Cognitive impairment and Charles Bonnet syndrome: a prospective study.
Gregor RussellRobert HarperHarry AllenRobert BaldwinAlistair BurnsPublished in: International journal of geriatric psychiatry (2017)
Reassurance that CBS is universally benign may be misplaced. Some people given this diagnosis go on to develop dementia. Cognitive testing at the point of diagnosis was unable to identify those at risk of this outcome. Partial insight, the presence of Mild Cognitive Impairment, and hallucinations of familiar figures at diagnosis of CBS may confer an increased risk of subsequent dementia diagnosis. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.