Sebastian Yim
Visual hallucinations, in the absence of psychopathology, remains a challenge for diagnosis in clinicians. Charles Bonnet Syndrome (CBS) is a condition whereby a patient experiences visual hallucinations, with clear insight into their nature; this often occurs in people with varying degrees of vision loss (1). While acknowledging that these phenomena are illusory, they may still cause significant distress to the patient. As a result, prompt awareness and understanding of the condition is essential. However, CBS remains difficult to diagnose through a lack of an accepted set of criteria (2); this article will briefly address the concept of visual acuity in its diagnosis, alongside some future recommendations to clinicians.
Although no set diagnostic criteria exist, there are many overlapping features that CBS patients exhibit: these include prominent visual hallucinations, preserved insight, and a lack of additional psychopathology which better explains the presentation (1). Interestingly, one criterion commonly expressed is that many patients have some degree of loss in visual acuity (2). One study showed a 12% prevalence in patients with visual acuity showcasing criteria resembling CBS (3).
However, to date, there has been no definitive consensus over the scientific basis for visual hallucinations in CBS. The current understanding revolves around de-afferentation of sensory signals, resulting in the disinhibition of neural networks along the visual pathway (4). The brain adapts by lowering the threshold for activation; its spontaneous firing is what causes the increased electrical activity, thereby manifesting as visual phenomena. This theory has been demonstrated through empirical evidence, showcasing a loss of inhibitory tone (2) and cortical hyperexcitability in CBS patients (5), and even replicated through visual deprivation experiments (6). Together, this points to the idea that visual acuity is a central tenet to the diagnosis of CBS.
However, the overall evidence remains unconvincing. Since loss in visual acuity is correlated to visual phenomena, several case studies (7) have shown that those phenomena are no longer be present once the visual acuity is corrected, for instance through surgery. Despite this, studies have shown a prevalence of CBS in patients with preserved visual acuity. A cross-sectional report (8) on the epidemiology of CBS in Asia found not only a lower prevalence compared to European surveys, but that CBS symptoms occurred in good visual acuity. This was corroborated with another case report (9) of 4 patients, challenging whether the idea that the degree of visual acuity is a pre-requisite for CBS. Importantly, this initially seems to contradict the de-afferentation theory as well – if visual pathways are still intact, it becomes unclear how this leads to hallucinations.
However, recent neuroimaging breakthroughs have showed the importance of functional connectivity: an expression of how the neural networks function with one another. If the synapses and neurons are the ‘hardware’ within our brain, how they all operate together is the ‘software’. During hallucinations, CBS patients show increased connectivity with other areas, such as the cerebellum (10), with heightened activity in networks never thought to play a role in visual processing (11). Importantly, even if pathways are structurally connected, its temporal relationship is key to show any dysfunction. There is still a paucity of studies which probe into the risk factors or causes of altered functional connectivity within CBS patients. Regardless, it showcases the importance of not only intact neural networks but its correct functioning when describing visual neurobiology.
One reason for the discrepancies is a lack of studies and its under-representation. Much of the evidence around CBS remains either cross-sectional or anecdotal in nature – to date, there has not been a systematic review outlining any significant estimates, especially regarding its prevalence – currently an enormous range from 0.4% to 63% (3,6,8). Secondly, CBS encompasses different sub-specialties: ophthalmology, neurology, psychiatry, and geriatric medicine. Therefore, CBS is tackled from different angles, which rarely offer complementary viewpoints: for the ophthalmologist, is CBS the eye disease itself, or the loss of acuity which is to be corrected (9)? For the neurologist, can CBS be treated as distinct from any age-related neurological impairment? Age is likely a significant confounder, one that has yet to be truly disentangled.
An overlap exists with dementia and visual hallucinations being an early sign (12); combined with the incidence of age-related eye diseases, it becomes increasingly difficult to determine the causal nature CBS might play in these conditions. Lastly, there remains a reluctance of the patient to disclose the information: if patients still believe hallucinations must solely occur in the context of psychiatric illness, these symptoms are likely less voiced. Interestingly, de Morsier, the clinician who gave its eponymous name, argued he never meant to conflate CBS with eye disease (1) – regardless, it remains a significant relationship at play.
Therefore, it seems pertinent to describe any future directions from the viewpoints of the academic and clinician. From the academic perspective, more studies are needed, particularly from the angle of visual acuity and its relationship to visual phenomena. Moreover, further research into the nature of these visual hallucinations is required. If the de-afferentation theory holds true, this should be correlated with the type of visual hallucinations, through functional imaging or connectivity studies. From the clinician’s perspective, it is important to communicate with patients and their families now. It is important to try and educate groups over any potential distress these hallucinations may bring, and provide available options for symptomatic benefit. Ultimately, inter-professional collaborations may be needed, attempting to definitively propose a set of criteria all areas agree upon to move diagnosis and effective treatment forward.
Overall, CBS remains an under-diagnosed condition, with its complexity in pathogenesis its main downfall. While further studies may one day elucidate and map visual hallucinations onto the affected regions of visual cortex, a key step involves how this may translate into patient care. Prompt recognition, clinician education, and management of additional co-morbidities all aim to provide patient empowerment. For an increasingly ageing population, the awareness of CBS remains as paramount as ever.
References
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