PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Siew Mei Yap AU - Gerald Wyse AU - J Nicholas P Higgins AU - Eoin O'Brien AU - Simon Cronin TI - Auditory hallucination in basilar occlusion: I heard it was the basilar AID - 10.1136/practneurol-2015-001189 DP - 2016 Apr 01 TA - Practical Neurology PG - 142--145 VI - 16 IP - 2 4099 - http://pn.bmj.com/content/16/2/142.short 4100 - http://pn.bmj.com/content/16/2/142.full SO - Pract Neurol2016 Apr 01; 16 AB - Acute basilar artery occlusion is a neurological emergency. Unlike anterior circulation stroke presenting with hemiparesis, the symptoms of basilar artery occlusion are challenging to recognise in the emergency setting. Basilar artery occlusion can rarely lead to ischaemia of the auditory pathways, resulting in bizarre, positive auditory hallucinations. Here, we report two cases of basilar artery occlusion presenting with positive auditory phenomena; in both cases the auditory phenomenon resolved upon arterial recanalisation. We discuss the phenomenology of this unusual and distinctive neurological symptom. Acute auditory hallucinosis in the setting of sudden vomiting, dizziness, visual disturbance or other posterior circulation symptoms should prompt emergency imaging of the basilar artery, to avoid a potentially devastating posterior circulation stroke.