Schizophrenia Demons
Schizophrenia Demons
Schizophrenia Demons
DOI 10.1007/s10943-012-9673-y
PSYCHOLOGICAL EXPLORATION
Schizophrenia or Possession?
M. Kemal Irmak
Abstract Schizophrenia is typically a life-long condition characterized by acute symptom exacerbations and widely varying degrees of functional disability. Some of its
symptoms, such as delusions and hallucinations, produce great subjective psychological
pain. The most common delusion types are as follows: My feelings and movements are
controlled by others in a certain way and They put thoughts in my head that are not
mine. Hallucinatory experiences are generally voices talking to the patient or among
themselves. Hallucinations are a cardinal positive symptom of schizophrenia which
deserves careful study in the hope it will give information about the pathophysiology of the
disorder. We thought that many so-called hallucinations in schizophrenia are really illusions related to a real environmental stimulus. One approach to this hallucination problem
is to consider the possibility of a demonic world. Demons are unseen creatures that are
believed to exist in all major religions and have the power to possess humans and control
their body. Demonic possession can manifest with a range of bizarre behaviors which
could be interpreted as a number of different psychotic disorders with delusions and
hallucinations. The hallucination in schizophrenia may therefore be an illusiona false
interpretation of a real sensory image formed by demons. A local faith healer in our region
helps the patients with schizophrenia. His method of treatment seems to be successful
because his patients become symptom free after 3 months. Therefore, it would be useful
for medical professions to work together with faith healers to define better treatment
pathways for schizophrenia.
Keywords
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health problems in the world. A survey by the World Health Organization ranks schizophrenia among the top ten illnesses that contribute to the global burden of disease (Murray
1996). It appears to affect 1 % of people worldwide. Because of its early age of onset
(average age 25 years) and its subsequent tendency to persist chronically, it produces great
suffering for patients and also for their family members (Andreasen 2011). It is an illness
that affects the essence of a persons identitythe brain and the most complex functions
that the brain mediates. Some of its symptoms, such as delusions and hallucinations,
produce great subjective psychological pain. Other facets of the illness produce great pain
as well, such as the persons recognition that they are literally losing their mind or being
controlled by forces beyond personal control. Consequently, it can be fatala substantial
number of its victims either attempt or complete suicide (Andreasen 2011; Pompili et al.
2007).
The primary treatment of schizophrenia is antipsychotic medications, but about 25 % of
people with schizophrenia are resistant to this type of treatment (Hunter 2012). Of those
people with schizophrenia who do benefit from antipsychotic medication, an additional 30
to 40 % are residually symptomatic despite adequate antipsychotic treatment (Kane et al.
1988). All the antipsychotic medications currently in use share a common putative
mechanism of action, namely dopamine antagonism. The dopamine hypothesis of
schizophrenia proposes that excessive subcortical dopamine release linked to prefrontal
cortical dopaminergic dysfunction is central to the pathogenesis of schizophrenia (Van
Rossum 1966). Although all antipsychotics modulate dopamine activity in the brain, via
dopaminergic antagonism, there is no incontrovertible evidence that schizophrenia is the
result of a primary dopamine abnormality. Dopamine dysregulation is likely to be a secondary consequence of the primary biological causes of the condition (Coyle 2006). The
biological basis of schizophrenia is therefore complex and much more than a dysregulation
of dopamine metabolism.
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conviction and subjective certainty, and is not amenable to logic. Delusions are extremely
variable in the content (Arango and William 2011; Vreugdenhil et al. 2004). The most
common delusions with respect to type of content are as follows:
Delusions of persecution No matter wherever I go, there are cameras filming me to
know what I do
Delusions of control My feelings and movements are controlled by others in a
certain way
Thought withdrawal They take my thoughts out of my head or steal them
Thought insertion They put thoughts in my head that are not mine
Thought broadcasting Everyone knows what I am thinking because my brain is
transparent
Patients with schizophrenia also experience abnormal perceptions, mainly in the form of
hallucinations. A hallucination is a perception without object, and the most common
hallucinations in schizophrenia are auditory (DeLeon et al. 1993). Hallucinatory
experiences are generally voices talking to the patient or among themselves. On many
occasions, the voice, which can be identified as male or female, is not associated with
anyone known by the patient. The voice is experienced as coming from the outside.
Particularly, characteristic of schizophrenia is voices that repeat the patients thoughts
aloud, give commentaries on the patients actions or thoughts, or argue with one another
and talk to the patient in the third person (Arango and William 2011).
Hallucinations are a cardinal positive symptom of schizophrenia which deserves careful
study in the hope it will give information about the pathophysiology of the disorder. The
problem is to determine whether the alleged hallucination relates to an event in the real
world. The nervous system always operates on sensory input even if that input is internally
generated (Locke 2011). When asked a patient, What are the voices saying? the answer
is something like Bad things. That is not an answer to the question, maybe because the
voices are not saying well-articulated words; they are just sounds construed by the patient,
operated on to be bad things (Locke 2011). We thought that many so-called hallucinations in schizophrenia are really illusions related to a real environmental stimulus.
Illusions are transformations of perceptions, with a mixing of the reproduced perceptions
of the subjects fantasy with the real perceptions. One approach to this hallucination
problem is to consider the possibility of a demonic world.
World of Demons
In our region, demons are believed to be intelligent and unseen creatures that occupy a
parallel world to that of mankind. In many aspects of their world, they are very similar to
us. They marry, have children, and die. The life span, however, is far greater than ours
(Ashour 1989). Through their powers of flying and invisibility, they are the chief component in occult activities. The ability to possess and take over the minds and bodies of
humans is also a power which the demons have utilized greatly over the centuries
(Littlewood 2004; Gadit and Callanan 2006; Ally and Laher 2008). Most scholars accept
that demons can possess people and can take up physical space within a humans body
(Asch 1985). They possess people for many reasons. Sometimes it is because they have
been hurt accidentally, but possession may also occur because of love (Ashour 1989;
Philips 1997). When the demon enters the human body, they settle in the control center of
the bodybrain. Then, they manifest themselves and take control of the body through the
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brain (Whitwell and Barker 1980; Littlewood 2004; Gadit and Callanan 2006; Ally and
Laher 2008). Demonic possession can manifest with a range of bizarre behaviors which
could be interpreted as a number of different psychotic disorders (Al-Habeeb 2003; Boddy
1989). On many occasions, the person has within him more than one demon, and often they
talk from their voices. They therefore cause symptoms such as hearing voices and certain
delusions (Littlewood 2004; Al-Ashqar and Umar 2003; Pereira et al. 1995).
Possession or Schizophrenia
As seen above, there exist similarities between the clinical symptoms of schizophrenia and
demonic possession. Common symptoms in schizophrenia and demonic possession such as
hallucinations and delusions may be a result of the fact that demons in the vicinity of the
brain may form the symptoms of schizophrenia. Delusions of schizophrenia such as My
feelings and movements are controlled by others in a certain way and They put thoughts
in my head that are not mine may be thoughts that stem from the effects of demons on the
brain. In schizophrenia, the hallucination may be an auditory input also derived from
demons, and the patient may hear these inputs not audible to the observer. The hallucination in schizophrenia may therefore be an illusiona false interpretation of a real
sensory image formed by demons. This input seems to be construed by the patient as bad
things, reflecting the operation of the nervous system on the poorly structured sensory
input to form an acceptable percept. On the other hand, auditory hallucinations expressed
as voices arguing with one another and talking to the patient in the third person may be a
result of the presence of more than one demon in the body.
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