Electrophysiologically determined contrast sensitivity in patients with ocular hypertension and chronic glaucoma
β Scribed by John William Howe; Keith William Mitchell
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 525 KB
- Volume
- 80
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0012-4486
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Subjectively assessed contrast sensitivity has been found to be abnormal in many patients with glaucoma. We previously reported the use of onset-offset visual evoked potential measurements to determine contrast threshold objectively. We now studied 216 patients (79 with ocular hypertension and 137 with chronic simple glaucoma) with this technique. In comparison with an age-matched control group (68 subjects), mean contrast threshold was found to be significantly different in both patient groups, the degree of significance being greater in the patients with chronic simple glaucoma. Additionally, the slope of the CI-CII amplitude versus log contrast plot was shown to be depressed in the majority of affected eyes in patients with unilateral chronic simple glaucoma. This measure appears to give an indication of suprathreshold contrast processing and is related to the difference in luminance between pattern elements, rather than the quality of the border or "edge" between them. The data support not only an increase in contrast threshold (reduced sensitivity) in early glaucoma and some patients with ocular hypertension but also a suppression in suprathreshold function that is not readily measurable with standard psychophysical methods. The findings are consistent with recent theories concerning the effect of early chronic simple glaucoma on the function of Y-type units of the M (magnocellular)-type pathways.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Contrast sensitivity and pattern visual evoked potential (VEP) were measured in cases of ocular hypertension and primary open-angle glaucoma at various stages. The visual field of each eye was examined quantitatively and the retinal nerve fiber layer and optic disc were precisely assessed with magni
We evaluated 19 ocular hypertensive and 32 chronic open-angle glaucoma patients to determine the correlation of pattern discrimination field loss to known markers of glaucomatous damage on the visual field and the optic nerve head. This study found no statistical association of the findings on the p
biochemical and histological improvement. 3,4 Several factors Hepatitis C virus (HCV) genotype 1b and high precan predict a poor response to interferon therapy, e.g., high treatment virus load are predictive factors of poor repretreatment virus load, genotype 1b, advanced histological sponse to inte