Jason Werbeloff, a twenty-two-year-old graduate student in
Johannesburg, spent months in bed with a severe case of
mononucleosis. He was told to e-mail Brad Duchaine, a professor of psychological and brain sciences at
Dartmouth College, who was studying the phenomenon. In a study by J.D. Blom, I.E.C. Sommer, S. Koops, and O.W. Sacks, hetero- and hemiprosopometamorphopsia were the two most widely documented types of prosopometamorphopsia. Heteroprosopometamorphopsia is the most common, at ~69% of patients. True autoprosopometamorphopsia make up around 5%, although 25% of patients experienced both of the former. Zoanthroprosopometamorphopsia is exceedingly rare, with 3% of patients reporting symptoms. One study reported a 24-year-old woman who developed prosopometamorphopsia after a childbirth. Initially she developed severe migraines and blurred vision mainly in her right visual hemifield and was in a confused state. The visual disturbances persisted long after the migraine had subsided several hours later. She described the left half of people's faces as "out of place" and would see these distortions irrespective of whether the faces were familiar or unknown. However, she was able to visualise the faces of familiar people in her mind without the distortions. She also did not report perceiving distortions in stimuli other than faces and demonstrated the same patterns a year after the first assessments. It was discovered that this woman had a
left hemisphere lesion which resulted in distortions of the left half of the faces to which she was exposed. The unilateral aspect of the defect suggests that the early stages of face processing occurs in parallel mechanisms across both hemispheres and the
right hemisphere then integrates the information that results in a unitary face representation. Another study examined a 75-year-old woman who suffered from a sudden onset of nausea, dizziness and blurred vision. The central part of faces, especially the nose and mouth, were described as being out of shape. She claimed that noses looked narrow and lengthened toward the mouth which looked small and rounded regardless of whether the faces were familiar to her or not. She was found not to have any other impairments in her visuoperceptual performances, nor did she have any cognitive or psychiatric impairments. A T2-weighted brain
MRI revealed an infarction in the right medial temporooccipital lobe including the
parahippocampal gyrus (complement of the FFA). A 52-year-old woman suffered from a lifelong history of seeing faces morph into
dragon-like faces and reported hallucinating similar faces several times a day. Initially she would recognise the actual faces but after a while they would become black, grew long pointy ears and a protruding snout, displayed reptile-like skin and had large protruding eyes in bright colours. She would see these faces coming towards her several times in a day from objects like electric sockets. She has also had these hallucinations in the dark. She had previously suffered from recurrent headaches, passage hallucinations (to see movements in the corner of the eyes) and zoopsia (she saw large ants crawling over her hands). An MRI of the brain showed minor white-matter abnormalities near the
lentiform nucleus and in the semioval center. The visual perceptions she had experienced were attributed to unusual electrophysiological activity in the regions of the brain that are specialised for face and colour in the ventral occipito-temporal cortex. A 44-year-old woman reported to have begun seeing facial distortions. She perceived that faces would change to look more like
caricatures of themselves, with her perception worsening over time. She had a history of epilepsy in childhood and had suffered a concussion several years before having this condition, though no medical evidence of seizure was found during distortions. She reported that occasionally she would experience a pixelated vision, like television static and mentioned that these symptoms occurred several times a week with each event lasting from a few minutes to a few hours. == References ==