¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Deliria
1. delirium [n] - See also: delirium
Medical Definition of Deliria
1. Plural of delirium. (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Deliria
Literary usage of Deliria
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Monographic Medicine by William Robie Patten Emerson, Guido Guerrini, William Brown, Wendell Christopher Phillips, John Whitridge Williams, John Appleton Swett, Hans Günther, Mario Mariotti, Hugh Grant Rowell (1916)
"(a) Initial and Febrile deliria In the initial and the febrile deliria, ...
(b) Collapse Delirium In the deliria of convalescence (collapse delirium, ..."
2. Manual of Psychiatry by Joseph Rogues de Fursac, Aaron Joshua Rosanoff (1916)
"deliria OF INFECTIOUS ORIGIN.1 THE mental disorders which appear in the course
of infectious diseases are brought about by the combined action of several ..."
3. Manual of Psychiatry by Joseph Rogues de Fursac, Aaron Joshua Rosanoff (1916)
"deliria OF INFECTIOUS ORIGIN! THE mental disorders which appear in the course of
infectious diseases are brought about by the combined action of several ..."
4. Clinical Psychiatry by Allen Ross Diefendorf, Emil Kraepelin (1907)
"B. INFECTION deliria This group comprises psychoses which appear to stand in
intimate relationship to the specific toxaemia of certain infectious diseases, ..."
5. The Treatment of Diseases of the Nervous System: A Manual for Practitioners by Joseph Collins (1900)
"The deliria attending scarlet fever, and, in fact, all of the eruptive ...
deliria of Intoxication.—As to the endogenous varieties of this class very little ..."
6. Psyche: A Concise and Easily Comprehensible Treatise on the Elements of by Max Talmey (1910)
"DISTURBANCE OF CONSCIOUSNESS IN GENERAL PARESIS AND IN deliria. ... These are
generally of toxic origin, as the deliria in the course of the acute ..."
7. Psychiatry: A Text-book for Students and Physicians by Stewart Paton (1905)
"A. The Fever deliria. In a description of the fever epidemic of 1836 Schweich
cites a reference from the observations made by an eye-witness of a somewhat ..."
8. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by Philadelphia Neurological Society, American Neurological Association, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association (1900)
"It is perfectly true that some of the deliria present secondary features ...
The deliria naturally separate themselves into the febrile and afebrile forms. ..."