Voices and Hallucination. ~He shoulda just said psychic. hersey is a fine form of psuedo(small) science. refuting and asking irredisputable basisies around mentalism isn't a hard thing to overcome.

  • @Kanggaxx
    @Kanggaxx หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Who watches a react video and then whines about too many pauses

  • @arizonawildflwr
    @arizonawildflwr หลายเดือนก่อน

    Tryptophan

  • @lrrrruleroftheplanetomicro6881
    @lrrrruleroftheplanetomicro6881 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    17:38 That aliens exist is almost certain, our universe is rather big.
    That they've visited with us is rather unlikely though. I mean I met a bunch of them once, after smoking DMT, but that doesn't really count imho.
    Ah, and the plant on your left is clearly meant to ridicule my small genitals, I noticed that from the start, well played Sir!

  • @PukarEhecatl
    @PukarEhecatl หลายเดือนก่อน

    Eleventh

  • @ronalddonner3396
    @ronalddonner3396 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Are you aware that your choice of study is under many dark clouds and deservedly so?

  • @SaskieInQatar
    @SaskieInQatar หลายเดือนก่อน

    Whoever on here has been giving you the feedback that you pause too often or ramble too much is completely missing the point of why you make these videos.

  • @Alayhoo
    @Alayhoo หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you for going into the meaning behind aberrant salience. That was very helpful.
    Are folks with a chronic psychotic disorder also assessed for sensory processing differences to rule out magical thinking or recognize its comorbidity?

    • @dionysusapollo
      @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What is the association, I have a sensory processing disorder but diagnosed by a neurologist who didn't take psych symptoms into account in a holistic way so just wondering

    • @Alayhoo
      @Alayhoo หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@dionysusapollo Thanks for asking! And please tell me what you think about this because I’m just speculating! I was thinking about the way someone in psychosis reports feeling their hallucinations (like something touching their leg), which made me wonder if a sensory processing disorder could exacerbate or trigger psychotic symptoms like paranoia. For example, if someone is hypersensitive to touch, could being touched unexpectedly, too lightly or to hard, (whether by an object or person) trigger paranoid thoughts about having a device implanted into them. Could sensory dysfunction contribute or be in some way connected to psychotic symptoms?
      Do you think any of that makes sense?
      I’m autistic with SPD so I know how my own emotional regulation and anxiety can be greatly impacted by the SPD, so I figured other mental health issues could be too. That’s where the association started for me.

    • @dionysusapollo
      @dionysusapollo หลายเดือนก่อน

      Watch the video 'first psychotic episode by Dr. Alex Kopelowicz' on you tube, he goes through sensory processing right at the start and says its dysfunction is one of the first parts of psychosis. This is my experience of it sofar, first the visual and auditory overwhelm ( cant look at patterns or busy scenes like grocery stores etc) started then feeling like I'm tripping on LSD with psychotic symptoms, mania etc about a year and a half later. It makes it hard to be around other people too when everything is too loud and overestimating too. I don't even want music or tele on anymore so I sit by myself a lot more than I used to. I was told by a neurologist I have sensory processing disorder and that you tube doctor said it gives you a vulnerability to psychosis. I have to try and piece my own experiences together as the care isn't great in my country. Hope Dr Syl will do a video on it too.