Publications by authors named "Biersdorf W"

Visual evoked potentials from seven horizontally spaced electrodes were recorded from normal subjects and subjects with homonymous hemianopia in response to hemifield pattern flash stimulation. Stimulation produced a large early peak that was positive on the scalp contralateral to the hemifield and negative on the ipsilateral scalp. From computer fitting of the amplitudes versus electrode position, the position of the equivalent source was found to be in the contralateral hemisphere.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The historical development of the foveal electroretinogram is reviewed. The factors required to obtain a local cone electroretinogram with a small focal source of illumination against a lighted background are discussed. From these considerations and various studies of macular degeneration, the optimal size of the foveal source is found to be 5 degrees diameter or less.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Blue cone monochromatism.

J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus

November 1989

Blue cone monochromatism (BCM) is a subtype of achromatopsia in which the blue cone mechanism predominates. Each of the four patients in this study had BCM proven by their having peak spectral sensitivities in the blue region of the visible spectrum (near 440 nm). Clinically, the diagnosis was suspected because of x-linked inheritance, the presence of acuities better than 20/200 in two patients and myopia ranging from -1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Congenital nystagmus (CN) is a common disorder indicative of a primary disturbance of the ocular motor or visual sensory systems. The authors prospectively evaluated 81 patients with CN, structurally normal eyes, and minimal or no abnormalities of the optic nerve, macula, and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Seventy-four (91%) patients were found to have a disorder of the visual sensory system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Photopic, 30-Hz, and foveal electroretinograms were measured in 19 diabetic patients in an experimental study of the effects of short-term Sorbinil (an aldose-reductase inhibitor) on retinal function. Patients were assigned in double-blind fashion to Sorbinil (250 mg/day) or placebo groups and were tested at the outset and after four weeks of therapy. Comparisons (t-test) between the Sorbinil and placebo groups failed to show significant effects of treatment on electroretinograms, although there was a significant correlation within the Sorbinil group between foveal recordings and red cell sorbitol at the end of treatment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Visual evoked potentials were recorded monopolarly from seven electrodes on a horizontal line from T3 to T4 and bipolarly in one channel from left of the midline to right of the midline. Stimulation of the right and left half-fields was performed with a checkerboard generator of 10 degrees x 13.5 degrees and checks of various sizes at high contrast.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Davidson and Hemmendinger (DH) color rule was evaluated for color vision screening of normal and congenital color-defective subjects. Ninety-eight normal and 14 color-defective subjects were tested on the color rule under Macbeth illumination of 5,400 K. The color-defective subjects were also tested on the Nagel anomaloscope, the Farnsworth D-15, and the H-R-R pseudoisochromatic plates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF