More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
OCD Patients More Likely To Hear the Music
May 21, 2004
Joan Arehart-Treichel
From Psychiatric News, Volume 39, Number 10. p. 24
© 2004 American Psychiatric Association

If patients experience musical hallucinations, it might indicate that they need an SSRI, not an antipsychotic, because such hallucinations appear to be most common in obsessive-compulsive disorder patients.

Back in 1953, there was a musical called "Call Me Madam." One of the songs from the musical went like this: "I hear music and there's no one there, I smell blossoms and the trees are bare. . . ."

These acoustical and olfactory experiences were supposed to be fantasies provoked by falling in love, but musical hallucinations really do exist. They have been noted in persons with hearing loss, in some elderly people, and in some individuals with abnormalities in the temporal lobe (auditory cortex) of the brain. And they are probably also more common among psychiatric patients than previously thought, suggests a new Israeli study published in the February Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.

A decade ago, Haggai Hermesh, M.D., a senior lecturer in psychiatry at Tel Aviv University, and his coworkers conducted a preliminary survey that led them to suspect that psychiatric patients sometimes experience musical hallucinations. They decided to undertake a study to further explore this possibility. Their subjects were 190 consecutive adult outpatients at an urban mental health center in Israel. The outpatients had bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, panic disorder, schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or social phobia. None of the subjects had significant hearing loss or known brain damage.

The researchers interviewed the subjects with a short structured interview they had designed called the Geha Short Interview for Musical Hallucinations (GSIMH). The GSIMH examines lifetime occurrence of musical hallucinations, with an emphasis on a false perception of music rather than merely thinking about music, humming to onself, or recollecting music. The researchers found that 51 of the 190 subjects (27 percent) experienced musical hallucinations.

The investigators then looked to see what distinguished subjects who had experienced musical hallucinations from those who had not.

One distinguishing factor was the age of onset of symptoms. The age of onset was four years earlier in subjects reporting musical hallucinations. However, the duration of mental disorders, as well as the level of general education and musical education, were similar between the two groups.

The researchers then assessed whether musical hallucinations were more prevalent in subjects with certain kinds of mental disorders. What they found was that only 26 percent of subjects with schizophrenia had ever experienced musical hallucinations, compared with 41 percent of subjects with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). In fact, OCD subjects were found to have experienced musical hallucinations to a much greater degree than had all of the other diagnostic groups combined.

The investigators then explored the relationship between musical hallucinations and OCD. They looked at the prevalence of musical hallucinations in subjects without OCD, with a sole diagnosis of OCD, and with OCD plus one additional psychiatric diagnosis.

They found that there was an increase in the prevalence of musical hallucinations from a rate of about 20 percent in subjects without the disorder, through 30 percent in subjects with the disorder, to more than 50 percent in subjects with the disorder plus one comorbid diagnosis.

Thus, musical hallucinations appear to be fairly common among certain psychiatric patients, and especially among OCD patients, Hermesh and his colleagues concluded. While their study included no healthy control subjects, a study by Montreal psychiatrist Martin G. Cole, M.D., and colleagues, and reported in the May 2002 International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, suggests that the prevalence of musical hallucinations in the general population is much lower around 3 percent.

This study has some clinical implications, Hermesh and his colleagues believe. For example, they said, "Identification of musical hallucinations raises the likelihood of obsessive-compulsive disorder with or without other comorbid mental disorders as opposed to a psychotic disorder. Additionally, musical hallucinations, especially when meeting criteria for an obsession (i.e., musical obsessions), may justify initiating a psychopharmacologic trial with an anti-OCD agent (e.g., an SSRI) rather than an antipsychotic agent."

"We are currently further analyzing our data to get a good psychopathological description of the phenomenological structure of the experience of musical hallucinations," Ruth Isseroff, D.Sc., a neuroscientist and one of the study's authors, told Psychiatric News. "In other words, we'll try to address the question of whether the majority of this musical misperception meets the criteria for true hallucinations or criteria of obsessions. We're also looking at possible differences in this musical experience between OCD patients and other psychiatric patients as well as normal individuals, especially those with a high level of musical education. We intend to submit this article for publication within the next few months."
 
Dr Baxter:
This is very interesting. I have often wondered whether or not there are ties with strong senses and mental illness or psychiatric problems. Actually i have recently in the last week talked to co-workers about my son's weird delicate senses as a child. He was easily annoyed by loud noises unless it was music. Most irritating to him was the sound of a vacuum running, even as a young man, but as well as a small child.
And his sense of smell has always been far more sharp then anyone i know. for instance, when he was a child he could smell someone chewing gum from across the room. It always seemed odd to me. And as i have told you about my son's mental problems now and last year. When he gets in those psychotic states his sense of smell is again very strong. He easily becomes agitated with unpleasant smells even if no one else can smell what he is smelling.
then to the subject in hand. Music hallucinations! I am not sure if Mike suffers from this, however; I know that he lives for music. And i have been told by co-workers that he has worked with, that they thought mike has always had a special talent or ear for music.. They shared with me that they had heard him whistling a tune of classical music. which is not the type of music that he listens to as a rule. but he had told this co-worker that he enjoys all music.
maybe there is nothing to this. But i have thought about it a lot, and then when i read your article, it really made me think.......... Mikes mom
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
The hypervigilance and/or hypersensitivity to sensory stimuli in psychotic disorders like schizophrenia are fairly common, but it's interesting that you noticed those sensitivities even when he was a young child. Could that have been a sign of his vulerability? Or was his recent illness more a result of this?

There's an interesting book: Aron, Elaine. The Highly Sensitive Person: How To Thrive When The World Overwhelms You. Broadway Books, 1996.

See also http://www.psychlinks.ca/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=825.
 
:I have OCD, too.It just so happens that whenever I turn on a certain fan and it points the opposite direction the sound waves give off a sound that sounds like a television turned on or conversation. Sometimes it sounds like conversation.
I haven't been diagnosed schizophrenic, just OCD, bipolar II and PTSD.
 
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