Musical hallucinations: prevalence in psychotic and nonpsychotic outpatients
- PMID: 15003072
- DOI: 10.4088/jcp.v65n0208
Musical hallucinations: prevalence in psychotic and nonpsychotic outpatients
Abstract
Background: Musical hallucinations have been considered a rare manifestation of psychotic states or brain and hearing abnormalities. However, an obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) assessment tool refers to musical hallucinations and our preliminary study showed that about one third of OCD patients experienced musical hallucinations.
Aims: To elucidate the lifetime prevalence of musical hallucinations among psychotic and nonpsychotic psychiatric outpatients.
Methods: Lifetime experience of musical hallucinations was examined with a specially designed structured interview in 190 consecutive outpatients with diagnoses of anxiety, affective, and schizophrenia disorders.
Results: Musical hallucinations occurred in more than one fifth of all diagnoses. The prevalence of musical hallucinations was highest in OCD patients (41%). Musical hallucinations were significantly more frequent with more comorbid disorders, and logistic regression revealed that this finding was mainly due to OCD combined with either social phobia or schizophrenia.
Conclusion: Musical hallucinations are more common among psychiatric patients than previously reported and are more suggestive of OCD than of other mental disorders.
Comment in
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Problems in assessing musical hallucinations.J Clin Psychiatry. 2005 Jan;66(1):136; author reply 136-7. doi: 10.4088/jcp.v66n0118d. J Clin Psychiatry. 2005. PMID: 15669903 No abstract available.
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