Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2011)
Eye-related visual hallucinations: Consider ′Charles Bonnet syndrome′
- Nilgun Cinar,
- Sevki Sahin,
- Sibel Karsidag
Affiliations
- Nilgun Cinar
- Sevki Sahin
- Sibel Karsidag
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.4103/0301-4738.81038
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 59,
no. 3
pp. 229 – 230
Abstract
The Charles Bonnet Syndrome (CBS) is typically characterized by visual hallucinations in elderly people without cognitive defects. This article presents the case of an 80-year-old male patient with a one-year history of visual hallucinations, secondary to glaucoma, in both eyes. Neither a dopamine agonist nor cholinesterase inhibitor therapy improved his symptoms. In this case, the hallucinations were gradually improved after administration of a GABAergic drug, pregabalin, for diabetic polyneuropathy. Placebo-controlled clinical trials would be needed to support this effect of pregabalin, as suggested by this association.
Keywords
- Ahmed glaucoma valve
- hypotony
- post-penetrating-keratoplasty glaucoma
- tube extrusion
- scleral patch
- Ranibizumab
- bevacizumab
- choroidal neovascular membrane
- age-related macular degeneration
- intravitreal injection
- central macular thickness
- best corrected visual acuity
- Intravitreal injection
- methotrexate
- pharmacokinetics
- Contrast sensitivity
- diabetes
- glare
- pupil cycle time
- Anemia
- diabetic retinopathy
- microalbuminuria
- severity
- Objective Structured Clinical Examination
- ophthalmology
- undergraduate
- Anisometropia
- anisometropic amblyopia
- fusion
- stereopsis
- Traumatic cataract
- Birmingham Eye Trauma Terminology System
- India
- cataract surgery
- Children with learning disability
- ocular disorders
- refractive errors
- special needs
- Charles Bonnet syndrome
- dementia
- hallucinations
- pregabalin