Olanzapine therapy in hallucinatory visions related to Bonnet syndrome
Tóm tắt
Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) is characterised
by the triad of complex visual hallucinations, ocular pathology
causing visual deterioration and preserved cognitive status.
We report a case of a 62–year–old man with a brief history
of visual hallucinations. The patient complained of amaurosis
with optic nerve atrophy in his left eye and a severe
impairment of visual acuity in the right and suddenly experienced
complex, vivid, elaborate and coloured visual hallucinations
persisting long after eye closure and stopping during
sleep. The patient maintained his insight, criticising these
visions as unreal and felt distressed by them. Hallucination
onset was 3 days before hospital admission. No cognitive
impairment and no diseases apart from prostatic adenoma
treated with alpha–lythic therapy were reported. Neurological
examination and neuroimaging data were normal. Therapy
with olanzapine (OLZ) 5 mg/day led to a progressive clearance
of visual hallucinations in seven days and was gradually
reduced and withdrawn. Three months later the visions
reappeared and OLZ 5 mg/day yielded a persisting remission
so that at the follow–up examination after 1 year on therapy
the patient is still asymptomatic. To date, no established treatment
for CBS is stated and in some patients the hallucinations
fade spontaneously; in our case an antipsychotic therapy with
OLZ was effective while generally anticonvulsant drugs with
different mechanism of action such as carbamazepine, valproate
and gabapentin are proposed.