Association of auditory Charles Bonnet syndrome with increased blood flow in the nondominant Brodmann area 22

Author:

Sakimoto Hitoshi1,Urata Yuka1,Ishizuka Takanori1,Kimotsuki Hiroshi12,Kasugai Motofumi13,Fukuhara Ryuji1,Sano Akira14,Nakamura Masayuki1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry Kagoshima University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences Kagoshima Japan

2. Department of Psychiatry Kagoshima City Hospital Kagoshima Japan

3. Kagoshima Prefecture Mental Health and Welfare Center Kagoshima Japan

4. Kagoshima University Kagoshima Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimAuditory Charles Bonnet syndrome (aCBS) is characterized by musical hallucinations (MHs) that accompany acquired hearing impairments. This hallucination is the acoustic perception of music, sounds, or songs in the absence of an outside stimulus, and it may be associated with hyperactivity of the superior temporal lobes. Some studies have reported the possibility of improving MH with antiepileptics. To elucidate in detail the brain regions responsible for aCBS, we analyzed the regions that changed functionally after treatment.MethodsBefore and after treatment with carbamazepine (four cases), clonazepam (one case), and a hearing aid (one case), cerebral perfusion single‐photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and the Auditory Hallucination Rating Scale (AHRS) were applied to six patients with hearing‐loss–associated MHs.ResultsCerebral blood flow analysis using SPECT revealed hyperperfusion in Brodmann area (BA) 22—the posterior region of the superior temporal gyrus—in the nondominant hemisphere in all six patients in the pretreatment phase. After treatment, the hyperperfusion region improved in all patients. The area percentages with hyperperfusion in the nondominant BA22 were strongly positively correlated with the AHRS score.ConclusionThe results suggest that aCBS, which was treatable with antiepileptics or hearing aids, was involved in hyperexcitement in BA22, and that MH strength was correlated with degree of excitement.

Publisher

Wiley

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