Increased risk of psychosis in patients with hearing impairment: Review and meta-analyses

Publication date

2016-03-01

Authors

Linszen, Mascha M J
Brouwer, Rachel MISNI 0000000389353779
Heringa, Sophie M.ISNI 0000000394170272
Sommer, Iris E.ISNI 0000000368884271

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Several studies suggest hearing impairment as a risk factor for psychosis. Hearing impairment is highly prevalent and potentially reversible, as it can be easily diagnosed and sometimes improved. Insight in the association between hearing impairment and psychosis can therefore contribute to prevention of psychosis. This paper provides meta-analyses of all epidemiologic evidence on the association between hearing impairment and psychosis and summarizes mechanisms that potentially underlie this relationship.Meta-analyses showed an increased risk of hearing impairment on all psychosis outcomes, such as hallucinations (OR 1.40(95%CI 1.18-1.65; n=. 227,005)), delusions (OR 1.55(95%CI 1.36-1.78; n=. 250,470)), psychotic symptoms (OR 2.23(95%CI 1.83-2.72; n=. 229,647) and delirium (OR 2.67(95%CI 2.05-3.48; n=. 12,432). Early exposure to hearing impairment elevated the risk of later development of schizophrenia (OR 3.15(95%CI 1.25-7.95; n=. 50,490)).Potential mechanisms underlying this association include loneliness, diminished theory of mind, disturbances of source monitoring and top-down processing and deafferentiation. Early assessment and treatment of hearing impairment in patients with (high risk of) psychosis may be essential in psychosis treatment and prevention.

Keywords

Delirium, Delusion, Hallucination, Hearing impairment, Hearing loss, Mechanisms, Meta-analysis, Psychosis, Psychosis prevention, Review, Risk factor, Schizophrenia, Taverne, Behavioral Neuroscience, Cognitive Neuroscience, Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Review, Meta-Analysis

Citation

Linszen, M M J, Brouwer, R M, Heringa, S M & Sommer, I E 2016, 'Increased risk of psychosis in patients with hearing impairment : Review and meta-analyses', Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, vol. 62, pp. 1-20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2015.12.012