Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T14:15:23.020Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

43 Tinnitus as an Aura for Sleep Paralysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2019

Luvleen Shergill
Affiliation:
Aureus University School of Medicine, Oranjestad, Aruba
Jasir Nayati
Affiliation:
St. James School of Medicine, Anguilla
Reshma Nair
Affiliation:
American University of Integrative Sciences, Barbados
Alan R. Hirsch
Affiliation:
Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation, Chicago, IL
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.
Objective

To understand that tinnitus may be an aura for sleep paralysis.

Background

Sleep paralysis is a transient-paralysis which occurs during awakening or falling asleep (Wilson, 1928). Those affected experience symptoms including visual, auditory, and haptic hallucinations, voluntary motor paralysis with intact ocular and respiratory motor movements, and diffuse or localized paresthesias. Sleep paralysis associated with tinnitus as an aura, has not heretofore been described.

Methods

A 34 year-old, right-handed female presented with a 13 year history of sleep paralysis. One month prior, she began to notice tinnitus prior to the onset of sleep paralysis. The tinnitus was bilateral, high-pitched, with a volume intensity of 5/10, lasting seven seconds prior to sleep initiation. She denied hearing loss, vertigo, dizziness, cataplexy, deja vu and jamais vu. After termination of tinnitus, she experienced paresthesia, “like at a dentist’s office” radiating from her posterior neck, to her tongue and down to her toes. She described seeing a white-shadowy male figure moving around her room, lasting seven seconds. Accompanied by a masculine “ahh” sound, lasting for three seconds. The sleep paralysis occurred after these events, lasting up to eight hours, or until her husband wakes her.

Results

Abnormalities in Physical Examination: General Examination: right arm hemangioma 4 by 5cm. Reflexes: absent bilateral brachioradialis, 1+ bilateral quadriceps femoris and bilateral Achilles tendon. Neuropsychiatric Examination: Calibrated Finger Rub Auditory Screening Test: faint 70 AU (normal).

Discussion

Tinnitus has been described as an aura for migraines (Schankin, 2014), temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) (Florindo, 2006), and narcolepsy-cataplexy (Marco, 1978). These epochs may represent amigranous migraines, which initially present with tinnitus that occurs both during the day and night, forcing the patient to be partially awoken at night with induction of the sleep paralysis sequence. It would be worthwhile to query those with narcolepsy or sleep paralysis if tinnitus precedes the event.

Type
Abstracts
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2019