A member asked:

Does anyone have experience with regressive dis-associative fugue?

A doctor has provided 1 answer
Dr. Kevin Nasky answered

Specializes in Psychiatry

No, but...: ...Psychoanalysts view fugue as a type of dissociation, a psychological defense mechanism that results in a drastic modification of one's sense of personal identity in order to avoid emotional distress. Once medical causes are ruled out (e.g. Narcolepsy, automatisms of complex partial seizures), psychotherapy is the treatment of choice. In severe cases, antipsychotics may be part of the treatment.

Answered 7/2/2012

5.8k views

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