Delirium
Substance intoxication delirium is a more serious state that may last longer than the transient symptoms most people experience when they are intoxicated. In addition, a person who is experiencing substance intoxication delirium will have additional disturbances in their cognition and may become completely unable to attend to the external environment.
A change in someone's state of consciousness that significantly disrupts their attention, awareness, and ability to process information about the world around them.
A person experiencing substance intoxication delirium might not be able to remember things properly, and in particular, they may lose their memory for events that have recently happened. Also, it can be associated with Psychosis, hallucinatory behavior and disturbed behaviors.
A person experiencing substance intoxication delirium might not be able to remember things properly, and in particular, they may lose their memory for events that have recently happened. Also, it can be associated with Psychosis, hallucinatory behavior and disturbed behaviors.
Delirium usually develops over a short period—from a few hours to a few days after the substance is taken. Its severity can change over time, but it's often worse at night when there is less happening in a person's environment that can help keep them oriented.