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Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia

Auditory hallucination is usually associated with psychiatric diseases and organic brain illness. It was rarely found as adverse events of antidepressants. Amitriptyline is considered as one of the first line medications for the psychopharmacotherapy of chronic pain including atypical odontalgia (AO...

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Autores principales: Watanabe, Motoko, Nakabayashi, Tetsuo, Nayanar, Gayatri, Takao, Chihiro, Maeda, Chizuko, Tu, Trang Thi Huyen, Motomura, Haruhiko, Toyofuku, Akira
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9108357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35586414
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.863485
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author Watanabe, Motoko
Nakabayashi, Tetsuo
Nayanar, Gayatri
Takao, Chihiro
Maeda, Chizuko
Tu, Trang Thi Huyen
Motomura, Haruhiko
Toyofuku, Akira
author_facet Watanabe, Motoko
Nakabayashi, Tetsuo
Nayanar, Gayatri
Takao, Chihiro
Maeda, Chizuko
Tu, Trang Thi Huyen
Motomura, Haruhiko
Toyofuku, Akira
author_sort Watanabe, Motoko
collection PubMed
description Auditory hallucination is usually associated with psychiatric diseases and organic brain illness. It was rarely found as adverse events of antidepressants. Amitriptyline is considered as one of the first line medications for the psychopharmacotherapy of chronic pain including atypical odontalgia (AO) which shows chronic tooth pain without corresponding abnormalities. Anticholinergic adverse events induced by amitriptyline are usually bearable and not critical since the prescription dose is very low for the patients with AO. This is a first case report about the AO patients who showed auditory hallucination by the low dose of amitriptyline. A 43-years-old female, housewife, complained chronic toothache following dental procedures and was diagnosed as AO. Amitriptyline was initially prescribed 25 mg and gradually increased up to 60 mg with the improvement of AO symptoms in 7 months. Although the temporary recurrence was observed following to the retreatment of prosthodontic dental procedures, it improved in a few weeks. Therefore, the dose of amitriptyline was decreased, and the continuation dose was set 30 mg. In 24 months, the AO symptoms were very much improved; however, she reported that she had been heard the voices at midnight for a year. The voices were neighborhoods' and talking about the noise troubles she had claimed before. She had not realized that the voices were auditory hallucination since they were heard only at midnight infrequent and not bothering her daily life. At the time she reported auditory hallucination, she worried whether organic brain diseases are hiding because the frequency of voices was increased and sometimes occurred in daytime. The adverse event of amitriptyline was suspected since she had never had psychotic symptoms before. Amitriptyline was decreased and continued with the dose of 25 mg. Magnetic resonance imaging and psychiatric consultation revealed no abnormality of brain and in psychiatric aspects. After final prosthodontic treatment, the amitriptyline was discontinued in 30 months. Two months after the discontinuation, auditory hallucination was almost disappeared with no recurrence of AO. The present case report suggests that amitriptyline has possibility to induce auditory hallucination even in conventional dose throughout the treatment of chronic pain including AO.
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spelling pubmed-91083572022-05-17 Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia Watanabe, Motoko Nakabayashi, Tetsuo Nayanar, Gayatri Takao, Chihiro Maeda, Chizuko Tu, Trang Thi Huyen Motomura, Haruhiko Toyofuku, Akira Front Psychiatry Psychiatry Auditory hallucination is usually associated with psychiatric diseases and organic brain illness. It was rarely found as adverse events of antidepressants. Amitriptyline is considered as one of the first line medications for the psychopharmacotherapy of chronic pain including atypical odontalgia (AO) which shows chronic tooth pain without corresponding abnormalities. Anticholinergic adverse events induced by amitriptyline are usually bearable and not critical since the prescription dose is very low for the patients with AO. This is a first case report about the AO patients who showed auditory hallucination by the low dose of amitriptyline. A 43-years-old female, housewife, complained chronic toothache following dental procedures and was diagnosed as AO. Amitriptyline was initially prescribed 25 mg and gradually increased up to 60 mg with the improvement of AO symptoms in 7 months. Although the temporary recurrence was observed following to the retreatment of prosthodontic dental procedures, it improved in a few weeks. Therefore, the dose of amitriptyline was decreased, and the continuation dose was set 30 mg. In 24 months, the AO symptoms were very much improved; however, she reported that she had been heard the voices at midnight for a year. The voices were neighborhoods' and talking about the noise troubles she had claimed before. She had not realized that the voices were auditory hallucination since they were heard only at midnight infrequent and not bothering her daily life. At the time she reported auditory hallucination, she worried whether organic brain diseases are hiding because the frequency of voices was increased and sometimes occurred in daytime. The adverse event of amitriptyline was suspected since she had never had psychotic symptoms before. Amitriptyline was decreased and continued with the dose of 25 mg. Magnetic resonance imaging and psychiatric consultation revealed no abnormality of brain and in psychiatric aspects. After final prosthodontic treatment, the amitriptyline was discontinued in 30 months. Two months after the discontinuation, auditory hallucination was almost disappeared with no recurrence of AO. The present case report suggests that amitriptyline has possibility to induce auditory hallucination even in conventional dose throughout the treatment of chronic pain including AO. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9108357/ /pubmed/35586414 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.863485 Text en Copyright © 2022 Watanabe, Nakabayashi, Nayanar, Takao, Maeda, Tu, Motomura and Toyofuku. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychiatry
Watanabe, Motoko
Nakabayashi, Tetsuo
Nayanar, Gayatri
Takao, Chihiro
Maeda, Chizuko
Tu, Trang Thi Huyen
Motomura, Haruhiko
Toyofuku, Akira
Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia
title Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia
title_full Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia
title_fullStr Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia
title_full_unstemmed Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia
title_short Case Report: Auditory Hallucination Induced by Amitriptyline for the Treatment of Atypical Odontalgia
title_sort case report: auditory hallucination induced by amitriptyline for the treatment of atypical odontalgia
topic Psychiatry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9108357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35586414
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.863485
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