Numinous-like symptoms in epilepsy and/or insular tumors: A hospital cohort study.

Epilepsy & behavior : E&B  – January 22, 2026

Source: PubMed

Summary

Seizures can surprisingly trigger profound numinous experiences, including mystical sensations. Among 83 epilepsy patients surveyed, 6.0% reported such symptoms. Separately, 8.7% of 23 tumor patients with pre-existing epilepsy also described them. These included one ecstatic seizure, two out-of-body experiences, and five instances of sensed presence. Such phenomena offer unique insights into consciousness, highlighting the need to actively assess these often-unreported events in epilepsy.

Abstract

Ecstatic seizures (EcS) have captured scientific interest due to their potential origin in anterior insular networks, emphasizing the insula's role in self-processing. Their frequency in epilepsy or insular pathology has not been systematically studied. Present study aimed to examine the frequency and clinical characteristics of EcS in epilepsy patients, and the potential occurrence of ecstatic symptoms in insula tumor patients. Preformatted questionnaires on symptom reporting were sent to 200 epilepsy patients and 40 with resected insular tumors. Patients reporting EcS-related symptoms underwent in-person interviews. Hospital records, including EEG and imaging, were analyzed. Seizure-related experiences with supernatural, religious, spiritual, mystical, or ecstatic features were referred to as "numinous-like symptoms" throughout the article. Interestingly, a variety of rare, numinous-like ictal experiences were found, all of which are discussed in this study. In the epilepsy cohort, 83 patients responded, five (6.0 %) reported symptoms that qualified them for interview and final analysis. In the tumor cohort, 23 patients responded, two (8.7 %) reported relevant symptoms, both with pre-existing epilepsy. During the interviews, we identified EcS (n = 1), ictal out-of-body experiences (OBE) (n = 2), and ictal sensed presence (SenP) (n = 5); one patient experienced both SenP and OBE. Three SenP patients had seizure origin in the right hemisphere: two had resected tumors in the temporo-insular region and one had mesial temporal sclerosis. The EcS patient had aphasia as an early seizure symptom and left-sided temporal interictal epileptiform activity. The remaining patients had less distinct investigational results. Our findings indicate that seizure-related numinous-like experiences are not uncommon and should be actively assessed, given the difficulty and reluctance of patients to speak about them, and their relevance for evaluating seizure freedom and differential diagnoses. Neuroscientifically, these phenomena offer insight into consciousness: EcS and OBE occupy distinct nodes in self-processing networks, whereas SenP requires further cognitive, psychological, and phenomenological analysis to guide future neurobiological research.

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