| Literature DB >> 30972497 |
J A F Coebergh1,2,3, R F Lauw4, I E C Sommer5, J D Blom6,7,8.
Abstract
Musical hallucinations are poorly understood phenomena. Their relation with epilepsy was first described over a century ago, but never systematically explored. We, therefore, reviewed the literature, and assessed all descriptions of musical hallucinations attributed to epileptic activity. Our search yielded 191 articles, which together describe 983 unique patients, with 24 detailed descriptions of musical hallucinations related to epilepsy. We also describe six of our own patients. Based on the phenomenological descriptions and neurophysiological data, we distinguish four subgroups of epilepsy-related musical hallucination, comprising auras/ictal, inter-ictal and post-ictal phenomena, and phenomena related to brain stimulation. The case descriptions suggest that musical hallucinations in epilepsy can be conceptualised as lying on a continuum with other auditory hallucinations, including verbal auditory hallucinations, and-notably-tinnitus. To account for the underlying mechanism we propose a Bayesian model involving top-down and bottom-up prediction errors within the auditory network that incorporates findings from EEG and MEG studies. An analysis of phenomenological characteristics, pharmacological triggers, and treatment effects suggests wider ramifications for understanding musical hallucinations. We, therefore, conclude that musical hallucinations in epilepsy open a window to understanding these phenomena in a variety of conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Antiepileptic; Auditory hallucination; EEG; MEG; Musical hallucinosis; Pharmacotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30972497 PMCID: PMC6517562 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-019-09289-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Flowchart for article and patient selection
Summary of clinical findings
| Article | Age/sex | Clinical diagnosis | Clinical presentation | EEG findings | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Wilson [ | Aura | ||||
| Rennie [ | M | Left temporal glioma | Aura | Left temporal spikes | Surgery and AED |
| Ozsarac et al. [ | 50M | Left temporal AVM | Music and other auditory hallucinations, aura | NA | No treatment |
| Golden and Josephs [ | 33F | Right superior temporal astrocytoma | Focal epilepsy involving musical aura | NA | NA |
| Coebergh et al. (present paper) | 19F | MRI Splenium abnormality after childhood meningitis | Aura once | Photosensitivity and interictal multifocal general spike/wave on EEG | AED: better |
| 39M | Left MCA stroke 7 years previously | Aura | Fast beta and theta intermixed centrally | AED: better | |
| Penfield and Erickson [ | 38F | Left temporal gliosis | Ictal | NA | |
| Penfield and Perot [ | 16F | No lesion seen during surgery | Ictal | ||
| Mulder and Daly [ | 40M | Left temporal lobe tumour | Music “like angel voices” during seizure | NA | NA |
| Schiffter and Straschill [ | 35F | Old right temporal-parietal bleed and epilepsy | Post-surgery 10 days reducing frequency and complexity | Left temporal rhythmical alpha and spike/sharp waves with musical hallucinations only | Resolved |
| Wieser [ | 22F | Asymmetric atrophy right Sylvian fissure | Ictal | Right temporal gyrus of Herschl discharge (intracranial) | Surgery |
| Sacks [ | 88F | Acute stroke right temporal lobe | Ictal | Spike/sharp wave bitemporal during musical hallucinations | AED (+/- time) |
| 80F | Hearing loss | Ictal | Sharp/spike-like waves during musical hallucinations | AED: full response | |
| M | Glioma | Ictal | ‘Frankly convulsive’ | No treatment | |
| Fénelon et al. [ | 58F | Left parietal metastasis | Ictal | Abnormal, no paroxysms | Surgery |
| Isaacson et al. [ | 60M | Cholesteatoma right side; intracranial normal | Ictal/post-ictal | Right temporal 90 s 10-11 Hz sharp rhythmic activity - focal slowing - return to normal | AED (and time/ stopping ciprofloxacin) |
| Roberts et al. [ | 61F | Aneurysm pressing on right uncus; hearing normal | Ictal? | Rhythmic spikes locally on corticography | Surgery |
| Gentile et al. [ | 45F | MRI normal; PTA normal | Ictal; specific song by a popular Italian artist 1-3/30 with and without abdominal pain | Continuous spikes/sharp-wave complexes left mid-temporal region, spreading to anterior temporal, parietal, and frontal | Carbamazepine |
| de Maeseneire et al. [ | 64F | Left insular-temporal tumour | Attacks of known music; likely ictal | PLED during musical hallucinations left frontotemporal | AED: resolved |
| Martinez-Perez et al. [ | 45M | Left temporal-parietal glioma; right hearing loss | Ictal | Left frontal/temporal spikes and sharp waves | AED: resolved |
| Coebergh et al. (present paper) | 34M | Left temporal glioma | Ictal; likely seconds | NA | Resolved after surgery |
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| Nielsen and Jacobs [ | 39M | Asymmetric plantar response | Post-ictal (many attacks) | ‘Petit mal epilepsy’ | |
| Hécaen and Ropert [ | 48F | Old left temporal traumatic brain injury and hearing loss | Post-ictal (once) | Slow left temporal (unknown date after musical hallucinations) | |
| Rennie [ | M | Cysticercosis and hearing loss | Post-ictal six days | Normal (later) | NA |
| Donnet and Régis [ | 81F | MRI: atrophy and white-matter change; bilateral hearing loss; depression | Inter-ictal/post-ictal two weeks constant | Left temporal sharp and desynchronisation during musical hallucinations; normal at other time | AED: resolved |
| Couper [ | 78F | Old right occipital stroke and hearing loss | After generalised tonic/clonic seizure continuous musical hallucinations for 34 days | Sharp waves left posterior temporal (previously normal) | Change of AED |
| Borelli et al. [ | 62F | Right hippocampal-temporal sclerosis; hearing normal | Interictal persistent | Normal during musical hallucinations | Not bothersome |
| Coebergh et al. (present paper) | 51F | Old right occipital/temporal ICH | Post-ictal two days | Day 4 right temporal-occipital delta burst | Resolved |
| 50M | Old right parietal stroke | 3 years after onset focal seizures; interictal? | Right temporal epileptiform and sharp waves | Resolved | |
| 70F | Epilepsy | Post-ictal 2-3 days | NA | Resolved |
NA not available, AED anti-epileptic drugs, PTA pure tone audiometry
Fig. 2Intracranial EEG showing seizure patterns concomitant with musical hallucinations: the spontaneous discharges in the gyrus of Heschl could be controlled only by very elaborate auditory stimuli. Left: the beginning of a Portuguese song changes the frequency of the epileptic discharge (see arrow). Right: a sudden interruption of the song (between arrows) suppressed and modified the otherwise continuous discharge (Wieser [21])
Fig. 3Intracranial EEG showing seizure patterns concomitant with musical hallucinations: single-channel display of a 3-h epileptic discharge from the right gyrus of Heschl, becoming more and more monotonous and showing marked slowing. Typical intervals, spaced approximately 15 min apart. Discharge accompanied by hallucinations of music (Wieser [21])