Int Arch Otorhinolaryngol 2012; 16(03): 322-327
DOI: 10.7162/S1809-97772012000300004
Original Article
Thieme Publicações Ltda Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Auditory hallucinations in tinnitus patients: Emotional relationships and depression

Rosa Maria Rodrigues dos Santos
1   Master of Science. Psychologist of Psychology Division / Otolaryngology of ICHC-FMUSP
,
Tanit Ganz Sanchez
2   MD, PhD. Associate Professor of Otolaryngology Discipline of FMUSP
,
Ricardo Ferreira Bento
3   MD, PhD. Professor and Chairman of Otolaryngology Discipline of FMUSP
,
Mara Cristina Souza de Lucia
4   PhD. Director of the Psychology Division of the ICHC-FMUSP.
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

03 November 2011

09 January 2012

Publication Date:
05 December 2013 (online)

Summary

Introduction: Over the last few years, our Tinnitus Research Group has identified an increasing number of patients with tinnitus who also complained of repeated perception of complex sounds, such as music and voices. Such hallucinatory phenomena motivated us to study their possible relation to the patients' psyches.

Aims: To assess whether hallucinatory phenomena were related to the patients' psychosis and/or depression, and clarify their content and function in the patients' psyches.

Method: Ten subjects (8 women; mean age = 65.7 years) were selected by otolaryngologists and evaluated by the same psychologists through semi-structured interviews, the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, and psychoanalysis interviews.

Results: We found no association between auditory hallucinations and psychosis; instead, this phenomenon was associated with depressive aspects. The patients' discourse revealed that hallucinatory phenomena played unconscious roles in their emotional life. In all cases, there was a remarkable and strong tendency to recall/repeat unpleasant facts/situations, which tended to exacerbate the distress caused by the tinnitus and hallucinatory phenomena and worsen depressive aspects.

Conclusions: There is an important relationship between tinnitus, hallucinatory phenomena, and depression based on persistent recall of facts/situations leading to psychic distress. The knowledge of such findings represents a further step towards the need to adapt the treatment of this particular subgroup of tinnitus patients through interdisciplinary teamwork. Prospective.

 
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