Literature DB >> 10476789

Ganglion cell losses underlying visual field defects from experimental glaucoma.

R S Harwerth1, L Carter-Dawson, F Shen, E L Smith, M L Crawford.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate the relationship between ganglion cell losses and visual field defects caused by glaucoma.
METHODS: Behavioral perimetry and histology data were obtained from 10 rhesus monkeys with unilateral experimental glaucoma that was induced by argon laser treatments to their trabecular meshwork. After significant visual field defects had developed, the retinas were collected for histologic analysis. The ganglion cells were counted by light microscopy in cresyl violet-stained retina sections, and the percentage of ganglion cell loss (treated to control eye counts) was compared with the depth of visual field defect (treated to control eye thresholds) at corresponding retinal and perimetry test locations. Sensitivity losses as a function of ganglion cell losses were analyzed for Goldmann III, white and Goldmann V, and short- and long-wavelength perimetry test stimuli.
RESULTS: The relationship between the proportional losses of ganglion cells and visual sensitivity, measured with either white or colored stimuli, was nonlinear. With white stimuli, the visual sensitivity losses were relatively constant (approximately 6 dB) for ganglion cell losses of less than 30% to 50%, and then with greater amounts of cell loss the visual defects were more systematically related to ganglion cell loss (approximately 0.42 dB/percent cell loss). The forms of the neural-sensitivity relationships for visual defects measured with short- or long-wavelength perimetry stimuli were similar when the visual thresholds were normalized to compensate for differences in expected normal thresholds for white and colored perimetry stimuli.
CONCLUSIONS: Current perimetry regimens with either white or monochromatic stimuli do not provide a useful estimate of ganglion cell loss until a substantial proportion have died. The variance in ganglion cell loss is large for mild defects that would be diagnostic of early glaucoma and for visual field locations near the fovea where sensitivity losses occur relatively late in the disease process. The neural-sensitivity relationships were essentially identical for both white and monochromatic test stimuli, and it therefore seems unlikely that the higher sensitivity for detecting glaucoma with monochromatic stimuli is based on the size-dependent susceptibility of ganglion cells to injury from glaucoma.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10476789

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci        ISSN: 0146-0404            Impact factor:   4.799


  149 in total

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8.  Optic disc imaging in perimetrically normal eyes of glaucoma patients with unilateral field loss.

Authors:  Joseph Caprioli; Kouros Nouri-Mahdavi; Simon K Law; Federico Badalà
Journal:  Trans Am Ophthalmol Soc       Date:  2006

9.  Sustained ocular hypertension induces dendritic degeneration of mouse retinal ganglion cells that depends on cell type and location.

Authors:  Liang Feng; Yan Zhao; Miho Yoshida; Hui Chen; Jessica F Yang; Ted S Kim; Jianhua Cang; John B Troy; Xiaorong Liu
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10.  Improved reproducibility of retinal nerve fiber layer thickness measurements with the repeat-scan protocol using the Stratus OCT in normal and glaucomatous eyes.

Authors:  Argyrios Tzamalis; Myron Kynigopoulos; Torsten Schlote; Ivan Haefliger
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