# Expanding the Spectrum of Charles Bonnet Syndrome: Severe Psychiatric Manifestations Associated With Total Vision Loss

**Authors:** Justin S Yun, Gabriela Prieto

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.84849 · 2025-05-26

## TL;DR

This paper presents a case where Charles Bonnet Syndrome, typically involving visual hallucinations, evolved into severe psychiatric symptoms in a blind patient, highlighting the need for interdisciplinary care.

## Contribution

The paper introduces an atypical case showing CBS can progress to severe psychiatric manifestations, challenging its traditional classification.

## Key findings

- CBS in a blind patient progressed to include psychotic symptoms like aggression and delusions.
- Treatment with multiple medications partially reduced symptoms but did not fully resolve them.
- The case underscores the need for combined ophthalmologic and psychiatric management in CBS.

## Abstract

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.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** olanzapine (PubChem CID 135398745), haloperidol (PubChem CID 3559), gabapentin (PubChem CID 3446), hydroxyzine (PubChem CID 3658), divalproex sodium (PubChem CID 23663956)
- **Diseases:** Charles Bonnet Syndrome (MONDO:0022140), schizoaffective disorder (MONDO:0005487)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** sensory deprivation (MESH:D012892), blindness (MESH:D001766), CBS (MESH:D000075562), aggressive behavior (MESH:D010554), delusions (MESH:D063726), Psychiatric Manifestations (MESH:D001523), psychosis (MESH:D011618), impaired insight (MESH:D060825), Vision Loss (MESH:D014786), hallucinations (MESH:D006212)
- **Chemicals:** divalproex sodium (MESH:D014635), hydroxyzine (MESH:D006919), olanzapine (MESH:D000077152), gabapentin (MESH:D000077206), haloperidol (MESH:D006220)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12189765