Yun Justin S, Prieto Gabriela
Ophthalmology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, USA.
Psychiatry, Olive View-UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles, USA.
Cureus. 2025 May 26;17(5):e84849. doi: 10.7759/cureus.84849. eCollection 2025 May.
Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) is typically characterized by complex, non-threatening visual hallucinations in patients with visual impairment who maintain insight that their perceptions are unreal. While primarily considered an ophthalmological phenomenon, recent evidence suggests that CBS may overlap with psychiatric disorders presenting with complex visual hallucinations and impaired insight, complicating both diagnosis and management. These interactions challenge the view of CBS as a benign and isolated condition, especially when symptoms become more entrenched, resemble psychosis, or co-occur with pre-existing psychiatric disorders. We present a new, atypical case involving a patient with CBS and evolving psychotic symptoms at the Olive View Medical Center in California. Our case highlights a 40-year-old female patient with bilateral blindness and a history of CBS, schizoaffective disorder, and repeated Lanterman-Petris-Short conservatorships. At presentation, she exhibited aggressive behavior, possible delusions, responses to internal stimuli, and significant difficulties in self-care. Treatment included a regimen of olanzapine (25 mg daily), haloperidol (15 mg daily), gabapentin (1800 mg daily), hydroxyzine (150 mg daily), and divalproex sodium (2000 mg daily), resulting in some symptom amelioration but persistent psychotic features. The patient's ongoing conservatorship demonstrates the severity and chronicity of her condition. This case suggests that even in patients with total vision loss, CBS has the potential to evolve beyond isolated visual hallucinations to include severe psychiatric sequelae, including psychotic symptoms. These findings call for greater clinical vigilance, timely ophthalmologic and psychiatric consultation, and interdisciplinary management. Further research is needed to elucidate the neurobiological mechanisms linking sensory deprivation to complex hallucinations and psychiatric disturbances. An improved understanding of these processes may guide more accurate diagnostics and inform targeted interventions, ultimately improving outcomes.
查尔斯·邦尼特综合征(CBS)的典型特征是,视力受损患者会出现复杂的、不构成威胁的视幻觉,且患者明白自己的感知是不真实的。虽然CBS主要被视为一种眼科现象,但最近的证据表明,它可能与伴有复杂视幻觉和自知力受损的精神障碍重叠,这使得诊断和管理都变得复杂。这些相互作用对CBS是一种良性且孤立病症的观点提出了挑战,尤其是当症状变得更加顽固、类似精神病或与既存精神障碍同时出现时。我们在加利福尼亚州的奥利夫维尤医疗中心介绍了一个新的非典型病例,该病例涉及一名患有CBS且出现不断演变精神病症状的患者。我们的病例突出了一名40岁的女性患者,她双目失明,有CBS、分裂情感性障碍病史,并且多次接受兰特曼 - 佩特里斯 - 肖特监护。就诊时,她表现出攻击性行为、可能的妄想、对内部刺激的反应以及在自我护理方面存在重大困难。治疗方案包括奥氮平(每日25毫克)、氟哌啶醇(每日15毫克)、加巴喷丁(每日1800毫克)、羟嗪(每日150毫克)和丙戊酸钠(每日2000毫克),症状有所改善,但仍有持续的精神病特征。患者持续接受监护表明了其病情的严重性和慢性。该病例表明,即使在完全失明的患者中,CBS也有可能从单纯的视幻觉发展为包括精神病症状在内的严重精神后遗症。这些发现呼吁提高临床警惕性,及时进行眼科和精神科会诊以及跨学科管理。需要进一步研究以阐明将感觉剥夺与复杂幻觉及精神障碍联系起来的神经生物学机制。对这些过程的更好理解可能会指导更准确的诊断并为有针对性的干预提供依据,最终改善治疗结果。