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“Hallucinations” Extra Credit Hallucinations don’t belong wholly to the insane. Much more commonly, they are linked to sensory deprivation, intoxication, illness, or injury. People with migraines may see shimmering arcs of light or tiny, Lilliputian figures of animals and people. People with failing eyesight, paradoxically, may become immersed in a hallucinatory visual world. Hallucinations can be brought on by a simple fever or even the act of waking or falling asleep, when people have visions ranging from luminous blobs of color to beautifully detailed faces or terrifying ogres. Those who are bereaved may receive comforting “visits” from the departed. In some conditions, hallucinations can lead to religious epiphanies or even the feeling of leaving one’s own body. Humans have always sought such life-changing visions, and for thousands of years have used hallucinogenic compounds to achieve them. As a young doctor in California in the 1960s, Oliver Sacks had both a personal and a professional interest in psychedelics. These, along with his early migraine experiences, launched a lifelong investigation into the varieties of hallucinatory experience. From the book review of “Hallucinations” by Oliver Sacks, on Amazon.com Listen to Flora Lichtman’s Science Friday interview with neurologist Oliver Sacks to answer the following questions. 34 minutes. 1. Charles Bonnet was a Swiss naturalist in the 1700’s. He described a syndrome that now bares his name and is actually quite common in the elderly who have lost their eyesight. Dr. Sacks explains that many blind people have vivid visual hallucinations, but won’t spontaneously tell you for fear of ______________________________________________________________. Towards the end of the interview, Dr. Sacks states that ________% of visually impaired people have elaborate hallucinations, while ________% have simple hallucinations (geometric patterns and such). 2. Dr. Sacks relates a story about an LSD experience he had in the 1960’s involving a visual hallucination of a pear-shaped, internally glowing, blob of indigo. He later relates that LSD and DMT (N,N-dimethyltryptamine, a hallucinogen common in many plant families) impact serotonin systems in the CNS, while amphetamines and cocaine mainly impact ______________________________. He explains that while each type of hallucination is related to inappropriate activity in a particular part of the brain, the same region of the brain will be activated by actual stimuli (that is, if you hallucinate a vision of your mom and actually see your mom, the same regions of the brain light up in functional magnetic resonance imagining {fMRI}). The parts of your brain affected by hallucinogenic drugs in reward pathways and those attributed to mystical consciousness, can be stimulated by ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is associated with olfactory hallucinations. TLE patients also have lots of déjà vu experiences and it may be the first sign/symptom of their epilepsy. In general, as people get older, déjà vu occurs more often. As you fall asleep it is common for people to hallucinate. Migraine sufferers often have hallucinations grouped under the term “auras.” What, according to Dr. Sacks, is different about all of these hallucinations and those of a schizophrenic? ________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ Page 1 of 3 “Hallucinations” Extra Credit Go to this article: Hallucinations in Parkinson’s Disease Prevalence, phenomenology and risk factors. Gilles Fenelon et.al. Brain 2000 123(4):733-745. In this article, the authors discuss explanations for the relatively high prevalence of hallucinations in patients with Parkinson’s Disease. 4. Approximately 25% of outpatients diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease experience hallucinations, most of which are visual. This article was published in 2000, since then the FDA has added boxed warnings to the drug they recommend using to treat hallucinations in Parkinson’s patients. First, what is the drug? And second, what are the boxed warnings (use your notes or drugs.com/pro/)? a. Drug? ___________________________________________________________________________________________ b. Boxed warnings? ______________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. They present a case study of “a 68-year-old-woman had received a diagnosis of Parkinson's disease 18 years previously. She had moderate cognitive disorders (MMP score 25) and felt depressed. She had experienced presence hallucinations (of an unindentified person) for the last 6 months. In one instance she saw her deceased son with another person. Her son distinctly said to her: “take care of yourself.” “ She was taking three drugs we covered in class and one that is only available overseas. What were the three drugs we covered that are indicated to treat PD? __________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ 6. Patients with visual hallucinations differed in a number of respects: they were older, had a longer duration of disease, had a more severe motor state, had more depressive symptoms, and were more likely to have cognitive impairment, day-time somnolence and a history of ocular pathology. They were less likely to receive ___________________________ or ____________________________ and received a higher daily dose of levodopa, but the levodopaequivalent dose did not differ significantly between the two groups. 7. First, they present evidence to support the explanation that the hallucinations are a result of dopaminergic therapy. What are the three points they make that support the hallucinations being caused by the dopamine agonists used to treat the disease? ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ 8. Then they present evidence that appears to refute this idea. Fill in key words in the following quoted text: First, in early reports the frequency of acute psychic adverse reactions may have been overestimated as larger doses of _______________________ were used. Moreover, as stressed Page 2 of 3 “Hallucinations” Extra Credit by Factor and colleagues, “it is difficult to determine the incidence with which these problems occurred because the early studies varied with regard to the inclusion criteria, the dosages of _______________________ employed, and the classification of the psychiatric effects reported”. In fact, hallucinations in the course of Parkinson's disease usually occur in a normal state of consciousness without delirium, and have a chronic course. Secondly, hallucinations were recorded before the use of _______________________, but the data are difficult to interpret because most studies were not prospective, patients with postencephalitic syndromes were often included, and anticholinergic medications were used widely. Thirdly, there is no simple dose–effect relationship between dopaminergic treatment and the development of hallucinations. In the present study, the daily dose of levodopa but not the daily levodopa-equivalent dose was significantly higher in patients with visual hallucinations. However, this variable did not emerge as an independent predictive factor in the multivariate analysis. Moreover, in two prospective studies and one retrospective study, hallucinations were not associated with the dosage of _______________________ medication (levodopa or dopaminergic agonists). Recently, Goetz and colleagues showed that there was not a simple relationship between visual hallucinations and high plasma levels of _______________________ or sudden changes in plasma levels (Goetz et al., 1998). This does not preclude a facilitating or triggering action of dopaminergic treatment on hallucinations, but eliminates a simple doserelated side-effect. Fourthly, non-dopaminergic pharmacological agents (mainly _______________________) may elicit hallucinations in Parkinson's disease patients. Fifthly, in a series of patients treated with _______________________ for pituitary tumours, hallucinations (mainly auditory) occurred in only 1% of cases. Finally, hallucinations may occur spontaneously (i.e. in the absence of _______________________ or other treatment), sometimes at presentation, in the course of DLB (dementia with Lewy bodies) In the present study, non-hallucinators were more likely to be on _______________________ or _______________________ than patients with hallucinations. 9. Fill in the blanks in this quoted text: The more frequent involvement of the visual cortex in Parkinson's disease dementia and DLB than in Alzheimer's disease could explain the higher prevalence of visual hallucinations in the first two conditions. Another possibility is that the prevalence of hallucinations is modified in different ways by pharmacological factors, i.e. it may be enhanced by ____________________ _______________________ in Parkinson's disease and reduced by _____________________ in Alzheimer's disease. Page 3 of 3