It is not known why patients with Anton syndrome deny their blindness, although there are many theories. One hypothesis is that damage to the
visual cortex results in the inability to communicate with the speech-language areas of the brain. Visual imagery is received but cannot be interpreted; the speech centers of the brain
confabulate a response. Another possibility is that in Anton syndrome, lesions cause a disconnection between internal visual representations in visual association cortex, metacognitive processing in the
cingulate cortex and memory-associated structures including the
hippocampus.
Anosognosia occurs because visual inputs cannot be meta-cognitively compared to priors stored in memory to recognize a deficit. Patients have also reported visual anosognosia after experiencing ischemic vascular cerebral disease. A 96-year-old man, who was admitted to an
emergency department complaining of a severe headache and sudden loss of vision, was discovered to have had a posterior cerebral artery thrombosis with consequent loss of vision. He adamantly claimed he was able to see despite an ophthalmologic exam proving otherwise. An MRI of his brain proved that his right occipital lobe was
ischemic. Similarly, a 56-year-old woman was admitted to the emergency department in a confused state and with severely impaired psychomotor skills. Ocular movements and pupil reflexes were still intact, but the patient could not name objects and was not aware of light changes in the room, and seemed unaware of her visual deficit. == Diagnosis ==