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Binocular contrast summation and inhibition in amblyopia

✍ Scribed by Shahina Pardhan; Jim Gilchrist


Book ID
104649301
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Year
1992
Tongue
English
Weight
383 KB
Volume
82
Category
Article
ISSN
0012-4486

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✦ Synopsis


The monocular contrast sensitivity loss in amblyopia is well documented. We investigated the influence of interocular sensitivity difference on binocular contrast sensitivity in amblyopia. Monocular and binocular contrast sensitivity functions of six amblyopes (three strabismic and three anisometropic) were measured. The monocular contrast sensitivity loss depended on the type of amblyope. Anisometropic amblyopes generally showed high frequency losses. Strabismic amblyopes showed losses at both low and high spatial frequencies. Binocular performance was assessed in terms of binocular ratios (binocular/non-amblyopic). A binocular ratio greater than 1 indicates binocular summation (binocular > monocular) while a ratio less than 1 shows binocular inhibition (binocular < monocular). In all subjects, the binocular ratio depended on the difference between the amblyopic and the non-amblyopic eye. Minimal interocular difference produced binocular summation, the magnitude of which decreased as the difference between the two eyes increased. Further increases in the monocular difference produced binocular inhibition. Anisometropic amblyopes showed a greater degree of binocular summation at low spatial frequencies compared to strabismic amblyopes. Both types of amblyopes showed binocular inhibition at high spatial frequencies. Clinical implications of binocular summation and inhibition in amblyopia are discussed.


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## Abstract We measured binocular summation for the detection of red–green chromatic, blue–yellow chromatic, and luminance contrast. The results indicated a higher degree of binocular summation for luminance contrast (reaching the level of neural summation) than for chromaticity contrast (probabili