Do musical hallucinations always arise from the inner ear?
Identifieur interne : 000498 ( Main/Curation ); précédent : 000497; suivant : 000499Do musical hallucinations always arise from the inner ear?
Auteurs : A. G. Gordon [Royaume-Uni]Source :
- Medical Hypotheses [ 0306-9877 ] ; 1997.
English descriptors
- Teeft :
- Acta otolaryngol, Acute mania, Arch neurol psychiat, Auditory, Auditory hallucinations, Auditory imagery, Aural fullness, Aural vertigo, Brain damage, Chronic otitis, Clinical psychiatry, Cochlear microphonics, Common complaint, Creative artists, Deafness, Delusion, Direct cause, Distant voices, Environmental noises, External noises, Giddiness, Hallucination, Head fullness, Hearing loss, Hydrops, Insomnia, Labyrinthine, Labyrinthine pressure, Lesion, Medical hypotheses, Mental changes, Mental confusion, Mental illness, Mental symptoms, Musical hallucinations, Nervous system, Nervous tissue, Neurasthenia, Neurological, Neurological disease, Other hand, Otitis, Paranoia, Perilymphatic hypotension, Prison psychoses, Psychosis, Pulsatile tinnitus, Risk factors, Rotatory vertigo, Sensory symptoms, Solitary confinement, Spike milligan, Strong evidence, Sufficient cause, Symptom, Syndrome, Tinnitus, Tone loss, Vertigo, Vestibular, Vestibular hallucinations, Vestibular system, Weight loss, White noise.
Abstract
Abstract: It has been known for some time that musical hallucinations occur in deaf patients. This has been ignored, as it has been believed that neurological and psychiatric causes predominate. However, despite specific appeals, no one with musical hallucinations and a lesion in the brain but not in the ear has been produced. The postulated otological basis is a hyperactive state of the ear, a slight endolymphatic hydrops or pre-Meniere's disease. The hallucinations probably develop out of rhythmic tinnitus. A review of all the very disparate states and diseases supposedly causing musical hallucinations shows that peripheral ear symptoms are always present. It therefore seems that they always have the same simple otological trigger.
Url:
DOI: 10.1016/S0306-9877(97)90216-4
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<term>Auditory hallucinations</term>
<term>Auditory imagery</term>
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<term>Creative artists</term>
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<term>Distant voices</term>
<term>Environmental noises</term>
<term>External noises</term>
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<term>Hearing loss</term>
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<term>Lesion</term>
<term>Medical hypotheses</term>
<term>Mental changes</term>
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<term>Mental illness</term>
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: It has been known for some time that musical hallucinations occur in deaf patients. This has been ignored, as it has been believed that neurological and psychiatric causes predominate. However, despite specific appeals, no one with musical hallucinations and a lesion in the brain but not in the ear has been produced. The postulated otological basis is a hyperactive state of the ear, a slight endolymphatic hydrops or pre-Meniere's disease. The hallucinations probably develop out of rhythmic tinnitus. A review of all the very disparate states and diseases supposedly causing musical hallucinations shows that peripheral ear symptoms are always present. It therefore seems that they always have the same simple otological trigger.</div>
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