psychogenic fugue
Noun: A dissociative disorder characterized by sudden, unexpected travel away from one's home or customary place of daily activities, accompanied by an inability to recall one's past. The individual may assume a new identity. Upon recovery, there is typically no memory for events that occurred during the fugue state.
This is a clinical, psychological term used in psychiatry and psychology to describe a specific mental health condition. - It is often discussed in the context of trauma, extreme stress, or other dissociative disorders. - The term is typically used by healthcare professionals, in academic literature, or in clinical diagnoses.
- The patient was diagnosed with psychogenic fugue after being found in another city with no memory of how he got there or who he was.
- In the novel, the character's disappearance was explained as a psychogenic fugue, a temporary escape from an unbearable reality.
- The therapist specialized in treating dissociative disorders, including psychogenic fugue.
- The condition is formally classified in diagnostic manuals such as the DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) under Dissociative Disorders, though the specific diagnostic criteria and naming have evolved.
- The fugue state is understood as a defense mechanism where consciousness, memory, and identity become dissociated.
- Dissociative fugue: A more contemporary clinical term often used synonymously with or in place of "psychogenic fugue."
- Fugue state: A general term for the period of dissociated travel and memory loss, which can occur within psychogenic fugue.
- Dissociation / Dissociative disorder: The broader psychological category to which this condition belongs.
- Dissociative fugue
- Fugue state (when referring to the episode itself)
The core meaning involves three key components: 1. Travel: Physical movement away from one's familiar environment. 2. Amnesia: Inability to remember one's past identity and life. 3. Dissociation: A break in the normal integration of consciousness, memory, and identity.
It is distinct from mere forgetfulness or deliberate travel. The memory loss is extensive and the behavior is not intentional.
- dissociative disorder in which a person forgets who they are and leaves home to creates a new life; during the fugue there is no memory of the former life; after recovering there is no memory for events during the dissociative state