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Brain, Vol. 110, No. 2, 489-515, 1987
© 1987 Oxford University Press


research-article

REGIONAL THRESHOLD CONTRAST SENSITIVITY WITHIN THE CENTRAL VISUAL FIELD IN OPTIC NEURITIS

GORDON T. PLANT1,2, and ROBERT F. HESS2

1Department of Neurology, Addenbrooke's Hospital University of Cambridge 2the Physiological Laboratory University of Cambridge

Correspondence to: Correspondence to: Dr Gordon T. Plant, National Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Queen Square, London WCIN 3BG, England.

Contrast sensitivity was measured at nine locations within the central 10° of the visual field in cases of recovered optic neuritis having varying degrees of residual deficit. A sample of 82 patches of visual field was obtained in 14 cases. Circular patches of vertically orientated sinusoidal gratings, 2.5° in diameter, were used. The gratings were modulated in time at 8 Hz and the effect of spatial frequency on the threshold loss determined at each visual field location. As anticipated from what is known of visual field changes in the disorder there was considerable variation in the magnitude of the contrast threshold elevation at different locations in the visual field in any one case. The variability was more marked in case with greater overall deficit.

Three types of spatial loss were encountered. The most common was a loss which increased at higher spatial frequencies, found in 65 of the 82 patches of visual field examined. In 11 the loss was unaffected by spatial frequency and in the remaining 6 the loss was maximal at an intermediate spatial frequency. There was no instance of a loss maximal at low spatial frequencies. Overall the results indicate that sensitivity to higher spatial frequencies is more likely to be impaired following an attack of optic neuritis. In the combined results the effect of spatial frequency on the threshold elevation was statistically significant at all eccentricities (P < 0.001).

Analysis of the combined results revealed no difference in the mean contrast sensitivity loss at eccentricities of zero, 3.75° or 7.5° for intermediate and low spatial frequencies. There is no evidence from these results to suggest that the central foveal projection(papillomacular bundle) is more likely to be affected following an attack of optic neuritis than the projections of other eccentricities within the central 10° as far as mechanisms subserving luminance vision are concerned at these spatial frequencies. Overall there was slightly greater reduction in acuity within the central 5° than at 7.5° eccentricity (P < 0.05). This may be accounted for by the finding that higher spatial frequencies are more affected, rather than being related to eccentricity per se.

Received December 12, 1985. Revised April 15, 1986. Accepted May 20, 1986.


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