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Thought Disorder

Thought disorder is a clinical term referring to disruptions in the organization, expression, or logic of thought, typically revealed through a person’s speech and writing. It is a hallmark symptom in various psychiatric and some neurological conditions.

Definition

Thought disorder refers to a disturbance in the form (structure) or content of thinking, leading to impaired communication or abnormal beliefs. It is most often associated with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders but also occurs in mood disorders, neurodegenerative diseases, and structural brain lesions.

Types of Thought Disorder

1. Formal Thought Disorder (FTD)

Involves abnormalities in the *form* or *process* of thinking, typically assessed by observing speech patterns.

Symptom Description
Derailment (loose associations) Shifting from one idea to another with little logical connection.
Tangentiality Answers diverge from the topic and never reach the point.
Incoherence (word salad) Speech becomes incomprehensible due to disorganized grammar and logic.
Neologisms Creation of new, idiosyncratic words.
Clang associations Linking words by sound rather than meaning.
Perseveration Repeating the same idea or phrase despite topic change.

2. Thought Content Abnormalities

Reflect distorted or false beliefs.

Type Example
Delusions Fixed false beliefs (e.g., persecutory, grandiose).
Paranoia Belief that others intend harm.
Magical thinking Belief that thoughts influence reality in supernatural ways.

Neurological and Neurocognitive Context

Though classically psychiatric, thought disorders can arise in neurological conditions such as:

Summary

Thought disorder is a disruption in the normal pattern of thinking, often observed as disorganized, illogical, or incoherent speech. It reflects abnormalities in how ideas are generated, connected, and communicated, and may signal underlying psychiatric or neurological disease.