We performed a study in 92 diabetic patients (76 Type 1 and 16 Type 2) without retinopathy to determine the relation between diabetic dyschromatopsia and neuropathy, which has been evoked in previous studies. Color vision was explored with Lanthony's desaturated D 15 panel. Peripheral nervous function was explored with an electrophysiological score which has been beforehand validated. Moreover evoked visual potentials were performed in 38 diabetic subjects in order to determine whether dyschromatopsia was related to an impairment of central optic pathways. Fifty-one among the 92 diabetic subjects had a blue-yellow dyschromatopsia. Among the recorded parameters, only peripheral nervous impairment was significantly more frequent in the group with dyschromatopsia than in the group without. Ten among 38 diabetics had impairment of the evoked visual potentials. Frequency of alteration of evoked visual potentials was not different between the group with and the group without dyschromatopsia. Our results confirm the relationship between dyschromatopsia and the alteration of the nervous function in diabetic subjects. In return, lack of significant modification of evoked visual potentials among diabetic patients with dyschromatopsia and the blue-yellow axis of dyschromatopsia are in opposition with a direct neurological origin of dyschromatopsia. We therefore evoke a common process in the beginning of the diabetic dyschromatopsia and of peripheral neuropathy.
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Biomedicines
December 2024
Department of Health and Nursing Sciences, Faculty of Health and Sport Sciences, Széchenyi István University, Egyetem tér 1, 9026 Győr, Hungary.
Balance and proprioception are essential elements in postural control and injury prevention. Proprioception, the body's sense of position and movement, is closely tied to balance, which depends on input from the visual, vestibular, and somatosensory systems. This article explores the link between trauma experiences and proprioceptive dysfunction, emphasizing how heightened muscle tone, dissociation, and altered sensory processing contribute to balance issues and the risk of injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent work has claimed that most apparently cross-modal responses in sensory cortex are instead caused by the face movements evoked by stimuli of the non-dominant modality. We show that visual stimuli rarely trigger face movements in awake mice; when they occur, such movements do not explain visual responses in auditory cortex; and in simultaneous recordings, face movements drove artifactual cross-modal responses in visual but not auditory cortex. Thus face movements do not broadly explain cross-modal activity across all stimulus modalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
Department of Neurology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands.
Objective: Older adults have an increased risk of developing persistent cognitive complaints after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Yet, studies exploring which factors protect older adults with mTBI from developing such complaints are rare. It has been suggested that one such factor may be cognitive reserve (CR), but it is unknown how CR influences cognition in this patient category.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFiScience
November 2024
Shanghai Advanced Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 201210, China.
In the field of steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP), stimulus paradigms are regularly arranged or mimic the style of a keyboard with the same size. However, stimulation paradigms have important effects on the performance of SSVEP systems, which correlate with the electroencephalogram (EEG) signal amplitude and recognition accuracy. This paper provides MP dataset that was acquired using a 12-target BCI speller.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anesth
January 2025
Division of Anesthesiology, Niigata University Graduate School of Medical and Dental Science, 1-757 Asahimachi-dori, Chuo-ku, Niigata, 951-8510, Japan.
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