3. I. Levitan, 1899
Prevalences of hallucinations and delusions
PATIENT GROUP PREVALENCE SOURCE
schizophrenia 59% hallucinations 73% delusions Lecrubier et al. 2007
bipolar disorder 76% psychotic symptoms Tillman et al. 2008
delirium 86% hallucinations 43% delusions Perälä et al. 2010
borderline personality disorder 50% psychotic symptoms Kingdon et al. 2010
narcolepsy 40% hallucinations 2% delusions Leu-Semenescu et a. 2011
Lewy body dementia 78% hallucinations 25% delusions Nagahama et al. 2007
anxiety disorder 27% psychotic symptoms Wigman et al. 2012
Parkinson's disease 30% hallucinations 5% delusions Friedman et al. 2013
Alzheimer's disease 21% hallucinations 10% delusions Burghaus et al. 2012
multiple sclerosis 10% hallucinations 7% delusions Diaz-Olavarietta et al. 1999
epilepsy 25% psychotic symptoms Matsuura et al. 2003
post traumatic stress disorder 12% psychotic symptoms Soosay et al. 2012
visual acuity < 0.3 11% hallucinations Teunisse et al. 1995
unipolar depression 10% psychotic symptoms Quinlan et al. 1997
systemic lupus erythematosus 6% psychotic symptoms Beltrao et al. 2013
mild-moderate hearing loss 4% hallucinations Teunisse et al. 2012
4. Diagnosis?
• Diagnosis: schizophrenia
Mr. A hears voices that forbid
him to eat. He doesn't trust
many people.
• Diagnosis: borderline personality
disorder
Ms. B hears voices that
forbid her to eat. She
doesn't trust many people.
• Diagnosis: schizophrenia
Ms. C is an eccentric lady.
She sees visitors no one else
sees and has tea with them.
• Diagnosis: Parkinson's disease
Mr. D sees visitors that no
one else sees and has tea
with them.
• Diagnosis: Charles Bonnet syndrome
Mrs. E has vision loss, yet
she sees visitors no one else
sees and has tea with them.
5. Formele denkstoornissenFour subtypes that present across diagnoses
1. Highly salient
psychotic symptoms
(the hyperdopaminergic
subtype)
• Highly emotional
content.
• Hallucinations of
threatening voices,
blood and amputated
body parts.
• Delusions: bizarre or
non-bizarre, abundant
and frightening.
2. Trauma related
psychotic symptoms
(the re-experiencing
subtype)
• Hallucinations related
to traumatic events.
• Delusions mild or
absent, except for a
general distrust.
3. Dreamlike
psychotic symptoms
(the inattentive
subtype)
• Non-emotional
hallucinations, mainly
visual, of persons/
animals.
• Delusions: non-
bizarre:
misidentification,
spousal infidelity,
theft, Capgras
syndrome.
4. Isolated psychotic
symptoms (the de-
afferentiation subtype)
• Hallucinations in one
modality, non-
emotional without
personal meaning.
• Auditory
hallucinations may be
musical
• Visual hallucinations:
figures at walls,
persons, sceneries.
• Delusions absent or
only explanations for
hallucinations.