Nubilization (from lat. Ob - before, against and nubes - cloud, from obnubilus - gloomy, cloudy), “veil” of consciousness , “cloudiness” or fog of consciousness ( English clouding of consciousness ) [1] - a slight degree of stunning [ 2] . Consciousness is “clouded” and reality is perceived as though through a fog [3] . When nubulation, the patient resembles a person in a state of mild intoxication [2] . His attention is a little scattered, he doesn’t immediately get together to answer correctly, all reactions are slow, slow and difficult to perceive events, so it seems that he responds out of place [2] . Patients can, by an effort of will for a short time, successfully join the conversation, manage to answer the questions asked and cues [3] . The mood is slightly increased [2] . The occurrence of euphoria indicates an aggravation of the pathological process with traumatic brain injury , intoxication or a brain tumor , and the transition of nubulation to stupor (deep stunning) [4] . The depth of the nubulation usually varies. Memories of the experienced embrace of consciousness are disordered, partial loss is typical [3] .
| Nubulation | |
|---|---|
| ICD-11 | MB20.2 |
There are nubulations during intoxication and mild infections [3] .
See also
- Stun
- Stupor
- Sopor
- Coma
- Groggy
Notes
- ↑ Stoimenov Y. A. , Stoimenova M. Y. , Koeva P. Y. and others. Psychiatric Encyclopedic Dictionary. - K .: “IAPM”, 2003. - S. 183, 1043. - 1200 p. - ISBN 966-608-306-X .
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 M.V. Korkina, N.D. Lakosin, A.E. Lichko, I.I. Sergeev. Psychiatry: A Textbook for Stud. honey. universities. - M .: MEDpress-inform, 2006 .-- 576 p. - ISBN 5-98322-217-1 .
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Y. A. Stoimenov, M. Y. Stoimenova, P. Y. Koeva and others. Psychiatric Encyclopedic Dictionary. - K .: IAPM, 2003 .-- S. 607. - 1200 p. - ISBN 966-608-306-X .
- ↑ V.V. Marilov. General psychopathology. - M .: "Academia", 2002. - S. 78. - 224 p. - ISBN 5-7695-0838-8 .