Devinsky Orrin, Lai George
Department of Neurology, NYU School of Medicine, New York University, NYU Epilepsy Center, 403 E 34 St., New York, NY 10016 USA.
Epilepsy Behav. 2008 May;12(4):636-43. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2007.11.011. Epub 2008 Jan 2.
Revered in some cultures but persecuted by most others, epilepsy patients have, throughout history, been linked with the divine, demonic, and supernatural. Clinical observations during the past 150 years support an association between religious experiences during (ictal), after (postictal), and in between (interictal) seizures. In addition, epileptic seizures may increase, alter, or decrease religious experience especially in a small group of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Literature surveys have revealed that between .4% and 3.1% of partial epilepsy patients had ictal religious experiences; higher frequencies are found in systematic questionnaires versus spontaneous patient reports. Religious premonitory symptoms or auras were reported by 3.9% of epilepsy patients. Among patients with ictal religious experiences, there is a predominance of patients with right TLE. Postictal and interictal religious experiences occur most often in TLE patients with bilateral seizure foci. Postictal religious experiences occurred in 1.3% of all epilepsy patients and 2.2% of TLE patients. Many of the epilepsy-related religious conversion experiences occurred postictally. Interictal religiosity is more controversial with less consensus among studies. Patients with postictal psychosis may also experience interictal hyper-religiosity, supporting a "pathological" increase in interictal religiosity in some patients. Although psychologic and social factors such as stigma may contribute to religious experiences with epilepsy, a neurologic mechanism most likely plays a large role. The limbic system is also often suggested as the critical site of religious experience due to the association with temporal lobe epilepsy and the emotional nature of the experiences. Neocortical areas also may be involved, suggested by the presence of visual and auditory hallucinations, complex ideation during many religious experiences, and the large expanse of temporal neocortex. In contrast to the role of the temporal lobe in evoking religious experiences, alterations in frontal functions may contribute to increased religious interests as a personality trait. The two main forms of religious experience, the ongoing belief pattern and set of convictions (the religion of the everyday man) versus the ecstatic religious experience, may be predominantly localized to the frontal and temporal regions, respectively, of the right hemisphere.
癫痫患者在一些文化中受到尊崇,但在大多数其他文化中却遭到迫害,纵观历史,他们一直与神圣、恶魔和超自然现象联系在一起。过去150年的临床观察支持了在癫痫发作期间(发作期)、之后(发作后期)以及发作间隙(发作间期)出现宗教体验之间的关联。此外,癫痫发作可能会增加、改变或减少宗教体验,尤其是在一小部分颞叶癫痫(TLE)患者中。文献调查显示,0.4%至3.1%的部分癫痫患者有发作期宗教体验;在系统问卷调查中发现的频率高于患者自发报告。3.9%的癫痫患者报告有宗教先兆症状或先兆。在有发作期宗教体验的患者中,右侧颞叶癫痫患者占多数。发作后期和发作间期宗教体验最常发生在双侧发作灶的颞叶癫痫患者中。发作后期宗教体验发生在所有癫痫患者中的比例为1.3%,颞叶癫痫患者中的比例为2.2%。许多与癫痫相关的宗教皈依体验发生在发作后期。发作间期宗教虔诚度更具争议性,研究之间的共识较少。有发作后期精神病的患者也可能经历发作间期过度虔诚,这支持了一些患者发作间期宗教虔诚度的“病理性”增加。尽管诸如耻辱感等心理和社会因素可能导致癫痫患者产生宗教体验,但神经学机制很可能起了很大作用。由于与颞叶癫痫的关联以及这些体验的情感性质,边缘系统也常被认为是宗教体验的关键部位。新皮质区域也可能参与其中,这是由视觉和听觉幻觉的存在、许多宗教体验中的复杂思维以及颞叶新皮质的广阔区域所表明的。与颞叶在引发宗教体验中的作用形成对比的是,额叶功能的改变可能作为一种人格特质导致宗教兴趣增加。宗教体验的两种主要形式,即持续的信仰模式和信念集(普通人的宗教)与狂喜的宗教体验,可能分别主要定位于右半球的额叶和颞叶区域。