Posterior cortical atrophy is a striking clinical syndrome in which a dementing illness begins with visual symptoms. Initially,
the problem may seem to be loss of elementary vision, but over time the patient develops features of visual agnosia, topographical
difficulty, optic ataxia, simultanagnosia, ocular apraxia (Balint’s syndrome), alexia, acalculia, right-left confusion, and
agraphia (Gerstmann’s syndrome), and later a more generalized dementia. Occasional patients have visual hallucinations and
signs of Parkinson’s disease or Lewy body dementia. A number of different neuropathologic disorders are associated with posterior
cortical atrophy.