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Altered visual sensitivity in axial high myopia: a local postreceptoral phenomenon?

Authors :
Jaworski A
Gentle A
Zele AJ
Vingrys AJ
McBrien NA
Source :
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science [Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci] 2006 Aug; Vol. 47 (8), pp. 3695-702.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Purpose: The present study investigated retinal integrity in high myopia using spatial psychophysical tasks.<br />Methods: Ten axial high myopes (-8.5 to -11.5 D) and 10 age-matched control subjects (+/-1.0 D) were recruited. All participants underwent clinical examination and ocular biometry and demonstrated no visible macular disease with visual acuities better than 6/12. Foveal summation thresholds were determined for white and S-cone-isolating spots of various diameters up to 5.4 degrees and spatial contrast sensitivity to luminance sine wave gratings (0.5-9.7 cyc/deg). Data were analyzed after correction for the magnification induced by eye size and correcting lens power.<br />Results: Spatial summation for both white and S-cone-isolating spots showed a generalized loss of sensitivity at all spot sizes in myopes relative to control subjects (P = 0.01). Critical areas at maximum summation were significantly larger in myopes, for S-cone isolating spots only, after image size correction (P = 0.048). Sensitivity at maximum summation correlated negatively with vitreous chamber depth for both targets (P = 0.005). Sensitivities for S-cone and luminance spots also correlated (P < 0.001), indicating widespread dysfunction. Myopes displayed contrast sensitivity losses at high spatial frequencies (P </= 0.006) with a normal peak contrast sensitivity.<br />Conclusions: These data can be interpreted to indicate that highly myopic eyes have either (1) a reduction in the number of receptors and/or a reduction in their sensitivity or, (2) a reduction in the sensitivity of postreceptoral processes. The presence of normal contrast sensitivity at low spatial frequencies indicates dysfunction at a postreceptoral level in high myopes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0146-0404
Volume :
47
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16877445
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1167/iovs.05-1569