Visual Hallucinations Review
Published and edited by Terrence Li M.D.
2010
Types of hallucinations –
Visual Hallucinations
First, differentiate between simple or complex hallucinations:
1) Simple – “elemental or non formed”
a. Lights, colors, lines, shapes or geometric shapes
b.
Light simple hallucinations can be delinated further into lights
without structure (phosphenes) OR lights with structure (photopsias)
2) Complex – “formed”
a. Images of people, animals, objects or lifelike scene
Auditory Hallucinations - one or more talking voices
Usually
associated with psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia or mania, but
can be caused by lesions in the brainstem, tumors, encephalitis or
abscesses
Tactile
hallucinations – sensation of tactile sensory input simulating various
sensations of pressure to the skin or other organs “feels bugs crawling
on them”
Usually always associated with exogenous substance abuse.
History
Description
Monocular vs binocular
Involved area of visual field
Motion – motion within the hallucination or movement of hallucination across field of vision
Triggers (dark room, anxiety, bright light)
Duration
Frequency
Insight?
Differential Diagnosis
Retinal pathology
Charles Bonnet hallucinations
Migraine with aura
Seizures – occipital, occipitotemporal, posterior temporal
Dementia with Lewy bodies, Parkinson disease
EtOH withdrawal
Peduncular hallucinosis
Narcolepsy
Psychiatric illness
Metabolic encephalopathy
Stroke
Others
Retinal Pathology
Etiologies
include traction, irritation, injury or disease of retina, posterior
vitreous detachment. Hallucinations are SIMPLE (streaks of light,
sparks, flashes), lasting seconds, variable frequency, insight
retained., invariably monocular except in cancer associated retinopathy
which it may be binocular.
Migraine
with aura – 90% auras in migraine are visual. Hallucinations are
SIMPLE, typically linear and geometric (zig zag lines, scintillating
scotoma, spots, shooting stars, fortification spectra), lasting 4-60
minutes, variable frequency, insight retained, binocular and usually
start in the central of the visual field with growth and spread of the
aura.
Always have associated symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, photophobia, phonophobia, and they always follow the aura.
There
is a special entity called acephalgic migraine in which there is a
visual area as described above and there is no associated headache.
Seizures
Depending on the focus of the seizure, the hallucinations can be SIMPLE or COMPLEX:
1) Occipital, occipitotemporal, occipitoparietal regions of cortex – SIMPLE hallucinations
a. Brightly colored circles or spherical patterns
b. Intrinsic motion of hallucination or move across the visual field is a hallmark!
2) Occipitotemporal or posterior temporal regions of cortex – COMPLEX hallucinations
Epileptic
visual phenomenon last for seconds, variable frequency, insight is
usually retained, binocular usually occurring in one hemifield.
There
are associated symptoms including déjà vu, jamais vu (temporal),
somatosensory (parietal), forced head and eye deviation (frontal), motor
activity (frontal and/or secondary generalization). There can be a
posticital headache afterwards, making the distinction between migraine
with aura and seizures difficult at times.
Dementia with Lewy bodies, Parkinson’s disease
Hallucinations
are complex, binocular, occur throughout the visual field. Some
examples are people, animals to abstract such as shapes and colors.
These episodes last seconds to minutes, frequency usually is at least
weekly. Insight may or may not be retained depending on the level of
dementia/cognitive impairment. These images may spark feelings from
indifference to fear (as in Phillip’s patient).
The
difference is visual hallucinations are an early hallmark for DLB
occurring in 2/3 of patients in the disease course. Parkinson’s disease
hallucinations develop later in the disease course and can be
exacerbated by dopamine agonists or carbidopa/levodopa.
Alcohol and drug use –
Alcohol
and BDZ withdrawal – complex hallucinations without insight with VIVID
imagery causing agitation, tremulousness and autonomic hyperactivity.
Medication
induced or recreational drug use – complex, bilateral and full field
with associated confusion and/or delirium. + tactile and auditory
hallucinations.
Digoxin
and sidenafil – there is RETINAL toxicity, simple hallucinations are
produced such as “TV static”, tint of yellow or green in the visual
field, dots of light, black spots. Long term supratherapeutic digoxin
levels known to cause permanent retinal injury. ?? long term effect with
sidenafil.
Non-psychotropic – digoxin, glucocorticoids, amantadine, H2 blockers, BB, sildenafil
Psychotropic – L-dopa, dopamine agonists, TCA, benztropine, BDZ, narcotics
Drugs of abuse – EtOH, LSD, PCP, cocaine, narcotics, ecstasy, amphetamine
Peduncular hallucinosis
Rare
manifestation of stroke/neoplasm affecting the midbrain in particular
the medial midbrain region affecting the reticular formation, red
nucleus, raphe nucleus and oculomotor nucleus. Pontine and thalamic
lesions have been described with this phenomenon.
Hallucinations
are complex, binocular, vivid and colorful imagery, +/- auditory and
tactile content, and insight is variably retained. Duration variable
from a few minutes to a few hours, frequency varies from 1-15 times a
day. Predilection to occur in the evening. Usually self limited,
resolving within a few weeks to months.
Invariably
associated with other cranial nerve and consciousness symptoms: sleep
wake cycle disturbances (daytime somnolence + night time insomnia),
vertical gaze palsies, hemiparesis, ataxia, poor papillary light
reaction, confusion.
Etiology has been postulated that the reticular activating system may be involved.
Narcolepsy
Hallucinations
are complex, vivid, colored images, occurring immediately BEFORE
falling asleep (hypnagogic) or just AFTER waking (hypnopompic). +/-
auditory or tactile sensations, duration and frequency are variable.
Insight is variably retained.
Associated symptoms include excessive daytime sleepiness, sleep paralysis and cataplexy.
Etiology
is REM sleep into wakefulness, however, medications that disrupt sleep
architecture (SSRI, anticholinergics) can do this as well.
Psychiatric illness
Hallucinations
are visual, complex, associated with auditory hallucinations and
usually occur in concert. Content is disturbing and antagonistic and
patients lack insight. Duration and frequency is highly variable.
Associated symptoms include mania, anxiety, disordered thoughts, and delusions.
Metabolic Encephalopathy
Visual
hallucinations occur in the context of waxing and waning confusion and
agitation. Tactile and auditory hallucinations and delusions may occur
too. The differential diagnosis of delirium is numerous: CNS infection,
systemic infection, hypoxia, medications, hepatic, renal
encephalopathy, hypothyroidism, electrolyte abnormality.
Stroke
Beware
of medial occipital + parahippocampal gyrus + hippocampus stroke, which
causes delirium with visual hallucinations AND hemianopsia.
Others
Papilledema
can cause photopsias or brief visual obscurations, lasting seconds,
monocular, secondary to the elevated ICP induced edema of retinal
ganglion cell axons, causing irritation of the retinal photoreceptor.
Optic neuritis can have visual hallucinations with eye movement in 30%.
Posterior
reversible leukoencephalopathy syndrome can produce visual
hallucinations with associated symptoms of visual field deficits, visual
distortions, headache, altered mental status, seizures.
Diagnostic Approach
Complete physical and neurological examination,
Ophthalmological examination (esp if monocular and acute)
Review of medication list
Urine toxicology screen
CBC, BMP, LFT, TSH
ABG
MRI brain without contrast
EEG
Psychiatric consultation (if psych associated symptoms are appreciated)
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