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Nervous Breakdown


 

Although not a medical term, the phrase "nervous breakdown" is often used by laymen to describe a sudden and acute attack of mental illness—for instance, clinical depression or anxiety disorder—in a previously outwardly healthy person. Breakdowns are the result of chronic and unrelenting nervous strain, and not a sign of weakness.

Related Topics:
Medical - Nervous breakdown - Mental illness - Clinical depression - Anxiety disorder

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As with a machine, the human body will start to malfunction when put under too much stress. In common usage "nervous breakdown" does not have a clinical definition, and no reputable doctor would use it in serious diagnosis, instead focusing on definite symptoms and underlying causes. One common diagnosis used in this case is brief reactive psychosis. Some have argued that a nervous breakdown can actually be a good thing in the long run, because (a) it forces the person to take a proper time-out to rest and recuperate and (b) the patient will have to deal with the issues that caused the breakdown in order to recover fully.

Related Topics:
Machine - Human - Body - Stress - Brief reactive psychosis

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Causes of breakdown include chronic and unresolved grief, unemployment, career changes and other work-related stress, stress from school, serious or chronic illness in a family member, divorce, death of a family member, and other sudden major life changes.

Related Topics:
Grief - Unemployment - Divorce - Death

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