Literature DB >> 22608537

Hallucinations and aberrant perceptions are prevalent among the young healthy adult population.

S García-Ptacek1, D García Azorín, R Sanchez Salmador, M L Cuadrado, J Porta-Etessam.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Hallucinations are frequent in clinical practice, with an incidence of up to 38.7% in the general population. We aim to determine the prevalence of hallucinations among healthy young adults in our environment. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We designed an observational study, using as subjects 3rd to 6th year medical students at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid who complete clinical rotations in the Hospital Clínico San Carlos. After a screening questionnaire, an individual interview was conducted via telephone or e-mail to those students who reported hallucinations. We obtained clinical and epidemiological data through a semi-structured clinical interview performed by a third year neurology resident.
RESULTS: N=134 (average age was 22.1 years; 77.6% were women). 74 respondents answered affirmatively to one or more screening questions, and 54 completed the follow-up interview. 22.2% described visual phenomena and 64.8%, auditory. The majority reported sleep-related experiences and auditory perceptions related to hyper vigilance, such as hearing the telephone or the doorbell ring when in fact it had not (38.8%). All subjects had good insight into their experiences and none had psychotic symptoms. Two cases were associated with substance abuse.
CONCLUSIONS: Hallucinations are frequent among the general population. Traditionally, auditory phenomena have been associated with psychotic pathology, and other studies show a low population incidence (0.6%). However, in our sample, short auditory perceptions with immediate analysis were frequent and not pathological.
Copyright © 2012 Sociedad Española de Neurología. Published by Elsevier Espana. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22608537     DOI: 10.1016/j.nrl.2012.02.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurologia        ISSN: 0213-4853            Impact factor:   3.109


  2 in total

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2.  The Structure and Measurement of Unusual Sensory Experiences in Different Modalities: The Multi-Modality Unusual Sensory Experiences Questionnaire (MUSEQ).

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