Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) describes the presence of complex visual hallucinations with retained insight in the unreal nature of the phenomenon in patients with visual function loss, and no other neurological or psychiatric disorders.
CBS has been found to affect between 2.8% and 20.1% of glaucoma patients, with higher rates in individuals with bilateral low visual acuity or extensive visual impairment (1). However, CBS has also been described in glaucoma patients with visual field loss but maintained visual acuity (2,3). Approximately one third of all patients with CBS feel distress about their symptoms, and negative experience of CBS is correlated to unawareness about CBS at the onset of symptoms (4).
Ophthalmologists and other health-care providers need to be familiar with CBS in patients with glaucoma and should preventively talk about CBS with their glaucoma patients even when visual acuity is unaffected.
Contributor: Dorothea Peters, MD, PhD, Eye Clinic at Skane University Hospital and Department of Clinical Sciences Malmö, Ophthalmology, Lund University, Sweden
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