First-Known Hypnopompic Hallucination Occurring In-Hospital: Case Report

Paul Ballas D.O.
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Abstract

Despite the high prevalence of hypnopompic hallucinations in the community, to our knowledge there are no reports that have been published in the English literature of these phenomenon observed by staff in the hospital setting. Psychiatric or neurological evaluation often ensues if a patient reports hallucinations in other circumstances, but when they are reported in connection with sleep, further evaluation is rarely performed because such events are common in the general populace. Our report emphasizes the distinction between hypnopompic and hypnagogic hallucination as an ongoing feature of life that someone is aware of, which we believe to be the case for normal persons who have them, and a similar hallucination occurring for the first time in someone who is unaware of it, at least unable to remember it. In the latter instance, we suggest careful interview for symptoms of a sleep disorder. Hypnagogic (prior to sleep onset) and hypnopompic (upon arousal from sleep) hallucinations are both phenomena that occur in normal people and symptoms that are characteristic of narcolepsy (1, 2). They are a common occurrence, experienced by almost everyone at least once and have also been shown to be associated with the use or withdrawal from certain medications, specifically, tricyclic antidepressants, opiates, and donepezil (3-5). Although hypnopompic and hypnagogic hallucinations are generally considered to be normal phenomenon, they have increased incidence in several psychiatric and neurologic disorders (6). One study of over 14,000 subjects revealed that people with anxiety, depression, or bipolar affective disorder have a two-fold increase in experiencing hypnopompic or hypnagogic hallucinations at least once weekly. The same study showed that people with adjustment disorders have a 1.5fold increase in experiencing these phenomenon at least once weekly (6-8). The notion that such phenomena are normal may be part of the reason behind the wide variation in the literature with regard to their lifetime incidence (hypnopompic 6-13%, hypnagogic 25–38%) (4, 9-11). Over 50 percent of people who experience them have no
首例院内发生的催眠幻觉:病例报告
尽管催眠幻觉在社区中非常普遍,但据我们所知,在英语文献中还没有发表过由医院工作人员观察到这些现象的报告。如果患者报告在其他情况下出现幻觉,通常会进行精神病学或神经学评估,但如果报告的幻觉与睡眠有关,则很少进行进一步评估,因为此类事件在普通民众中很常见。我们的报告强调了催眠幻觉和催眠幻觉之间的区别,催眠幻觉是一种人们意识到的持续的生活特征,我们认为正常人有这种情况,而类似的幻觉第一次发生在没有意识到的人身上,至少不能记住它。在后一种情况下,我们建议仔细面试睡眠障碍的症状。入睡前的幻觉和入睡后的幻觉都是发生在正常人身上的现象,也是发作性睡病的典型症状(1,2)。它们很常见,几乎每个人都至少经历过一次,也被证明与某些药物的使用或停药有关,特别是三环抗抑郁药、阿片类药物和多奈哌齐(3-5)。虽然催眠和临睡幻觉通常被认为是正常现象,但它们在一些精神和神经疾病中的发病率有所增加(6)。一项对14,000多名受试者的研究显示,患有焦虑、抑郁或双相情感障碍的人每周至少出现一次催眠或临睡幻觉的几率增加了两倍。同一项研究表明,患有适应障碍的人每周至少经历一次这种现象的几率增加了1.5倍(6-8)。认为这种现象是正常的,这可能是文献中关于其终生发病率差异很大的部分原因(催眠6-13%,催眠25-38%)(4,9 -11)。有过这种经历的人中,超过50%的人没有
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