Imaginary friend – or CBS hallucination?

25 November 2020
Acuity digital

Charles Bonnet syndrome is typically associated with elderly patients but new research shows children are not immune either. Helen Gilbert investigates.

Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS), a complication of sight loss, is characterised by the vivid, silent hallucinations that occur when the brain overcompensates for the lack of information it receives from the retina by creating its own pictures.

According to the Macular Society (2020), almost 1.5 million people in the UK are affected by macular disease, half of whom experience CBS hallucinations.

These visions are not a sign of mental illness but a natural, if sometimes debilitating, experience. They can manifest in several ways, from flashes of light, colour or shapes to geometrical grids and lattice patterns. For some, the images are more terrifying and take the form of distorted faces, crawling spiders or slithering snakes.

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The College of Optometrists has today launched a public consultation on the next edition of its Guidance for Professional Practice which will be open for the next six weeks until Monday 3 August 2026.

The Health Bill is part of the government's modernisation agenda to improve patient care in England.

Patients will be paid £20 per session and all travel expenses will be reimbursed.