RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Anton's syndrome accompanying withdrawal hallucinosis in a blind alcoholic JF Neurology JO Neurology FD Lippincott Williams & Wilkins SP 969 OP 969 DO 10.1212/WNL.34.7.969 VO 34 IS 7 A1 Swartz, Barbara E. A1 Brust, John C.M. YR 1984 UL http://n.neurology.org/content/34/7/969.abstract AB During alcohol withdrawal, a man totally blind following ocular trauma experienced formed visual hallucinations (“alcoholic hallucinosis”), the unreality of which he recognized. During these same periods, however, he believed that his vision had been restored, and confabulated descriptions of his surroundings (Anton's syndrome). He was otherwise mentally normal. Anosognosia for blindness can occur episodically or chronically, and with either peripheral or central visual loss; dementia nearly always coexists. The basis of the syndrome is obscure, and its occurrence during alcohol withdrawal, in association with readily acknowledged visual hallucinations and otherwise preserved mentation, has not been previously reported.