Purpose: As part of a long-term, prospective study of prenatal and clinical risk factors for optic nerve hypoplasia (ONH) at Children's Hospital Los Angeles, pattern ERGs (PERGs) were evaluated for prognostic value using an automated objective and robust analytical method.
Methods: Participants were 33 children with ophthalmoscopically diagnosed ONH [disc diameter-to-disc macula ratio (DD/DM) less than 0.35 in one or both eyes on fundus photographs]. Using cycloplegia and chloral hydrate sedation in one session before 26 months of age, we recorded PERGs to checkerboard reversal using five check sizes. Participants were followed with clinical and psychometric testing until 5 years of age. PERGs were analysed using automated robust statistics based on magnitude-squared coherence and bootstrapping optimized to objectively quantify PERG recovery in the challenging recordings encountered in young patients. PERG measures in the fixating or better-seeing eyes were compared with visual outcome data.
Results: PERG recording was complete to at least three check sizes in all eyes and to all five sizes in 79%. Probability of recording a PERG that is significantly different from noise varied with check size from 73% for the largest checks to 30% for the smallest checks (p = 0.002); smaller waveforms were associated with earlier implicit times. The presence of significant PERGs in infancy is associated with better visual outcomes; the strongest association with visual outcome was for the threshold check size with a significant N95 component (ρ = 0.398, p = 0.02).
Conclusions: Automated statistically robust signal-processing techniques reliably and objectively detect PERGs in young children with ONH and show that congenital deficits of retinal ganglion cells are associated with diminished or non-detectable PERGs. The later negativity, N95, was the best indicator of visual prognosis and was most useful to identify those with good visual outcomes (≤0.4 LogMAR). Although PERGs reflect function of the inner layers of the central retina, they lack the specificity required to determine prognosis reliably in individual cases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10633-017-9603-0 | DOI Listing |
Doc Ophthalmol
October 2024
Clinical and Academic Department of Ophthalmology, Tony Kriss Visual Electrophysiology Unit, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, 40-41 Queens Square, London, UK.
Purpose: Our aim was to explore the effect of ambient lighting on the pattern ERG (PERG).
Methods: We compared PERGs recorded in two conditions; room lights on and room lights off. PERGs from 21 adult participants were recorded from each eye to high contrast checks of 50' side width, reversing 3rps in a large (30°) and then standard (15°) field.
Int Ophthalmol
February 2024
Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Beira Interior, Covilhã, Portugal.
Introduction: Amblyopia is generally a unilateral disorder, defined by at least a difference of two lines of visual acuity between both eyes with the best-corrected visual acuity, a decrease in contrast sensitivity, and a decrease in stereopsis. Pattern electroretinogram (PERG) is a noninvasive technique that provides a retinal biopotential and is a highly sensitive indicator of changes in the macular area. Our aim was to evaluate if there are differences in the retinal response of an amblyopic eye compared with a normal eye (NE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDoc Ophthalmol
October 2023
Department of Ophthalmology, University Medical Centre Ljubljana, Grabloviceva 46, 1000, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Aim: Dysfunction of the retinal ganglion cells (RGC) can be detected by the pattern electroretinogram (PERG) as a reduction of the N95 amplitude, a decrease of the ratio between N95 and P50 amplitude and/or a shortening of P50 peak time. Additionally, the slope from the top of the P50 towards the N95 (P50-N95 slope) is less steep than in control subjects. The aim of the study was to quantitatively evaluate this slope in large field PERGs in controls and patients with RGC dysfunction due to optic neuropathy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDoc Ophthalmol
April 2023
Clinical and Academic Department of Ophthalmology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, Great Ormond Street, London, WC1N 3AJ, England, UK.
Introduction: Visual electrophysiology tests require the use of precise and calibrated visual display units (VDUs). Existing VDUs for presenting structured stimuli are now mostly obsolete, with modern solutions limited or unsuitable for clinical testing. Digital light processing (DLP) laser projectors have recently become commercially available and this study aimed to assess their suitability as VDUs for visual electrophysiology testing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOphthalmic Genet
August 2023
Department of Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus and Adult Motilty, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Purpose: To describe a patient with retinoblastoma and subsequent maculopathy unrelated to the tumor but related to intra-arterial melphalan documented by pattern electroretinography.
Methods: Comprehensive ophthalmic evaluation, treatment with intra-arterial chemotherapy and subsequent follow-up including electroretinography to assess for macular dysfunction.
Results: A 3-year-old child was evaluated with electrophysiological investigations following treatment of unilateral Group D retinoblastoma with intra-arterial and intravitreal chemotherapy with melphalan.
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