A close cousin to delusions of grandeur is Narcissistic Personality Disorder.
The mental health experts have not labeled NPD a disease, but rather a mental disorder whereby the person creates a "false Self," as a response to feelings of inadequecy during early childhood. This is the result of a child having had to create another identity in order to satisfy parental abuse. As time goes on, the person is unable to tell the difference between his false self and real self. In order to survive parental abuse, a child will mold themselves to reflect their parents wishes. The real self is lost, and the false self survives. The delusions of grandeur (Queen) are symptomatic of someone who has extreme feelings of worthlessness and has had to make up grandiose images in order to counteract these feelings.
gingeritis.
No
because she had disease because she had disease
Are you thinking of ketosis?
lung and heart disease
not so sure but lets hope that whoever you are thinking of with heart disease doesnt die :)
Not thinking independently
Queen Mary I of England was not beheaded. She reigned 1553 - 1558. Perhaps you are thinking of Mary, Queen of Scots who was beheaded in 1587, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England.
Lewy body disease is type of disease that leads to a decline in thinking, reasoning or independent function. Alzheimer is the disease that one has before one gets lewy body disease.
Queen Victoria. She carried the gene for the disease but always thought it came from her husband's family.
You may be thinking of Queen Maud Land, which was the first area of Antarctica to be sighted in 1820, by Fabian von Bellingshausen. The name honours Queen Maud of Wales. It was labeled as such in January 1930. She was the wife of the then-reigning Norwegian King Haakon VII, according to its Wikipedia entry.
There are several brain conditions that cause problems in thinking and memory. One is Alzheimer's disease.