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Visual hallucinations

Practical Neurology, 2021
Visual hallucinations have intrigued neurologists and physicians for generations due to patients’ vivid and fascinating descriptions. They are most commonly associated with Parkinson’s disease and dementia with Lewy bodies, but also occur in people with visual loss, where they are known as Charles Bonnet syndrome. More rarely, they can develop in other
Rimona S Weil, A J Lees
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Visual hallucinations

WIREs Cognitive Science, 2010
AbstractUnderstanding of visual hallucinations is developing rapidly. Single‐factor explanations based on specific pathologies have given way to complex multifactor models with wide potential applicability. Clinical studies of disorders with frequent hallucinations—dementia, delirium, eye disease and psychosis—show that dysfunction within many parts of
Daniel, Collerton, Urs Peter, Mosimann
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Visual hallucinations

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2004
Neurologists and ophthalmologists should be familiar with the causes and treatment of visual hallucinations so that they are able to reassure patients and minimize the anguish associated with untreated visual hallucinations. Hallucinations are under-reported by patients because of the perceived psychiatric implication or because of poor insight into ...
Victoria S., Pelak, Grant T., Liu
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Prevalence of visual hallucinations

Clinical and Experimental Optometry, 2020
To determine the prevalence of visual hallucinations and to report its associations with demographic and clinical factors in a population-based survey in India.Prevalence of visual hallucinations was determined as a part of a large prospective, cross-sectional, population-based study that was carried out in two districts of Telangana, namely Khammam ...
Srinivas, Marmamula   +4 more
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Visual hallucinations in ophthalmology

Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology, 1987
Forty-three patients with severe visual impairment due to bilateral eye disease were assessed for visual hallucinations, 28 of them after eye surgery. Ages ranged between 65 and 93 years and none of the patients had any psychiatric disorder. Five of the 43 patients were diagnosed as cases with Charles Bonnet syndrome reporting visual hallucinations ...
H M, Olbrich   +3 more
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On the Diversity of Visual Hallucinations

The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1982
It is proposed that human beings can suffer from several kinds of visual hallucinations based on different pathomechanisms simultaneously or in an intercurrent fashion. The authors review several types of visual hallucinations in relation to their case study.
L B, Raschka, F M, Schlager
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Doxepin and Visual Hallucinations

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1982
(1982). Doxepin and Visual Hallucinations. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry: Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 295-296.
T R, Norman   +3 more
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Neuropsychiatry of complex visual hallucinations

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 2006
Objective: To describe the phenomenology and pathophysiology of complex visual hallucinations (CVH) in various organic states, in particular Charles Bonnet syndrome and peduncular hallucinosis. Method: Three cases of CVH in the setting of pontine infarction, thalamic infarction and temporoparietal epileptiform activity are presented ...
Ramon, Mocellin   +2 more
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Visual Hallucinations in the Elderly

Gerontology, 2009
Visual hallucinations, without auditory hallucinations and in the elderly, are not usually based on previous psychiatric illness. The elderly can, of course, hallucinate as part of severe depression or a life-long schizophrenia, but the clinician should assume that there is an organic basis when an elderly individual begins to develop visual ...
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VISUAL HALLUCINATIONS WITH IMIPRAMINE

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1965
The occasional occurrence of imipramine-induced visual hallucinations resembling those produced by hallucinogenic agents is documented. The phenomenon is dosage dependent and easily managed by reduction of dosage level when recognized. Delirious confusion is not a necessary part of this syndrome.
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