Purpose: To determine the correlation between the aesthetics of lens tints preferred for cosmesis... more Purpose: To determine the correlation between the aesthetics of lens tints preferred for cosmesis and lens tints preferred for viewing. Methods: Thirty-five subjects (mean age: 25; 49% male, 51% female) with no significant ocular pathology participated in the study. Median visual acuity was 20/20. Color vision testing was performed on each subject using Ishihara plates, and those with abnormal scores were excluded from the study. Subjects were shown nine pre-selected tinted lenses (50% transmittance) of variable wavelengths. These lenses were mounted on two separate color backgrounds, one white and the other approximating their skin tone. Subjects were asked to choose from each background which tinted lens they would most prefer to wear and which lens they would least prefer to wear. The subjects were then shown a series of eight pictures (four nature photographs and four paintings) with different dominant wavelengths. Subjects were asked to grade the aesthetic effect of a clear lens and each of the nine tinted lenses on the appearance of the pictures. Chromaticity coordinates were calculated for each lens and picture. Results: The blue lens was the most frequently chosen preferred lens to wear, followed by green, purple, and gray. The least preferred lenses were yellow, brown, and pink. For viewing the nature photographs, the clear lens was preferred over any of the tinted lenses. For viewing the paintings, the purple lens was most preferred. The yellow lens was least preferred for both photographs and paintings. Conclusions: Younger individuals with no significant ocular pathology preferred viewing both nature photographs and paintings through tinted lenses that did not, or only slightly, altered the chromaticity of the image. Whereas a clear lens was favored over the tinted lenses for viewing the photographs, some tinted lenses (purple and pink) were preferred for viewing paintings. There was no correlation between the most favored lens tint chosen based purely on cosmesis and the most favored lens tint based on viewing preference. However, the least preferred lens tint for cosmesis and viewing was yellow.
Purpose: To compare the patterns of local cone and rod system impairment in patients with progres... more Purpose: To compare the patterns of local cone and rod system impairment in patients with progressive cone dystrophy (CD) using psychophysical and electrophysiological techniques. Methods: Local cone system function was assessed by measuring cone system thresholds (visual fields) and cone-mediated multifocal electroretinograms (mfERGs). Rod system function was assessed by measuring rod system thresholds (visual fields) and rod-mediated mfERGs. The results in a group of eight patients with CD were compared with those in an age-similar control group. Results: All the patients had abnormal cone system visual field thresholds and cone-mediated mfERGs. Cone system psychophysical thresholds were elevated for targets presented within the central 10 degrees, but were within normal limits for targets at peripheral locations. Cone-mediated mfERG measures of amplitude scale and time scale were abnormal for most of the hexagons tested. Most of the rod-mediated psychophysical thresholds and mfERGs were within normal limits. Rod system losses tended to be patchy and scattered throughout the area tested. Conclusions: There was poor correspondence among local measures of cone and rod system losses in these patients with CD. The results suggest that the spatial pattern of cone system losses in this disease differs from the spatial pattern of rod system losses.
To determine whether retinal dysfunction in obligate carriers of the Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) ... more To determine whether retinal dysfunction in obligate carriers of the Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) could be observed in local electroretinographic responses obtained with the multifocal electroretinogram (mfERG). Six obligate carriers of the BBS were examined for the study. Examination of each carrier included an ocular examination and mfERG testing of one eye. For the mfERG, we used a 103-scaled hexagonal stimulus array that subtended a retinal area of approximately 40 degrees in diameter. The amplitudes and implicit times in each location for the mfERG were compared with the corresponding values determined for a group of 34 normally sighted, age-similar control subjects. Mapping of 103 local electroretinographic response amplitudes within a central 40 degrees area with the mfERG showed regions of reduced mfERG amplitudes in three of six carriers. Implicit time measurements in the 6 carriers were all normal except for those locations associated with abnormal amplitude reductions in 3 of the carriers. When present, retinal dysfunction was evident in the presence of a normal-appearing fundus. Multifocal ERG testing can demonstrate areas of retinal dysfunction in carriers of the BBS. This test may therefore be useful for identifying some heterozygous carriers of this disease.
Temporal sensitivity was assessed in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and ocular ... more Temporal sensitivity was assessed in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and ocular hypertension (OHT). Three measures of flicker sensitivity were obtained: psychophysical modulation thresholds, visual-evoked potentials (VEPs), and focal electroretinograms (FERGs). We found elevated psychophysical thresholds at higher temporal frequencies (30-50 Hz) in patients with POAG, relative to thresholds for age-matched controls. The OHT patients had elevated psychophysical thresholds only at 50 Hz. On the other hand, VEP amplitudes in POAG patients were reduced at all temporal frequencies, with the magnitude of the loss increasing with temporal frequency. The OHT patients, however, showed no reductions in VEP amplitude at any temporal frequency. Finally, POAG patients' FERG amplitudes were reduced at 30-50 Hz; whereas FERG amplitudes in the OHT patients were normal at all temporal frequencies. These results indicate that OHT patients can exhibit psychophysical threshold losses at high temporal frequencies which are not observed in the suprathreshold electrophysiological amplitude measures. On the other hand, patients with POAG show both psychophysical and VEP losses across a range of temporal frequencies. In addition, the decreases in FERG amplitudes in POAG patients suggest changes in the functioning of the outer retina in this disease.
Many patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) show cone ERG b-waves that are depressed in amplitud... more Many patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) show cone ERG b-waves that are depressed in amplitude and delayed in timing even during the early stages of RPe.g.1-3. Further, patients' photopic, visual fields measured with static perimetry show a range of losses in sensitivity both within and across patients4-7. Because of the difficulty in obtaining focal ERGs with conventional methods, little is known about the relationship of local sensitivity to local retinal activity outside the central retina. The multi-focal technique as described by Sutter and colleagues8,9 allows for simultaneous measurement of 103 focal retinal responses. Although a general agreement has been observed between visual field losses and multi-focal ERGs in patients with RP10-12, the relationship between local sensitivity changes and multi--focal ERG changes has yet to be explored. Here patients' multi-focal ERGs are compared to local visual field sensitivity measured with static perimetry.
A patient with congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) (Schubert-Bornschein type) transmitte... more A patient with congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) (Schubert-Bornschein type) transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait was studied with several tests of electrical function as well as a variety of psychophysical procedures. Comparison of the patient's present findings with those obtained 23 years earlier showed that while rod thresholds have remained the same, cone sensitivity has decreased. Subjective flicker thresholds obtained following a bleach were unchanged during the course of dark adaptation. The absence of rod-cone interaction, together with an absent scotopic b-wave, implies that the defect is in the mid-retinal layers. Further, the absence of oscillatory potentials in the photopic electroretinogram (ERG) suggests that the interplexiform cell may be implicated in some manner. The focal ERG of the CSNB patient showed normal amplitude and normal phase delays, supporting the idea that the focal ERG samples primarily cone photoreceptor activity.
Many aspects of visual function have been shown to decrease in the peripheral retina. Letter acui... more Many aspects of visual function have been shown to decrease in the peripheral retina. Letter acuity, grating acuity and contrast sensitivity all decrease as a function of retinal eccentricity (Westheimer, 1982). However, increased temporal sensitivity of the peripheral retina has been reported. For example, critical flicker frequency (CFF) and the peak of the modulation transfer functions increase with eccentricity (Hartman, Lachenmayer and Brettel, 1979; Virsu and Rovamo, 1979; Rovamo and Raninen, 1984; Tyler, 1985). We have previously documented, using electrophysiological and psychophysical techniques, that the locus of the increased temporal sensitivity of the peripheral retina begins at the level of the outer retina in humans (Seiple and Holopigian, 1996). In the current study, we examined whether the increased temporal detection sensitivity of the peripheral retina to uniformly illuminated targets was correlated with temporal aspects of letter identification. We also included a task which ensured central fixation in these experiments.
We measured contrast processing as a function of spatial and temporal frequency using three measu... more We measured contrast processing as a function of spatial and temporal frequency using three measurement techniques: psychophysical thresholds, visual evoked potential (VEP) thresholds and VEP amplitudes. Measurements were made using the same stimulus parameters and on the same group of subjects. The agreement among these functions depended upon the particular spatio-temporal stimulus employed and in general, there were more differences than similarities among these measures. For example, VEP derived functions (both amplitude and threshold) peaked at 4 c/deg, whereas, the psychophysical functions peaked at 1 c/deg. VEP amplitude functions were maximum at > or = 3.5 Hz, whereas both psychophysical and VEP sensitivity were maximum at < or = 2.5 Hz. VEP thresholds were broad and low pass in shape and in contrast, the psychophysical and VEP amplitude functions were band pass. In summary, comparisons among these measures of contrast processing must be made with caution.
The authors examined electrophysiologic and psychophysical measures of retinal function in patien... more The authors examined electrophysiologic and psychophysical measures of retinal function in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) at different stages of infection, including patients with cytomegalovirus retinitis (CMVR). All patients had complete ophthalmologic examinations. Rod-mediated psychophysical thresholds were measured using a modified two-color dark-adapted perimetry technique. Rod-dominated full field flash electroretinograms (ERGs) were obtained as a function of flash intensity, followed by cone-dominated ERGs. The 26 patients infected with HIV (26 eyes) were categorized into three groups. Six patients were infected with HIV but had not progressed to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and 14 had AIDS. Six patients had CMVR with less than 10% of the retina involved. The data were compared with results from age-similar control subjects. Psychophysical thresholds as a function of retinal eccentricity were elevated for each of the three stages of HIV infection. The group of patients with CMVR had the greatest amount of threshold elevation and threshold elevation increased with retinal eccentricity. In addition, all three patient groups had abnormal electroretinographic findings. Patients with CMVR were affected more severely on all measures than were the other HIV-infected groups. Results reveal that a diffuse functional retinal pathology exists in eyes with the funduscopic appearance of localized peripheral CMVR. Additionally, patients infected with HIV, including those without cotton wool spots, may have abnormal retinal function.
Purpose: To determine the correlation between the aesthetics of lens tints preferred for cosmesis... more Purpose: To determine the correlation between the aesthetics of lens tints preferred for cosmesis and lens tints preferred for viewing. Methods: Thirty-five subjects (mean age: 25; 49% male, 51% female) with no significant ocular pathology participated in the study. Median visual acuity was 20/20. Color vision testing was performed on each subject using Ishihara plates, and those with abnormal scores were excluded from the study. Subjects were shown nine pre-selected tinted lenses (50% transmittance) of variable wavelengths. These lenses were mounted on two separate color backgrounds, one white and the other approximating their skin tone. Subjects were asked to choose from each background which tinted lens they would most prefer to wear and which lens they would least prefer to wear. The subjects were then shown a series of eight pictures (four nature photographs and four paintings) with different dominant wavelengths. Subjects were asked to grade the aesthetic effect of a clear lens and each of the nine tinted lenses on the appearance of the pictures. Chromaticity coordinates were calculated for each lens and picture. Results: The blue lens was the most frequently chosen preferred lens to wear, followed by green, purple, and gray. The least preferred lenses were yellow, brown, and pink. For viewing the nature photographs, the clear lens was preferred over any of the tinted lenses. For viewing the paintings, the purple lens was most preferred. The yellow lens was least preferred for both photographs and paintings. Conclusions: Younger individuals with no significant ocular pathology preferred viewing both nature photographs and paintings through tinted lenses that did not, or only slightly, altered the chromaticity of the image. Whereas a clear lens was favored over the tinted lenses for viewing the photographs, some tinted lenses (purple and pink) were preferred for viewing paintings. There was no correlation between the most favored lens tint chosen based purely on cosmesis and the most favored lens tint based on viewing preference. However, the least preferred lens tint for cosmesis and viewing was yellow.
Purpose: To compare the patterns of local cone and rod system impairment in patients with progres... more Purpose: To compare the patterns of local cone and rod system impairment in patients with progressive cone dystrophy (CD) using psychophysical and electrophysiological techniques. Methods: Local cone system function was assessed by measuring cone system thresholds (visual fields) and cone-mediated multifocal electroretinograms (mfERGs). Rod system function was assessed by measuring rod system thresholds (visual fields) and rod-mediated mfERGs. The results in a group of eight patients with CD were compared with those in an age-similar control group. Results: All the patients had abnormal cone system visual field thresholds and cone-mediated mfERGs. Cone system psychophysical thresholds were elevated for targets presented within the central 10 degrees, but were within normal limits for targets at peripheral locations. Cone-mediated mfERG measures of amplitude scale and time scale were abnormal for most of the hexagons tested. Most of the rod-mediated psychophysical thresholds and mfERGs were within normal limits. Rod system losses tended to be patchy and scattered throughout the area tested. Conclusions: There was poor correspondence among local measures of cone and rod system losses in these patients with CD. The results suggest that the spatial pattern of cone system losses in this disease differs from the spatial pattern of rod system losses.
To determine whether retinal dysfunction in obligate carriers of the Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) ... more To determine whether retinal dysfunction in obligate carriers of the Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) could be observed in local electroretinographic responses obtained with the multifocal electroretinogram (mfERG). Six obligate carriers of the BBS were examined for the study. Examination of each carrier included an ocular examination and mfERG testing of one eye. For the mfERG, we used a 103-scaled hexagonal stimulus array that subtended a retinal area of approximately 40 degrees in diameter. The amplitudes and implicit times in each location for the mfERG were compared with the corresponding values determined for a group of 34 normally sighted, age-similar control subjects. Mapping of 103 local electroretinographic response amplitudes within a central 40 degrees area with the mfERG showed regions of reduced mfERG amplitudes in three of six carriers. Implicit time measurements in the 6 carriers were all normal except for those locations associated with abnormal amplitude reductions in 3 of the carriers. When present, retinal dysfunction was evident in the presence of a normal-appearing fundus. Multifocal ERG testing can demonstrate areas of retinal dysfunction in carriers of the BBS. This test may therefore be useful for identifying some heterozygous carriers of this disease.
Temporal sensitivity was assessed in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and ocular ... more Temporal sensitivity was assessed in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG) and ocular hypertension (OHT). Three measures of flicker sensitivity were obtained: psychophysical modulation thresholds, visual-evoked potentials (VEPs), and focal electroretinograms (FERGs). We found elevated psychophysical thresholds at higher temporal frequencies (30-50 Hz) in patients with POAG, relative to thresholds for age-matched controls. The OHT patients had elevated psychophysical thresholds only at 50 Hz. On the other hand, VEP amplitudes in POAG patients were reduced at all temporal frequencies, with the magnitude of the loss increasing with temporal frequency. The OHT patients, however, showed no reductions in VEP amplitude at any temporal frequency. Finally, POAG patients' FERG amplitudes were reduced at 30-50 Hz; whereas FERG amplitudes in the OHT patients were normal at all temporal frequencies. These results indicate that OHT patients can exhibit psychophysical threshold losses at high temporal frequencies which are not observed in the suprathreshold electrophysiological amplitude measures. On the other hand, patients with POAG show both psychophysical and VEP losses across a range of temporal frequencies. In addition, the decreases in FERG amplitudes in POAG patients suggest changes in the functioning of the outer retina in this disease.
Many patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) show cone ERG b-waves that are depressed in amplitud... more Many patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) show cone ERG b-waves that are depressed in amplitude and delayed in timing even during the early stages of RPe.g.1-3. Further, patients' photopic, visual fields measured with static perimetry show a range of losses in sensitivity both within and across patients4-7. Because of the difficulty in obtaining focal ERGs with conventional methods, little is known about the relationship of local sensitivity to local retinal activity outside the central retina. The multi-focal technique as described by Sutter and colleagues8,9 allows for simultaneous measurement of 103 focal retinal responses. Although a general agreement has been observed between visual field losses and multi-focal ERGs in patients with RP10-12, the relationship between local sensitivity changes and multi--focal ERG changes has yet to be explored. Here patients' multi-focal ERGs are compared to local visual field sensitivity measured with static perimetry.
A patient with congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) (Schubert-Bornschein type) transmitte... more A patient with congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) (Schubert-Bornschein type) transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait was studied with several tests of electrical function as well as a variety of psychophysical procedures. Comparison of the patient's present findings with those obtained 23 years earlier showed that while rod thresholds have remained the same, cone sensitivity has decreased. Subjective flicker thresholds obtained following a bleach were unchanged during the course of dark adaptation. The absence of rod-cone interaction, together with an absent scotopic b-wave, implies that the defect is in the mid-retinal layers. Further, the absence of oscillatory potentials in the photopic electroretinogram (ERG) suggests that the interplexiform cell may be implicated in some manner. The focal ERG of the CSNB patient showed normal amplitude and normal phase delays, supporting the idea that the focal ERG samples primarily cone photoreceptor activity.
Many aspects of visual function have been shown to decrease in the peripheral retina. Letter acui... more Many aspects of visual function have been shown to decrease in the peripheral retina. Letter acuity, grating acuity and contrast sensitivity all decrease as a function of retinal eccentricity (Westheimer, 1982). However, increased temporal sensitivity of the peripheral retina has been reported. For example, critical flicker frequency (CFF) and the peak of the modulation transfer functions increase with eccentricity (Hartman, Lachenmayer and Brettel, 1979; Virsu and Rovamo, 1979; Rovamo and Raninen, 1984; Tyler, 1985). We have previously documented, using electrophysiological and psychophysical techniques, that the locus of the increased temporal sensitivity of the peripheral retina begins at the level of the outer retina in humans (Seiple and Holopigian, 1996). In the current study, we examined whether the increased temporal detection sensitivity of the peripheral retina to uniformly illuminated targets was correlated with temporal aspects of letter identification. We also included a task which ensured central fixation in these experiments.
We measured contrast processing as a function of spatial and temporal frequency using three measu... more We measured contrast processing as a function of spatial and temporal frequency using three measurement techniques: psychophysical thresholds, visual evoked potential (VEP) thresholds and VEP amplitudes. Measurements were made using the same stimulus parameters and on the same group of subjects. The agreement among these functions depended upon the particular spatio-temporal stimulus employed and in general, there were more differences than similarities among these measures. For example, VEP derived functions (both amplitude and threshold) peaked at 4 c/deg, whereas, the psychophysical functions peaked at 1 c/deg. VEP amplitude functions were maximum at > or = 3.5 Hz, whereas both psychophysical and VEP sensitivity were maximum at < or = 2.5 Hz. VEP thresholds were broad and low pass in shape and in contrast, the psychophysical and VEP amplitude functions were band pass. In summary, comparisons among these measures of contrast processing must be made with caution.
The authors examined electrophysiologic and psychophysical measures of retinal function in patien... more The authors examined electrophysiologic and psychophysical measures of retinal function in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) at different stages of infection, including patients with cytomegalovirus retinitis (CMVR). All patients had complete ophthalmologic examinations. Rod-mediated psychophysical thresholds were measured using a modified two-color dark-adapted perimetry technique. Rod-dominated full field flash electroretinograms (ERGs) were obtained as a function of flash intensity, followed by cone-dominated ERGs. The 26 patients infected with HIV (26 eyes) were categorized into three groups. Six patients were infected with HIV but had not progressed to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and 14 had AIDS. Six patients had CMVR with less than 10% of the retina involved. The data were compared with results from age-similar control subjects. Psychophysical thresholds as a function of retinal eccentricity were elevated for each of the three stages of HIV infection. The group of patients with CMVR had the greatest amount of threshold elevation and threshold elevation increased with retinal eccentricity. In addition, all three patient groups had abnormal electroretinographic findings. Patients with CMVR were affected more severely on all measures than were the other HIV-infected groups. Results reveal that a diffuse functional retinal pathology exists in eyes with the funduscopic appearance of localized peripheral CMVR. Additionally, patients infected with HIV, including those without cotton wool spots, may have abnormal retinal function.
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