Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T04:04:17.776Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Charles Bonnet syndrome and cognitive impairment: a systematic review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2014

Gregor Russell*
Affiliation:
Daisy Hill House, Lynfield Mount Hospital, Bradford BD9 6DP, UK
Alistair Burns
Affiliation:
University of Manchester and Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PL, UK
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: Dr Gregor Russell, Consultant in Old Age Psychiatry, Daisy Hill House, Lynfield Mount Hospital, Bradford BD9 6DP, UK. Phone: +01274-251630; Fax: +01274-228573. Email: gregor.russell@bdct.nhs.uk.

Abstract

Background:

Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) is defined as complex persistent visual hallucinations in the absence of mental disorder. It is common in conditions causing significant visual impairment. Many authors advise reassurance, considering the condition benign. However, others have suggested that CBS may in some patients represent the early stages of dementia. This review seeks to systematically examine the evidence for any link between CBS and cognitive impairment.

Methods:

Literature search using OVID Medline, PsychINFO, and Embase.

Results:

Three studies where cognitive functioning was the primary focus of the research were found. All were small, did not properly apply diagnostic criteria, and reported conflicting results. Eight other studies commented on cognitive functioning, but none used tests sufficiently sensitive to detect changes seen in early dementia. One hundred and thirty four case reports were scrutinized, and reports found of 16 patients with CBS where dementia emerged. High rates of partial insight at diagnosis of CBS were seen in these patients.

Conclusions:

There have been no adequately powered studies, using accepted diagnostic criteria, where changes in cognitive functioning were the primary outcome. Existing studies are of limited methodological quality and allow no conclusion regarding a relationship between cognitive impairment and CBS to be reached. Numerous case reports of dementia developing in patients with CBS and partial insight raise the possibility of a link between these conditions. There is a clear need for properly constructed studies to investigate this.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Psychogeriatric Association 2014 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abell, T. (1845). Remarkable case of illusive vision. Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, 33, 409413.Google Scholar
Adachi, N., Watanabe, T., Matsuda, H. and Onuma, T. (2000). Hyperperfusion in the lateral temporal cortex, the striatum and the thalamus during complex visual hallucinations: single photon emission computed tomography findings in patients with Charles Bonnet syndrome. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 54, 157162.Google Scholar
Archibaldo Donoso, S., Carlos Silva, R., Patricio Fuentes, G. and German Gaete, C. (2007). Sindrome de Charles Bonnet: presentacion de tres casos y revision de la literatura. Revista Medica de Chile, 135, 10341039.Google Scholar
Bak, T. H. (2006). Cognitive profiles of Parkinsonian syndromes. Advances in Clinical Neuroscience and Rehabilitation, 6, 1214.Google Scholar
Bartlett, J. E. A. (1951). A case of organised visual hallucinations in an old man with cataract and their relation to the phenomena of the phantom limb. Brain, 74, 363373.Google Scholar
Berrios, G. E. and Brook, P. (1982). The Charles Bonnet syndrome and the problem of visual perceptual disorders of the elderly. Age and Aging, 11, 1723.Google Scholar
Bourgeois, V. et al. (2010). The Charles Bonnet syndrome and vitamin B12 deficiency: a case report. General Hospital Psychiatry, 32, 446.e78.Google Scholar
Brabbins, C. J. (1992). Dementia presenting with complex visual hallucinations (letter). International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 7, 455457.Google Scholar
Burgermeister, J. J., Tissot, R. and de Ajuriaguerra, J. (1965). Les allucinations visuelles des ophtalmopathes. Neuropsychologia, 3, 938.Google Scholar
Cole, M. G. (1992). Charles Bonnet hallucinations: a case series. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 37, 267270.Google Scholar
Collerton, D., Perry, E. and McKeith, I. (2005). Why people see things that are not there: a novel perception and attention deficit model for recurrent complex visual hallucinations. Behavioural and Brain Sciences, 28, 737794.Google Scholar
Crumbliss, K. E., Taussig, M. J. and Jay, W. M. (2008). Vision rehabilitation and Charles Bonnet syndrome. Seminars in Ophthalmology, 23, 121126.Google Scholar
Crystal, H., Wolfson, L. and Ewing, S. (1988). Visual hallucinations as the first symptom of Alzheimer's disease (letter). American Journal of Psychiatry, 145, 1318.Google Scholar
Damas-Mora, J., Skelton-Robinson, M. and Jenner, F. A. (1982). The Charles Bonnet syndrome in perspective. Psychological Medicine, 12, 251261.Google Scholar
de Morsier, G. (1936). Les automatismes visuels (hallucinations visuelles retro-chiasmatiques). Schweizerische Medizinische Wochenschrift, 29, 700703.Google Scholar
de Morsier, G. (1967). Le syndrome de Charles Bonnet: hallucinations visuelles des vieillards sans deficience mentale. Annales Medico Psychologiques (Paris), 125, 677702.Google Scholar
Ffytche, D. H., (2007). Visual hallucinatory syndromes: past, present and future. Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience, 9, 173189.Google Scholar
Ffytche, D. H. et al. (1998). The anatomy of conscious vision: an fMRI study of visual hallucinations. Nature Neuroscience, 1, 738742.Google Scholar
Folstein, M. F., Folstein, S. E. and McHugh, P. R. (1975). “Mini-mental state”. A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 12, 189198.Google Scholar
Gilmour, G., Schreiber, C. and Ewing, C. (2009). An examination of the relationship between low vision and Charles Bonnet syndrome. Canadian Journal of Ophthalmology, 44, 4952.Google Scholar
Gil Navarro, S. et al. (2011). Can Charles Bonnet syndrome herald a dementia with Lewy bodies? Report of a case. Journal of Neurology, 258 (Suppl. 1), S75.Google Scholar
Gold, K. and Rabins, P. V. (1989). Isolated visual hallucinations and the Charles Bonnet syndrome: a review of the literature and presentation of six cases. Comprehensive Psychiatry, 30, 9098.Google Scholar
Haddad, P. M. and Benbow, S. M. (1992). Visual hallucinations as the presenting symptom of senile dementia. British Journal of Psychiatry, 161, 263265.Google Scholar
Hanyu, H. et al. (2008). Is Charles Bonnet syndrome an early stage of Lewy body dementia? (letter). Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 56, 17631764.Google Scholar
Hartney, K. E., Catalano, G. and Catalano, M. C. (2011). Charles Bonnet syndrome: are medications necessary? Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 17, 137141.Google Scholar
Hecaen, H. and Garcia Badaracco, J. (1956). Les hallucinations visualles au cours des ophthalmopathies et des lesions nerfs et du chiasma optiques. L’Evolution Psychiatrique, 1956, 157179.Google Scholar
Hedges, T. R. (2007). Charles Bonnet, his life, and his syndrome. Survey of Ophthalmology, 52, 111114.Google Scholar
Holroyd, S. and Rabins, P. V. (1996). A three year follow-up study of visual hallucinations in patients with macular degeneration. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 184, 188189.Google Scholar
Holroyd, S., Rabins, P. V., Finkelstein, D. and Lavrisha, M. (1994). Visual hallucinations in patients from an ophthalmology clinic and medical clinic population. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 182, 273276.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. and Barnes, R. C. (2001). The Charles Bonnet syndrome: symptomatic relief with atypical antipsychotics: a case series. International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice, 5, 141144.Google Scholar
Lefroy, R. B. (1999). The Charles Bonnet syndrome. Australasian Journal on Ageing, 18, 150151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levine, A. M. (1980). Visual hallucinations and cataracts. Ophthalmic Surgery, 11, 9598.Google Scholar
Mahgoub, N. and Serby, M. (2007). Charles Bonnet syndrome: long-term outcome of treatment. Psychiatric Annals, 37, 579580.Google Scholar
Menon, G. J. (2005). Complex visual hallucinations in the visually impaired. Archives of Ophthalmology, 123, 349355.Google Scholar
Menon, G. J., Rahman, I., Menon, S. J. and Dutton, G. N. (2003). Complex visual hallucinations in the visually impaired: the Charles Bonnet syndrome. Survey of Ophthalmology, 48, 5872.Google Scholar
Norton-Willson, L. and Munir, M. (1987). Visual perceptual disorders resembling the Charles Bonnet syndrome. A study of 434 consecutive patients referred to a psychogeriatric unit. Family Practice, 4, 2731.Google Scholar
Ormond, A. W. (1925). Visual hallucinations in sane people. British Medical Journal, 2, 376379.Google Scholar
Owen, C. G. et al. (2012). The estimated prevalence and incidence of late stage age related macular degeneration in the UK. British Journal of Ophthalmology, 96, 752756.Google Scholar
Pliskin, N. H. et al. (1996). Charles Bonnet syndrome: an early marker for dementia? Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 44, 10551061.Google Scholar
Podoll, K., Schwarz, M. and Noth, J. (1990). Charles Bonnet-syndrom bei einem Parkinson-patienten mit beidseitigem visusverlust. Der Nervenartz, 61, 5256.Google Scholar
Riedel-Heller, S. G., Busse, A., Aurich, C, Matschinger, H. and Angermeyer, M. C. (2001). Incidence of dementia according to DSM-III-R and ICD-10. British Journal of Psychiatry, 179, 255260.Google Scholar
Sadananda Unni, K. E. (1994). Charles Bonnet syndrome: two case reports. Indian Journal of Psychiatry, 36, 190192.Google Scholar
Schadlu, A. P., Schadlu, R. and Shepherd, J. B. (2009). Charles Bonnet syndrome: a review. Current Opinion in Ophthalmology, 20, 219222.Google Scholar
Schultz, G. and Melzack, R. (1993). Visual hallucinations and mental state. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 181, 639643.Google Scholar
Shedlack, K. J., McDonald, W. M., Laskowitz, D. T. and Ranga Rama Krishnan, K. (1994). Geniculocalcarine hyperintensities on brain magnetic resonance imaging associated with visual hallucinations in the elderly. Psychiatry Research, 54, 283293.Google Scholar
Terao, T. (2001). The present state of Charles Bonnet syndrome. Psychogeriatrics, 2, 614.Google Scholar
Terao, T. and Collinson, S. (2000). Charles Bonnet syndrome and dementia (letter). Lancet, 355, 2168.Google Scholar
Teunisse, R. J. (1997). Comment on Charles Bonnet syndrome: an early marker for dementia? (Letter). Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 45, 892893.Google Scholar
Teunisse, R. J., Zitman, F. G. and Raes, D. C. M. (1994). Clinical evaluation of 14 patients with the Charles Bonnet syndrome (isolated visual hallucinations). Comprehensive Psychiatry, 35, 7075.Google Scholar
Teunisse, R. J., Cruysberg, J. R. M., Verbeek, A. and Zitman, F. G. (1995). The Charles Bonnet syndrome: a large prospective study in the Netherlands. British Journal of Psychiatry, 166, 254257.Google Scholar
Teunisse, R. J. et al. (1996). Visual hallucinations in psychologically normal people: Charles Bonnet's syndrome. Lancet, 347, 794797.Google Scholar
Teunisse, R. J. et al. (1998). Risk indicators for the Charles Bonnet syndrome. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 186, 190192.Google Scholar
UK Department of Health (2012). The Prime Minister's challenge on dementia. London: Williams Lea for the Department of Health.Google Scholar
Ukai, S., Yamamoto, M., Tanaka, M. and Takeda, M. (2004). Treatment of typical Charles Bonnet syndrome with donepezil. International Clinical Psychopharmacology, 19, 355357.Google Scholar
Walker, J. D. and Keys, M. A. (2008). Dementia with Lewy bodies and Charles Bonnet syndrome. Retinal Cases and Brief Reports, 2, 2730.Google Scholar
White, N. J. (1980). Complex visual hallucinations in partial blindness due to eye disease. British Journal of Psychiatry, 136, 284286.Google Scholar