| Literature DB >> 26075282 |
Nicola Pescosolido1, Andrea Barbato2, Alessio Stefanucci3, Giuseppe Buomprisco4.
Abstract
Retinopathy is a severe and common complication of diabetes, representing a leading cause of blindness among working-age people in developed countries. It is estimated that the number of people with diabetic retinopathy (DR) will increase from 126.6 million in 2011 to 191 million by 2030. The pathology seems to be characterized not only by the involvement of retinal microvessels but also by a real neuropathy of central nervous system, similar to what happens to the peripheral nerves, particularly affected by diabetes. The neurophysiological techniques help to assess retinal and nervous (optic tract) function. Electroretinography (ERG) and visual evoked potentials (VEP) allow a more detailed study of the visual function and of the possible effects that diabetes can have on the visual function. These techniques have an important role both in the clinic and in research: the central nervous system, in fact, has received much less attention than the peripheral one in the study of the complications of diabetes. These techniques are safe, repeatable, quick, and objective. In addition, both the ERG (especially the oscillatory potentials and the flicker-ERG) and VEP have proved to be successful tools for the early diagnosis of the disease and, potentially, for the ophthalmologic follow-up of diabetic patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26075282 PMCID: PMC4436463 DOI: 10.1155/2015/319692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Res Impact factor: 4.011
Standard full field ERG protocols and parameters according to ISCEV.
| ERG test | Adaptation/time | Stimulus range (cd∗s∗m−2) | Interstimulus time (s) | Main physiological generator |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scotopic ERG | Dark adapted/≥20 min | 0.02–0.03 | 2.0 | b-wave: rods |
| Massive ERG | Dark adapted/≥20 min | 6.7–8.4 | 10 | a-wave: photoreceptors |
| Oscillatory potentials | Dark adapted/≥20 min | 6.7–8.4 | 10 | Middle retinal layer and vascular function |
| Photopic ERG | Light adapted (30 cd∗m−2)/≥10 min | 2.7–3.4 | 0.5 | a-wave: cones |
| Flicker-ERG | Light adapted (30 cd∗m−2)/≥10 min | 2.7–3.4 | 0.030–0.036 | Cones |
Standards for VEP assessment according to ISCEV.
| Field size (deg) | Stimulus type | Stimulation | Background luminance (cd∗m−2) | Contrast (%) | Presentation rate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pattern stimulation | >15 | Pattern reversal or onset/offset | Monocular | — | >75 | <1–3 reversals or ≤2 onsets per second |
| Flash stimulation | >20 | Standard luminance flash (2.7–3.4 cd∗s∗m−2) | Monocular (recommended) | 15–30 | — | <1.5 flashes per second |
Summary of the advantages (left side) and disadvantages (right) of electrophysiological techniques described in relation to DR. All techniques reported are noninvasive, safe, objective, and repeatable. Full knowledge and the use of them in clinical practice can provide useful information in preclinical evaluation, prognosis, and follow-up of DR.
| ERG (OPs) | (i) Precociously altered in preclinical stage of DR. | (i) Massive retinal response, not able to detect dysfunctions localized in a single small area. |
|
| ||
| Flicker-ERG | (i) Directly reduced in proportion to the degree of DR. | (i) Nonspecific. |
|
| ||
| MfERG | (i) Able to detect localized and minimal dysfunctions. | (i) Not very suitable in advanced DR and/or in the follow-up after medical or laser interventions. |
|
| ||
| PERG | (i) Able to provide macular functionality assessment in preclinical and clinical stages of DR. | (i) Responses being susceptible to artifacts. |
|
| ||
| FERG | (i) Precociously altered in DR. | (i) Nonspecific. |
|
| ||
| VEPs | (i) Provide a reliable and objective indicator of clinically significant alterations of the visual pathway. | (i) Influenced by cooperation of the patient (fixing, attention), age, transparency of the optical mediums, and size of the pupil. |