Can certain diseases cause paranoia similar to that seen in individuals with paranoid schizophrenia, even if they do not have the disorder?
Last Updated: 24.06.2025 03:17

Pharmaceutical drug (abuse or side effects)
Narcolepsy
Brain Tumors
"D Gukesh Was Blindly...": Magnus Carlsen's First Reaction After Loss To Indian GM - NDTV Sports
Delirium tremens
Parkinson's disease
Bipolar disorder
US growth likely to slow to 1.6% this year, hobbled by Trump's trade wars, OECD says - ABC News
Hallucinogen use
Grief (yes, sadly)
Migraines
Tariff news isn't good... - Daily Kos
⁉️sources from my experiences and internet research ⁉️
Seizures
Infection
Scientists delve into Hells Canyon cave to solve mystery of America's deepest gorge - Live Science
Affective disorders
PTSD
Alcohol
Google Confirms Most Gmail Users Must Upgrade Accounts - Forbes
Dementia with Lewy bodies
Withdrawal from benzodiazepines
Alcohol withdrawal
How to protect yourself from wildfire smoke and poor air quality - The Washington Post
Sleep disorders
Alzheimer's disease,
Charles Bonnet syndrome
MIT Discovers Magnetic Superconductor in Pencil Lead - SciTechDaily
Fever
Stress
Some of those things on the list are very very rare cases but I just wanted to cover everything (or almost everything).
'King of the Hill' Reboot First Details: Hank, Peggy, Bobby, Dale - Variety
Dementia and drug use cause paranoia. That is very common. Some of other things that can include delusions and/or hallucination can be:
Mental disorder
Head injury