Abstract
ObjectiveTo describe and discuss potential mechanisms for modulation of visual hallucinations by nystagmus.MethodsWe present 2 patients with coexistent Charles Bonnet syndrome and periodic alternating nystagmus in the context of acquired visual loss.ResultsThe combination has given rise to a rare phenomenon: visual hallucinations that move in a manner governed by the nystagmus, specifically by the direction and velocity of the slow phase. The perceived modulation of movement is selective for a surface in one case and a landscape in the other but not present for hallucinated individual objects and people separate from the hallucinated background visual scene.ConclusionsThe collision of Charles Bonnet syndrome and periodic alternating nystagmus in these 2 patients has demonstrated that some visual hallucinations can be modulated by, or collaterally with, ocular movements. We propose 2 potential mechanisms based on ocular proprioceptive input from extraocular muscles projecting to either extrastriate processing of visual scene, or to higher-order visual cortical areas involved in analysis of motion signals across the whole visual field.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
4 articles.
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