Postoperative visual and auditory hallucinations after cardiac surgery: VAACS umbrella study.

Khadija, H. A., Hamdeh, N. A., Najajra, D., Othman, W., Abdul-Hafez, H. A., Zahran, A., Heih, O., Fraitekh, Y. Z., Masu’d, M., Awwad, M., Filho, I. J. Z., Zayed, A., Sawalha, M., Ismail, S., Swidan, I., Abu-Hamda, O., Nana, O., Hamoudy, K., Bali, B., … Alnees, M. (2026). Postoperative visual and auditory hallucinations after cardiac surgery: VAACS umbrella study.. Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 202, 112480.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hallucinations are underrecognized neuropsychiatric complications after cardiac surgery. Data on incidence and type-specific predictors in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and valvular surgery are limited.

METHODS: We conducted a multicenter prospective cohort study (September 2022 to May 2025) across West Bank cardiac surgery centers. A total of 1332 adults (997 CABG, 335 valve) were assessed daily for 7 days postoperatively using the Questionnaire for Psychotic Experiences. Predictors of visual and auditory hallucinations evaluated with Cox proportional hazards models.

RESULTS: Visual hallucinations occurred in 11.5 % of CABG patients and 10.0 % of valve surgery patients, while auditory hallucinations were reported in 7.0 % and 5.0 %, respectively. In the CABG group, the multivariable Cox regression models stratified by hospital showed that auditory hallucinations were significantly associated with lower left ventricular ejection fraction (HR = 1.05 per 1 % decrease; 95 % CI 1.01-1.09), longer aortic cross-clamp time (HR = 1.01 per minute; 95 % CI1.0004-1.02), and immunosuppressive therapy (HR = 4.81; 95 % CI 1.13-20.53). Postoperative blood transfusion was associated with an increased risk of visual hallucinations in univariate analysis (HR = 1.87; 95 % CI 1.05-3.33), but the association became borderline after adjustment (HR = 1.97; 95 % CI 0.95-4.09). Among the valve surgery cohort, the hospital-stratified models indicated that prolonged postoperative ventilation was independently protective against visual hallucinations (adjusted HR = 0.78; 95 % CI 0.68-0.90), whereas noradrenalin use (adjusted HR = 6.07; 95 % CI 2.18-16.93) and immunosuppressive therapy (adjusted HR = 5.13; 95 % CI 1.14-23.09) markedly increased the risk. For auditory hallucinations in valve surgery patients, adrenaline exposure emerged as a significant independent predictor (adjusted HR = 3.40; 95 % CI 1.21-9.54).

CONCLUSIONS: Postoperative hallucinations affected ∼1 in 10 patients; visual hallucinations were more frequent, auditory hallucinations linked to stress and medications, with risks varying by surgery type, supporting tailored monitoring and prevention.

Last updated on 04/01/2026
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