Objective: The aims of our study were to evaluate whether deficits in color vision exist in epileptic adolescents, to study if monotherapy with valproic acid (VPA) and carbamazepine (CBZ) can affect color vision, and to determine the possible relationship between abnormal color vision tests and AEDs dosage and their serum concentrations.
Patients: We examined 45 epileptic patients before the beginning of therapy and after 1 year of VPA or CBZ monotherapy and 40 sex- and age-matched healthy controls.
Methods: Color vision was evaluated with Farnsworth Munsell 100 (FM100) hue test and achromatic and short-wavelength automated perimetry (SWAP).
Statistical Analysis: To evaluate intergroup differences we used ANOVA with Scheffe's post hoc test, when appropriate. Repeated measures ANOVA was used to evaluate the intragroup modifications of total error score (TES) and perimetric threshold during the follow-up. Pearson's correlation test was performed to correlate chromatic sense and perimetric data and AEDs dosage and serum concentrations.
Results: Before the beginning of therapy, there were no differences in central color vision and SWAP between controls and epileptic patients. After 1 year, patients treated with VPA or CBZ showed a deficit in FM100 hue test and SWAP parameters while no significant deficit was found in achromatic perimetry. In particular, with the FM100 hue test a higher number of errors was found in both groups of patients (CBZ patients: 166.00 +/- 27.72 TES; VPA patients: 151.19 +/- 44.09, P < 0.001) in comparison with controls (controls: 109.29 +/- 24.73) and baseline values (CBZ patients: 110.65 +/- 22.9; VPA patients 107.43 +/- 21.70). With SWAP patients of both groups showed significant variation of foveal threshold (controls: 21.07 +/- 2.01 dB; CBZ patients: 19.35 +/- 1.32, P < 0.001; VPA patients: 18.88 +/- 1.89, P < 0.001), full-field mean threshold perimetric sensitivity (controls: 18.50 +/- 1.24 dB; CBZ patients: 16.60 +/- 1.47, P < 0.001; VPA patients: 16.23 +/- 1.55, P < 0.001) and mean threshold perimetric sensitivity of the three evaluated subareas of the visual field (area 1 controls: 21.01 +/- 1.15; CBZ patients: 19.45 +/- 1.74, P = 0.001; VPA patients: 18.25 +/- 1.61, P < 0.001; area 2 controls: 18.40 +/- 1.43; CBZ patients: 16.07 +/- 1.58, P +/- 0.001; VPA patients: 16.13 +/- 1.46, P = 0.001; area 3 controls: 17.20 +/- 1.49; CBZ patients: 14.28 +/- 1.51, P < 0.001; VPA patients: 14.31 +/- 2.90, P = 0.001).
Conclusions: Our study demonstrates that treatment with VPA or CBZ can affect significantly both central and paracentral color vision after a short treatment period.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.seizure.2003.09.006 | DOI Listing |
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
January 2025
UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to analyze the retinal sensitivity under photopic, mesopic, and scotopic conditions in a cohort of patients affected with KCNV2-associated retinopathy.
Methods: Cross-sectional evaluation of molecularly confirmed individuals was conducted. Data were obtained prospectively.
Front Neurorobot
December 2024
Department of Fine Arts, Bozhou University, Bozhou, Anhui, China.
Introduction: Segmentation tasks in computer vision play a crucial role in various applications, ranging from object detection to medical imaging and cultural heritage preservation. Traditional approaches, including convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and standard transformer-based models, have achieved significant success; however, they often face challenges in capturing fine-grained details and maintaining efficiency across diverse datasets. These methods struggle with balancing precision and computational efficiency, especially when dealing with complex patterns and high-resolution images.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
December 2024
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN, United States.
Introduction: While the fact that visual stimuli synthesized by Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) may evoke emotional reactions is documented, the precise mechanisms that connect the strength and type of such reactions with the ways of how ANNs are used to synthesize visual stimuli are yet to be discovered. Understanding these mechanisms allows for designing methods that synthesize images attenuating or enhancing selected emotional states, which may provide unobtrusive and widely-applicable treatment of mental dysfunctions and disorders.
Methods: The Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), a type of ANN used in computer vision tasks which models the ways humans solve visual tasks, was applied to synthesize ("dream" or "hallucinate") images with no semantic content to maximize activations of neurons in precisely-selected layers in the CNN.
J Otol
October 2024
Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacký University Olomouc, Czech Republic.
Background: Over 55 million people worldwide are living with dementia. The rate of cognitive decline increases with age, and loss of senses may be a contributing factor.
Objectives: This study aimed to analyze hearing, olfactory function, and color vision in patients with dementia.
Naturwissenschaften
January 2025
Institute for Animal Cell and Systems Biology, University of Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King Platz 3, Hamburg, 20146, Germany.
Physiological or genetic assays and computational modeling are valuable tools for understanding animals' visual discrimination capabilities. Yet sometimes, the results generated by these methods appear not to jive with other aspects of an animal's appearance or natural history, and behavioral confirmatory tests are warranted. Here we examine the peculiar case of a male jumping spider that displays red, black, white, and UV color patches during courtship despite the fact that, according to microspectrophotometry and color vision modeling, they are unlikely able to discriminate red from black.
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