| Literature DB >> 21687773 |
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a common disorder of middle-aged and elderly people in which degeneration of the extrapyramidal motor system causes significant movement problems. In some patients, however, there are additional disturbances in sensory systems including loss of the sense of smell and auditory and/or visual problems. This paper is a general overview of the visual problems likely to be encountered in PD. Changes in vision in PD may result from alterations in visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, colour discrimination, pupil reactivity, eye movements, motion perception, visual field sensitivity, and visual processing speeds. Slower visual processing speeds can also lead to a decline in visual perception especially for rapidly changing visual stimuli. In addition, there may be disturbances of visuospatial orientation, facial recognition problems, and chronic visual hallucinations. Some of the treatments used in PD may also have adverse ocular reactions. The pattern electroretinogram (PERG) is useful in evaluating retinal dopamine mechanisms and in monitoring dopamine therapies in PD. If visual problems are present, they can have an important effect on the quality of life of the patient, which can be improved by accurate diagnosis and where possible, correction of such defects.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21687773 PMCID: PMC3109513 DOI: 10.4061/2011/908306
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2042-0080
Visual signs and symptoms of Parkinson's disease (PD).
| Ocular aspect | Change in PD | References |
|---|---|---|
| Visual acuity | Poor, especially at low contrast | [ |
| [ | ||
| Colour vision | Vision blurred for coloured stimuli | [ |
| Shortened colour fusion time | [ | |
| Progressive deterioration | [ | |
| Visual fields | Increase in glaucomatous visual field defects | [ |
| Side effects of surgery | [ | |
| Saccadic eye movement | Reaction time and max. velocity of horizontal gaze slower | [ |
| Hypometria | [ | |
| Amplitude increased after cued saccades | [ | |
| Smooth pursuit movement | Affected early in disease process | [ |
| Superimposed saccades | [ | |
| Reduction in response magnitude | [ | |
| Optokinetic Nystagmus | Abnormal in some patients | [ |
| Convergence | Impaired, associated with large exophoria, diplopia | [ |
| [ | ||
| Blink frequency | Reduced, causing abnormal tear film, dry eye and reduced vision | [ |
| Blink reflex | Habituation not observed | [ |
| Pupil diameter | Larger after light adaptation with anisocoria | [ |
| Light reflex | Longer latency | |
| Constriction time | Increased | [ |
| Contraction amplitude | Reduced | [ |
| Contrast sensitivity (CS) | Abnormal in some cases, intermediate to high frequencies | [ |
| Temporal processing | Impaired ability to track rapid fluctuations | [ |
| Duration perception affected | [ | |
| Flash ERG | Reduced amplitude of “b” wave | [ |
| PERG | Reduced amplitudes. |
[ |
| Specific defect at medium SF | ||
| Delayed P50 | [ | |
| Cortical VEP | Delayed P100 | [ |
| [ | ||
| Chromatic VEP | Increased latency and reduced |
[ |
| Amplitude (esp. blue-yellow) | ||
| ERP | Abnormal. Delayed reaction times | [ |
| [ | ||
| Visuo-spatial | Difficulty in judging verticals, | [ |
| position of body parts, and in route-walking tasks | [ | |
| Orientation and motion discrimination | Impaired | [ |
| Facial perception | Impaired ability to perceive and imagine emotional faces | [ |
| Visual hallucinations | Chronic in 30–60% of treated cases | [ |
Abbreviations: ERG: Electroretinogram, ERP: event-related potentials, PERG: Pattern electroretinogram, SF: Spatial frequency, VEP: Visual evoked potentials.
Figure 1The layers of the retina (PE: pigment epithelium, PR: visual receptors, ONL: outer nuclear layer, OPL: outer plexiform layer, INL: internal nuclear layer, IPL: internal plexiform layer, GC: ganglion cell layer, and SO: Stratum opticum). Dopamine neurons (TOH+: Tyrosine hydroxylase positive neurons, Type 1 cells and Type 2 amacrine cells) are primarily concentrated in the INL and dopamine positive neurites (Type 1 in stratum 1 and type 2 ramify above stratum 1) in the IPL. Type 1 cells may synapse onto GABA interpelexiform cells (IPCs). Some dopamine activities may also be observed in the ganglion cell layer.
Figure 2Cells from the cerebral cortex showing the presence of Lewy bodies (α-synuclein immunohistochemistry, haematoxylin stain, bar = 25 μm).
Figure 3The dopamine projections of the central nervous system (OB: Olfactory bulb, SFC: superior frontal cortex, CG: Cingulate gyrus, ST: Striatum, HY: Hypothalamus, VT: Ventral tegmentum, SN: Substantia nigra).
Adverse ocular reactions to treatment for Parkinson's disease.
| Treatment | Examples | Ocular side effects |
|---|---|---|
| Anticholinergi | Benzhexol, Diphenydramine | Mydriasis, photophobia, dry eyes, decreased accommodation, anisocoria, blurred vision, anterior angle closure |
| Dopamine agonists | Bromocriptine | May exacerbate visual hallucinations |
| Pramipexole | May exacerbate visual hallucinations | |
| Ropinirole | May exacerbate visual hallucinations | |
| L-dopa | L-dopa/carbidopa | Mydriasis, miosis, blepharospasm eyelid ptosis, may prolong latency of saccades |
| MAO inhibitors | Selegiline | May cause loss of visual acuity and blurred vision |
| Antiviral | Amantadine | Mydriasis, superficial keratitis, reduced accommodation, hallucinations |
| Antidepressant | Imipramine | Mydriasis, cycloplegia, dry eyes, ocular muscle paresis, nystagmus |