| Literature DB >> 31143156 |
Tirza Naarden1, Bastiaan C Ter Meulen1,2, Sarah I van der Weele1, Jan Dirk Blom3,4,5.
Abstract
Background: Alice in Wonderland syndrome (AIWS) is a rare neurological disorder characterized by distortions of visual perception (metamorphopsias), the body image, and the experience of time, along with derealization and depersonalization. Some 85% of patients present with perceptual distortions in a single sensory modality, e.g., only visual or only somesthetic in nature. Moreover, the majority experience only a single type of distortion, e.g., only micropsia or only macropsia. AIWS has many different etiologies, and hence an extensive differential diagnosis. Its amenability to treatment depends on the underlying pathological process, which in children is mostly encephalitis, and in adults, migraine. In the literature, no more than 180 "clinical" cases of AIWS have been described (i.e., cases in need of medical attention). Of them, some 50% showed a favorable prognosis. However, non-clinical cases (i.e., fleeting, transient cases of AIWS for which no professional help is needed) have been described in up to 30% of the general population. This indicates that AIWS is perhaps not as rare as traditionally assumed, and has led some authors to conclude that, prognostically, AIWS is usually harmless.Entities:
Keywords: Heidenhain variant; etiology; metamorphopsia; neurodegeneration; prion disease; prognosis; time distortion; visual perception
Year: 2019 PMID: 31143156 PMCID: PMC6521793 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1High signal intensity of the left parieto-occipital cortex on diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI; b = 1,000).
Figure 2EEG showing periodic sharp-wave complexes over the left parieto-occipital region, suggestive of CJD.
Definitions of hallucination, illusion, and distortion [after (20)].
| Hallucination | A percept, experienced by a waking individual, in the absence of an appropriate stimulus from the outside world (e.g., seeing a cat that is not there, hearing a voice in the absence of sound waves) |
| Illusion | A percept, experienced by a waking individual, which is based on an appropriate stimulus from the outside world, and which is either misperceived or misinterpreted (e.g., taking a moving curtain for an intruder, hearing music in the monotonous drone of a computer fan) |
| Distortion | A percept, experienced by a waking individual, which is based on an appropriate stimulus from the outside world, of which, however, a highly specific aspect is altered in a consistent manner (e.g., seeing all straight lines as wavy, feeling one's head grow to an unnaturally large size) |