The development of white matter structural changes during the process of deterioration of the visual field.

Sci Rep

Department of Medical Neurobiology, The Institute for Medical Research Israel-Canada, Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 91220, Jerusalem, Israel.

Published: February 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists are studying how the brain changes when people lose their vision, particularly in patients with a condition called retinitis pigmentosa.
  • They looked at two groups: one with some central vision left and another that was completely blind, to see how losing different parts of vision affects the brain's white matter.
  • The results showed that as people lose their vision, the brain reorganizes itself, which might help them adapt to their new way of seeing and improve other senses.

Article Abstract

Emerging evidence suggests that white matter plasticity in the adult brain is preserved after sensory and behavioral modifications. However, little is known about the progression of structural changes during the process of decline in visual input. Here we studied two groups of patients suffering from advanced retinitis pigmentosa with specific deterioration of the visual field: patients who had lost their peripheral visual field, retaining only central ("tunnel") vision, and blind patients with complete visual field loss. Testing of these homogeneous groups made it possible to assess the extent to which the white matter is affected by loss of partial visual input and whether partially preserved visual input suffices to sustain stability in tracts beyond the primary visual system. Our results showed gradual changes in diffusivity that are indicative of degenerative processes in the primary visual pathway comprising the optic tract and the optic radiation. Interestingly, changes were also found in tracts of the ventral stream and the corticospinal fasciculus, depicting a gradual reorganisation of these tracts consequentially to the gradual loss of visual field coverage (from intact perception to partial vision to complete blindness). This reorganisation may point to microstructural plasticity underlying adaptive behavior and cross-modal integration after partial visual deprivation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6375971PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-38430-5DOI Listing

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