| Literature DB >> 34177665 |
Steven M Silverstein1,2,3,4, Adriann Lai1.
Abstract
Schizophrenia is characterized by visual distortions in ~60% of cases, and visual hallucinations (VH) in ~25-50% of cases, depending on the sample. These symptoms have received relatively little attention in the literature, perhaps due to the higher rate of auditory vs. visual hallucinations in psychotic disorders, which is the reverse of what is found in other neuropsychiatric conditions. Given the clinical significance of these perceptual disturbances, our aim is to help address this gap by updating and expanding upon prior reviews. Specifically, we: (1) present findings on the nature and frequency of VH and distortions in schizophrenia; (2) review proposed syndromes of VH in neuro-ophthalmology and neuropsychiatry, and discuss the extent to which these characterize VH in schizophrenia; (3) review potential cortical mechanisms of VH in schizophrenia; (4) review retinal changes that could contribute to VH in schizophrenia; (5) discuss relationships between findings from laboratory measures of visual processing and VH in schizophrenia; and (6) integrate findings across biological and psychological levels to propose an updated model of VH mechanisms, including how their content is determined, and how they may reflect vulnerabilities in the maintenance of a sense of self. In particular, we emphasize the potential role of alterations at multiple points in the visual pathway, including the retina, the roles of multiple neurotransmitters, and the role of a combination of disinhibited default mode network activity and enhanced state-related apical/contextual drive in determining the onset and content of VH. In short, our goal is to cast a fresh light on the under-studied symptoms of VH and visual distortions in schizophrenia for the purposes of informing future work on mechanisms and the development of targeted therapeutic interventions.Entities:
Keywords: mechanisms; psychosis; retina; schizophrenia; self; visual distortions; visual hallucinations
Year: 2021 PMID: 34177665 PMCID: PMC8226016 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.684720
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Examples of visual distortions experienced by people with schizophrenia.
| Blurred vision | Transiently reduced visual acuity |
| Transitory blindness | Temporary loss of most/all vision |
| Partial seeing | Parts of objects that should be visible are not visible |
| Hypersensitivity to light | Brightness and colors appear to be intensified |
| Photopsias | Light stimuli appear and disappear quickly |
| Porropsia | Distance between self and objects is altered |
| Micropsia | Objects seem smaller and/or space larger |
| Macropsia | Objects seem larger than usual |
| Metamorphopsia | Objects appear to change in shape and form |
| Prosometamorphopsia | Faces change and can look disfigured |
| Metachromopsia | The normal coloring of objects is altered |
| Dysmegalopsia | Different parts of objects change differently in size |
| Pseudomovement of objects | Stable objects and scenes appear to move |
| Changes in object orientation | Upright objects may appear tilted |
| Palinopsia | Repeated perception of objects that are no longer in the field of view |
For further detail on these phenomena in schizophrenia see Keane et al. (.
Definitions and examples of different levels of visual processing, emphasizing those that are clearly impaired in many people with schizophrenia.
| Low | Representation of information generated by the retina and primary visual cortex | Sensitivity to luminance changes (as measured by electroretinography) |
| Mid | Integration of information about visual features into higher order representations with emergent features | Figure-ground segregation Perceptual organization |
| High | Interpretation of what is seen | Disambiguation based on prior experience (e.g., Mooney faces test) |
Consistent published evidence of impairments in schizophrenia. Some visual processing paradigms on which people with schizophrenia have consistently shown impairments, but that do not fit neatly into the categories of low-, mid-, or high-level vision, or that operate at multiple levels, are not shown (e.g., backward masking deficits). See Silverstein (.
Figure 1Comparison of pyramidal cell component contributions during waking and dreaming consciousness. The image on the left demonstrates that during waking consciousness the primary determinants of perception are external inputs (continuous red arrow), which are processed as feedforward activity through the somatic integration zone (red dotted ovals) of layer 5 pyramidal neurons. This activity can be amplified or suppressed based on internal contextual input (including episodic memory traces, expectations, and emotional factors; horizontal blue dotted arrow), which is processed in layer 1 of the same neurons, via activation of apical dendritic tufts. The combined contextual activity is integrated within the apical integration zone (AIZ) of pyramidal neurons (blue dotted ovals), whose activation level affects the firing rate of the neuron (vertical blue dotted arrow), but does not lead the neuron to fire in the absence of external input. During dreaming, internal contextual input (continuous horizontal blue arrow) can activate an apical dendritic mechanism that enables it to drive the neuron's output (continuous vertical blue arrow), and that output is interpreted (by downstream circuits) as conveying information about the external world (external input) even though it does not. We propose that in the case of visual hallucinations a scenario midway between the two extremes of waking consciousness and dreaming is operative, wherein AIZ activity can exert both modulatory and driving influences, resulting in internally-generated visual representations, often involving significant contributions from trauma-based memories and related emotional and symbolic material, being experienced as having been externally generated. In the view proposed in this paper, complex hallucinations involving this mechanism differ in many respects from simple visual hallucinations and visual distortions in that the latter two phenomena primarily represent compensations within the visual system for missing, weakened, or degraded input, and with relatively fewer contributions from episodic memory and emotional factors. However, even simple VH can be related to as meaningful and can reflect psychological factors (15). The image in this figure, and portions of the figure caption, are reproduced from: Aru et al. (126). Apical drive-A cellular mechanism of dreaming? Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 119, 440–55, with permission from Elsevier via a CC BY license.
Figure 2Proposed relative contributions of biological factors, and their psychological consequences, involved in different types of altered visual phenomena in schizophrenia. Arrow at top depicts a continuum from visual distortions to simple visual hallucinations (VH) to complex VH, moving from left to right. Triangles below the top arrow depict hypothesized increasing and decreasing influences across the continuum. The green triangle, becoming larger moving from left to right, represents an increased influence of basal forebrain acetylcholine (Ach) reduction, striatal dopaminergic (DA) increases, default mode network (DMN) disinhibition, and apical drive in generating more complex hallucinatory phenomena in which episodic memory traces and associated emotional factors are thought to be involved. In contrast, the relative contributions of retinal and primary visual cortex changes are hypothesized to be greatest in cases of visual distortions and simple VH, where the anomalous percepts involve filling-in and release phenomena within visual cortex regions. Note that each of these factors involves additional factors (e.g., increased apical drive involves effects of multiple neurotransmitters).