Lateral spread of adaptation as measured with the multifocal electroretinogram

2001 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 687-694
Author(s):  
WILLIAM SEIPLE ◽  
THASARAT S. VAJARANANT ◽  
DAVID R. PEPPERBERG ◽  
JANET P. SZLYK

We examined whether lateral spread of adaptation can be observed in the electroretinogram in humans. Specifically, we tested whether the luminance level of a surrounding, nonmodulated annulus affects the multifocal electroretinogram (ERG) response of a modulated central area. Multifocal electroretinograms were recorded in response to an array of 37 unscaled hexagons subtending a retinal area of 38 deg × 35 deg. Responses were recorded in six control subjects. In the first series of experiments, only the center hexagon was modulated, while the surrounding 36 hexagons were held constant at either 0.45, 172, or 340 cd/m2. In a subsequent series of control experiments, modulation depth of the center hexagon was varied and the proximity of the surrounding hexagon systematically altered. For the center-modulated condition, response amplitude and implicit time for the first-order kernel response significantly decreased as a function of increasing surround luminance. Control experiments demonstrated that the effect of the surround illumination was not due to scattered light but was influenced by the proximity of the surrounding annulus. These results demonstrate that lateral adaptation influences can be measured using the multifocal ERG.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroki Tanaka ◽  
Kyoko Ishida ◽  
Kenji Ozawa ◽  
Akira Sawada ◽  
Kiyofumi Mochizuki ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: The association between the structure of the macular region and its function as measured by multifocal electroretinography (mfERG) and the mean thresholds (MT) of the visual field (VF) is not well-understood. Methods: The macular retinal nerve fiber layer (mRNFL) and the ganglion cell and inner plexiform layer (GCIPL) in six regions were measured by optical coherence tomography (OCT). For functional assessment, MT and mfERG scans with parameters of the second-order kernel responses within the central 5°, nasal to temporal amplitudes ratio (N/T), and the multifocal photopic negative response to B-wave ratio (mfPhNR/B) were measured. Forty-one glaucoma patients underwent OCT, mfERG, and MT measurement and 55 healthy subjects underwent mfERG. Results: The mfPhNR/B was significantly smaller ( P < 0.01) and the N/T was significantly larger ( P < 0.01) in glaucoma patients than in normal subjects. In glaucoma patients, the N/T is significantly correlated with the thickness of inferior and inferotemporal GCIPL ( r = -0.317 and -0.360, respectively) and MT of corresponding VF areas ( r = -0.330 and -0.334, respectively) (all P values < 0.05). The mfPhNR/B was significantly correlated with the thickness of mRNFL in the central area ( r = 0.365, P = 0.02) and with the MT of all corresponding VF areas ( r rages between 0.330 and 0.460, all P values < 0.04), except for the inferotemporal area. However, correlation was not observed between the N/T and the mfPhNR/B in any location. Conclusions: Significant differences exist between glaucoma and healthy participants in the N/T and mfPhNR/B. Correlations were observed between two mfERG parameters and OCT parameters or MT in glaucoma patients. Further research should seek to demonstrate whether the N/T and the mfPhNR/B should be applied in a complementary fashion.


2021 ◽  
pp. 277-282
Author(s):  
Takashi Matsushima ◽  
Yuji Yoshikawa ◽  
Airi Shimura ◽  
Ayana Yajima ◽  
Yui Ojima ◽  
...  

We describe the electroretinographic findings of a case of primary intraocular lymphoma (PIOL) wherein the patient received intravitreal injections of methotrexate (ivMTX). A 62-year-old man developed blurred vision and complained of decreased visual acuity (VA) in his right eye. Fundus examination showed vitreous opacity and multiple subretinal yellowish lesions. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) revealed subretinal and intraretinal infiltrations. The full-field electroretinogram (ffERG) showed subnormal combined rod-cone response and multifocal electroretinogram (mfERG) recorded using skin electrodes showed severe attenuation of the response compared with the other eye. Pars prana vitrectomy, phacoemulsification, and lens implantation were performed to remove the opacity, and vitreous biopsy revealed a high ratio of interleukin 10–6 (76.0). There was no systemic malignant lesion, and the patient was diagnosed with PIOL. Treatment with ivMTX (400 μg/0.1 mL) was started. One month later, the intraretinal infiltration had disappeared, and mfERG revealed recovery of the response density from the central area. Two months later, OCT showed recovery of the foveal ellipsoid and interdigitation zones, and VA recovered to 20/17; mfERG showed maintenance of macular function. However, the amplitude of a- and b-waves in the ffERG gradually decreased. Macular function recovered, but there was also a decrease in total retinal function. mfERG and ffERG recorded using skin electrodes were useful in monitoring macular and entire retinal function with repeated examinations and showed recovery and maintenance of macular function in a case of PIOL treated with ivMTX.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Jiang Huang ◽  
Yi Li ◽  
Yao Chen ◽  
Yuhong You ◽  
Tongtong Niu ◽  
...  

Purpose. To study retinal function defects in type 2 diabetic patients without clinically apparent retinopathy using a multifocal electroretinogram (mf-ERG). Methods. Seventy-six eyes of thirty-eight type 2 diabetes mellitus(DM) patients without clinically apparent retinopathy and sixty-four normal eyes of thirty-two healthy control (HC) participants were examined using mf-ERG. Results. Patients with type 2 DM without apparent diabetic retinopathy demonstrated an obvious implicit time delay of P1 in ring 1, ring 3, and ring 5 compared with healthy controls ( t = 5.184 , p ≤ 0.001 ; t = 8.077 , p ≤ 0.001 ; t = 2.000 , p = 0.047 , respectively). The implicit time (IT) in ring 4 of N1wave was significantly delayed in the DM group ( t = 2.327 , p = 0.021 ). Compared with the HC group, the implicit time of the P1 and N1 waves in the temporal retina zone was significantly prolonged ( t = 3.66 , p ≤ 0.001 ; t = 2.187 , p = 0.03 , respectively). And the amplitude of P1 in the temporal retina decreased in the DM group, which had a significantly statistical difference with the healthy controls ( t = − 6.963 , p ≤ 0.001 ). However, there were no differences in either the amplitude of the response or the implicit time of the nasal retina zone between DM and HC. The AUC of multiparameters of mf-ERG was higher in the diagnosis of DR patients. Conclusions. Patients with type 2 DM without clinically apparent retinopathy had a delayed implicit time of P1 wave in temporal regions of the postpole of the retina compared with HC subjects. It demonstrates that mf-ERG can detect the abnormal retinal change in the early stage of type2 DM patients without apparent diabetic retinopathy. Multiparameters of mf-ERG can improve the diagnostic efficacy of DR, and it may be a potential clinical biomarker for early diagnosis of DR.


1962 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. Frocht ◽  
Y. F. Cheng

In applying the shear-difference method to the determination of stress distributions in photo plasticity, a basic question arises whether, under plastic flow, the isoclinic parameters represent the directions of the secondary principal stresses. Special equipment, new techniques, and a series of experiments are described to study this problem. Tests were made with stress systems which varied in magnitude and direction at normal and oblique incidence, and at strains for which a one-to-one stress-optic relation exists as well as at strains for which it breaks down. Typical results are given. These findings together with the method of scattered light and an appropriate stress-optic law may provide a foundation for three-dimensional photoplasticity. The effects described are limited to loading. Cases of loading plus unloading are not considered in the present paper.


The author, pursuant to an intention expressed in a former paper read to the Society, undertook a series of experiments, for the purpose of measuring the gas evolved from the thermal springs at Bath during a period of time sufficiently long to enable him to determine with tolerable precision its average amount, and to ascertain whether any great diurnal variations in its quantity can be detected. He also kept during the same period a corresponding register of the conditions of the atmosphere, as to temperature, humidity and pressure, in order to learn whether any connexion could be traced between these conditions and the quantities of gas evolved. The supplies, both of water and of gas, from the Hot Bath and the Cross Bath being insignificant compared with those from the King’s Bath, the author confined his inquiries to the last of these, and chiefly to the gas arising from the apertures within its central area, which is about twenty feet in diameter; the other apertures without this circle from which gas issued being carefully stopped up. The gas was collected by a funnel-shaped apparatus, constructed of several sheets of iron riveted together, and the seams rendered airtight by white lead, supported on a frame, with contrivances for raising and lowering it as occasion might require. The observations were made during periods of from five to fifteen minutes, and continued daily from the 17th of September to the 18th of October inclusive. The average quantity of gas evolved per minute, as deduced from the mean of all the observations, is 267 cubic inches, giving a total daily volume of 223 cubic feet. The author, by referring to the accounts on record of other thermal waters, concludes that the evolution of gas is a phenomenon as intimately connected with the constitution of these waters, as the presence of a definite quantity of certain saline ingredients, or the possession of a particular temperature; both of which probably continue unaltered for periods of indefinite duration, compared with the records of any human history. He considers this phenomenon to be explicable, by supposing that a large volume of these gases is pent up in some cavern of rock, at a great depth below the surface of the earth, which, at some former period, had been heated by volcanic action, and which, by the gradual cooling and consequent contraction of its external portions, exerts a continued pressure on the gaseous contents of its cavity, and determines the uniform flow of a stream of gas through crevices towards the surface.


2007 ◽  
Vol 51 (5) ◽  
pp. 379-389 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eijiro Asano ◽  
Kiyofumi Mochizuki ◽  
Akira Sawada ◽  
Ei-ichiro Nagasaka ◽  
Yuji Kondo ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang Huang ◽  
Yi Li ◽  
Jianjiang Xiao ◽  
Qin Zhang ◽  
Guoxu Xu ◽  
...  

Background. The retinal changes have been identified in morphology and function in Parkinson’s disease (PD). However, the controversial results suggest that it is incredible that only using a single method for testing retinal change to evaluate Parkinson’s disease. The aim of this study was to assess retinal changes and increase the diagnostic efficacy of Parkinson’s disease with a combination of multifocal electroretinogram (mf-ERG) and spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) examinations. Method. Fifty-three PD patients and forty-one healthy controls were enrolled. Subjects were assessed for retinal function using mf-ERG and retinal structure using SD-OCT. Results. The PD patients had a significantly decreased amplitude density of P1 and a delayed implicit time of P1 in some regions. The macular retinal thickness, macular volume, and average RNFL thickness were decreased in PD. The AUC of a single parameter of either retinal function or structure was low. Both of them were higher in diagnostic value to discriminate PD patients. Conclusion. The amplitude density of P1 combined with macular volume can get a high diagnostic efficacy to discriminate between participants with or without PD. It indicates that a combination of mf-ERG and SD-OCT provides a good clinical biomarker for diagnosis of PD.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-26
Author(s):  
Mona Abdelkader ◽  
◽  
Mohamed Mamdouh ◽  
Ayman Fawzy

Purpose: To document the effects of successful vitrectomy on retinal function and anatomy in diabetic patients. Methods: Three-port pars plana vitrectomy with detachment of posterior vitrous face was performed in 30 eyes of 25 patients with diabetic macular oedema DME (11 male, 14 Female).For each patients, visual acuity (VA) examination, measurement of retinal thickness using optical coherence tomography (OCT), full field electro-retinogram (ERG) and multifocal eletroretinogram (MF-ERG) were performed before and 1week,1month and 3months after vitrectomy. Results: Mean postoperative visual acuity was significantly improved (P<0.05); mean retinal thickness was significantly (P=0.001 ) decreased after 3monthes of surgery (from 450±150 into 220±50 micron ) .b-wave amplitudes of all cone and rod responses of ERG were significantly decreased in all vitrectomized eyes after 1 week. At one month, rod response was still unimproved but improved after 3months. Reduction in foveal Function as well as in para-foveal areas detected in the MF-ERG within 1st month. Then, mean P1 wave amplitude of MF-ERG of central ring increased and mean P1 wave implicit time decreased. These changes of MF-ERG parameters observed 3 months after vitrectomy. Conclusion: Multifocal electroretinogram can be useful to provide objective criteria for functional evaluation before and after vitrectomy in diabetic oedema.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 357
Author(s):  
Yoshiaki Shimada ◽  
Masayuki Shibuya ◽  
Kei Shinoda

Background: The acute physiological changes induced by focal retinal photocoagulation (PC) have been largely unexplored. Methods: This was a case-series study. We recorded multifocal electroretinograms (mfERGs) just before PC, and mfERGs were also recorded 5′, 15′, one hour, 24 h, and one week after the PCs. Transient changes of mfERGs were analyzed in eyes which underwent PCs to treat diabetic macular edema. The mfERGs recorded from the predominantly irradiated area and that from non-irradiated areas were analyzed separately. Results: Fifteen eyes of 15 patients were included in this study. The mfERGs elicited from non-irradiated areas did not change after PC, but the mfERGs elicited from the irradiated area changed with time; the amplitude was larger at 60′ than that before (p < 0.05) and at 5′ after PC (p < 0.01) and significantly smaller at 24 h and 1 week than that before and at 60′ after the PC (p < 0.01). The implicit time was significantly prolonged after PC. mfERG on irradiated area with the severe diabetic change was less altered after PCs. Conclusions: The transient increase in the amplitude at 60′ likely resulted from a biological amplification of partially damaged cells adjacent to the PC spots. The mfERGs manifested the dynamic alterations of the retinal function following PCs.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document