The oscillatory potentials are viewed by many as small oscillations of a highfrequency domain that ride on the b-wave of the electroretinogram. A study of electroretinograms and oscillatory potentials performed in 25 normal subjects was undertaken to substantiate my claim that oscillatory potentials
Relationships between the electroretinogram a-wave, b-wave and oscillatory potentials and their application to clinical diagnosis
โ Scribed by Husam Asi; Ido Perlman
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 791 KB
- Volume
- 79
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0012-4486
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โฆ Synopsis
The electroretinogram is the electrical response of the retina to a light stimulus. The amplitude and temporal pattern of its components, the a-wave, the b-wave and the oscillatory potentials, depend on the functional integrity of the retina, on the intensity of test flash reaching the retina and on the ambient illumination. The latter contributions to the normal variability in the electroretinogram can be circumvented by constructing the relationships between the different electroretinogram waves. The electroretinogram responses were recorded from 18 dark-adapted subjects with normal vision. The slope of the a-wave and the amplitude of the b-waves were measured in the time domain. The oscillatory potentials were isolated by a digital filter and were transformed to the frequency domain for quantitative measurement. The relationship between each pair of variables could be fitted by linear segments. Our findings suggest that this mode of electroretinogram analysis can be useful in localizing the site of action of retinal disorders and that the relationship between the a-wave slope and the power density of the oscillatory potentials is a useful index for identifying disorders of the inner retina.
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