Understanding hallucinations in probable Alzheimer's disease: Very low prevalence rates in a tertiary memory clinic

Publication date

2018-01-01

Authors

Linszen, Mascha M J
Lemstra, Afina W.
Dauwan, MeenakshiISNI 0000000423196755
Brouwer, Rachel M.ISNI 0000000389353779
Scheltens, Philip
Sommer, I. E.ISNI 0000000368884271

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Introduction: Averaging at 13.4%, current literature reports widely varying prevalence rates of hallucinations in patients with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD), and is still inconclusive on contributive factors to hallucinations in AD. Methods: This study assessed prevalence, associated factors and clinical characteristics of hallucinations in 1227 patients with probable AD, derived from a tertiary memory clinic specialized in early diagnosis of dementia. Hallucinations were assessed with the Neuropsychiatric Inventory. Results: Hallucination prevalence was very low, with only 4.5% (n = 55/1227) affected patients. Hallucinations were mostly visual (n = 40/55) or auditory (n = 12/55). Comorbid delusions were present in over one-third of cases (n = 23/55). Hallucinations were associated with increased dementia severity, neuropsychiatric symptoms, and a lifetime history of hallucination-evoking disease (such as depression and sensory impairment), but not with age or gender. Discussion: In the largest sample thus far, we report a low prevalence of hallucinations in probable AD patients, comparable to rates in non-demented elderly. Our results suggest that hallucinations are uncommon in early stage AD. Clinicians that encounter hallucinations in patients with early AD should be sensitive to hallucination-evoking comorbidity.

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease, Comorbidity, Dementia severity, Hallucinations, Low prevalence, Clinical Neurology, Psychiatry and Mental health

Citation

Linszen, M M J, Lemstra, A W, Dauwan, M, Brouwer, R M, Scheltens, P & Sommer, I E C 2018, 'Understanding hallucinations in probable Alzheimer's disease : Very low prevalence rates in a tertiary memory clinic', Alzheimer's and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring, vol. 10, pp. 358-362. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dadm.2018.03.005