Changes in the ERG and VEP across the life span were investigated. The dark adapted and scotopic ERGs both showed a progressive increase in the implicit times of the A and B waves and a reduction in the amplitude of the AB configuration. There was also an increase in the implicit times of the oscill
The effects of age on steady-state pattern electroretinograms and visual evoked potentials
β Scribed by Hiroyuki Tomoda; Gastone G. Celesia; Mitchell G. Brigell; Sandra Toleikis
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 580 KB
- Volume
- 77
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0012-4486
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Steady-state pattern-reversal electroretinograms and visual evoked potentials were simultaneously recorded in two groups of young and elderly normal volunteers. The young group consisted of 23 subjects (13 women and 10 men) aged 18 to 28 years, and the elderly group consisted of 24 subjects (11 women and 13 men) aged 58 to 77 years. Stimuli were square-wave gratings ranging in spatial frequency from 0.5 to 6 c/deg and phase reversed at a frequency of 4 Hz. Pattern-reversal electroretinograms and visual evoked potentials consisted of a prominent second and a smaller fourth harmonic response. Spatial frequency-amplitude functions of the pattern-reversal electroretinogram second and fourth harmonics were similar for the young and elderly groups. The mean fourth harmonic phase was significantly shifted in elderly subjects compared with young subjects for all spatial frequencies tested. Spatial frequency tuning was observed for amplitude and phase functions of the visual evoked potential second and fourth harmonic responses for both age groups. Age had a significant effect on phase for spatial frequencies above 1.5 c/deg. Amplitude of the fourth harmonic was significantly lower for the elderly group at 1.5-4 c/deg. Phase was significantly different between groups for spatial frequencies below 3 c/deg. Our results suggest that aging influences both retinal and central visual pathways. Aging differentially affected the visual evoked potential second and fourth harmonic responses, suggesting different neuronal origins for these components.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
30 eye-healthy subjects were being examined, with their pupils reacting, mydriatic or miotic. Their pattern reversal visual evoked cortical potentials (PRVECP's) were recorded under steady-state conditions. Test conditions allowed establishing a statistically significant influence of pupil size on t
Pattern reversal visually evoked cortical potentials were recorded from 70 normal volunteers, aged from 4 to 70 years. Eleven reversal frequencies between 1 and 20 rev/sec were presented. The progressive reduction in the amplitude of the P100 component with age for lower frequency ranges was shown u
The spatial distribution of the pattern-evoked potentials on the face was studied with a simultaneous 16-channel recording system. The potentials had the first positive component at a peak latency of approximately 55 msec, which was much earlier than the latency of the response picked up from the sc