Kaleidoscope in the Mind: Charles Bonnet Syndrome
Joel Philip, Feena Sebastian

TL;DR
This paper discusses a case of Charles Bonnet Syndrome, where a visually impaired man experiences complex hallucinations that blend with delusions, highlighting the need to distinguish it from dementia or psychosis.
Contribution
The paper presents a case study illustrating how CBS hallucinations can merge with delusional thinking, complicating diagnosis.
Findings
The patient met two of the three CBS diagnostic criteria but lacked insight into the hallucinations' unreality.
Hallucinations became intertwined with the patient's delusional framework over time.
CBS should be considered in visually impaired individuals with hallucinations to avoid misdiagnosis.
Abstract
Aims: Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) is a phenomenon characterized by complex visual hallucinations in visually challenged patients. CBS may go unrecognized and be misdiagnosed as early dementia or psychosis. Methods: We present the case of an 83-year-old Caucasian gentleman ‘X’ who was referred to the older adult home treatment team. X reported that his problems began when some men turned up at his door a few weeks earlier, regarding an application he had made to the council for solar panels. X suffered from a complex delusional framework, believing that these men have stayed around in his home and are living in his loft. He believed that there are microphones in his bedroom and that his conversations are being transmitted to malicious people who work for the council. X reported distressing visual hallucinations of men in his kitchen threatening him with guns. Other hallucinations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHallucinations in medical conditions · Retinal and Optic Conditions
