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Charles bonnet syndrome (CBS): Successful treatment of visual hallucinations due to vision loss with trazodone in three cases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

H.C. Hsu
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Taiwan R.O.C
T.C. Chen
Affiliation:
Department of Metabolism and Endocrinology, Taiwan R.O.C
Y.S. Huang
Affiliation:
Department of Neurology, Taiwan R.O.C
W.X. Fan
Affiliation:
Department of Ophthalmology, Buddhist Dalin Tzuchi General Hospital, Chia-Yi County, Taiwan R.O.C

Abstract

Background

CBS becomes more prevalent as the population ages and the number of patients with low vision increases. Clinical features of CBS have been described as complex visual hallucinations with insight due to the vision loss or visual ability decrease in patients who’re otherwise mentally normal. We describe three typical CBS patients whose visual hallucinations developed after bilateral severe visual impairment due to diabetic retinopathy. They responded well to treatment with trazodone. The effectiveness of trazodone in these patients adds to evidence implicating serotonergic pathways in the pathogenesis of visual hallucinations.

Case report

The characteristics of 3 patients and their reactions are listed in table 1.

Discussion

This is the first report describing the effectiveness of trazodone in treating typical CBS patients. It indicates that trazodone is an safer option for the treatment of CBS, especially in the elderly, diabetic population. In addition to having fewer interactions with comedications, trazodone has fewer adverse effects and relative lower body weight gain risk compared to anticonvulsants and neuroleptics. CBS is a condition that many clinicians aren’t very familiar with, yet it’s a surprisingly high prevalence rate (10%-30%) among the visually impaired. Clinicians must therefore keep in mind and ask elderly people with visual impairment whether they’ve hallucinations.

Type
P01-376
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association2011
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