Koek Adriana Y, Espinosa Patricio S
Clinical Biomedical Science, Florida Atlantic University Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, Boca Raton, USA.
Neurology, Marcus Neuroscience Institute, Boca Raton Regional Hospital, Boca Raton, USA.
Cureus. 2018 Aug 23;10(8):e3191. doi: 10.7759/cureus.3191.
Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) refers to the experience of visual hallucinations in the context of visual impairment. The underlying pathology may be localized anywhere along the visual pathway from the eye itself to visual cortical centers. It is sometimes compared to phantom limb syndrome; both involve decreased sensory input, as in loss of a limb or declining vision, resulting in overactivity in areas of the brain controlling sensory perception. Definitive diagnostic criteria are still lacking and may vary by discipline. However, the following features are generally agreed upon: visual hallucinations, impaired vision, and intact cognition and insight. Psychiatric symptoms, cognitive decline, and hallucinations of other sensory modalities are often excluded, although this remains an area of debate. Certain non-classic cases of CBS have inspired the designation of atypical CBS, which encompasses a wide spectrum of sensory experiences and associated symptoms. Auditory hallucinations in the hearing-impaired, a well-described phenomenon thought to have a similar pathogenesis, share with CBS the important risk factor of increased age. In patients experiencing both types of hallucinations with deterioration in both sensory domains, the distinction between a CBS variant and two independent processes may not be straightforward. In addition to the ongoing diagnostic dilemma posed by multimodal hallucinations, these phenomena tend to be underreported by patients likely due to concern that they will be diagnosed with mental illness. Although many patients with this condition are indifferent to it, some suffer distress from their hallucinations and would benefit from recognition, reassurance, and in some cases correction of the underlying cause or pharmacologic treatment. Here we present the case of an elderly woman with a history of macular degeneration and chronic hearing loss who experienced complex auditory and visual hallucinations surrounding an episode of severe anxiety. We postulate that her anxiety acted as a precipitant to her hallucinatory experiences and may partially explain their abrupt onset in the absence of other clear pathologic processes. This case serves to reinforce CBS as a possible etiology of visual hallucinations in the elderly population, while also generating discussion of how to classify her particular set of symptoms.
查尔斯·邦尼特综合征(CBS)是指在视力受损的情况下出现视幻觉的现象。其潜在病理可能位于从眼睛本身到视觉皮层中枢的视觉通路的任何部位。它有时被比作幻肢综合征;两者都涉及感觉输入减少,如肢体缺失或视力下降,导致控制感觉感知的大脑区域活动过度。目前仍缺乏明确的诊断标准,且不同学科的标准可能有所不同。然而,以下特征通常是公认的:视幻觉、视力受损以及认知和洞察力完好。尽管这仍是一个有争议的领域,但精神症状、认知衰退和其他感觉模态的幻觉通常被排除在外。某些非典型的CBS病例促使了非典型CBS的命名,它涵盖了广泛的感觉体验和相关症状。听力受损者出现的幻听是一种描述详尽的现象,被认为具有相似的发病机制,与CBS共同具有年龄增长这一重要风险因素。在同时经历两种幻觉且两个感觉领域都出现功能恶化的患者中,区分CBS变体和两个独立过程可能并不容易。除了多模态幻觉带来的持续诊断困境外,这些现象可能因患者担心被诊断为精神疾病而往往未被充分报告。尽管许多患有这种疾病的患者对此漠不关心,但有些患者会因幻觉而痛苦,认识到这一点、得到安慰,以及在某些情况下纠正潜在病因或进行药物治疗会对他们有益。在此,我们报告一例老年女性病例,她有黄斑变性和慢性听力损失病史,在一次严重焦虑发作期间经历了复杂的听觉和视幻觉。我们推测她的焦虑是其幻觉体验的诱因,并且可能部分解释了在没有其他明确病理过程的情况下幻觉为何突然发作。这个病例有助于强化CBS作为老年人群视幻觉可能病因的观点,同时也引发了关于如何对她的特定症状组合进行分类的讨论。