| Literature DB >> 28033389 |
Heather E Moss1,2, Monica Samelson1, Girish Mohan1, Qin Li Jiang2.
Abstract
The afferent visual system may be affected by neuro-degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) based on observations of visual function impairment and retinal inclusions on histopathology in ALS patients. To test the hypothesis that visual acuity is impaired in ALS, we compared three measures of visual acuity in ALS patients (n = 25) attending a multidisciplinary ALS clinic and age matched control subjects (n = 25). Bilateral monocular and binocular visual acuities were assessed using high contrast (black letters on white background) and low contrast (2.5%, 1.25% grey letters on white background) visual acuity charts under controlled lighting conditions following refraction. Binocular summation was calculated as the difference between binocular and best monocular acuity scores. There were no associations between binocular or monocular high contrast visual acuity or low contrast visual acuity and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis diagnosis (generalized estimating equation models accounting for age). Binocular summation was similar in both amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and control subjects. There was a small magnitude association between increased duration of ALS symptoms and reduced 1.25% low contrast visual acuity. This study does not confirm prior observations of impaired visual acuity in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and does not support this particular measure of visual function for use in broad scale assessment of visual pathway involvement in ALS patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28033389 PMCID: PMC5199071 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Subject characteristics.
| ALS (n = 25) | Control (n = 25) | P | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean (range)) | 52.9 yrs (26–77) | 53.3 yrs (35–72) | 0.92 (t-test, t = 0.099) |
| Gender (female) | 32% (8) | 64% (16) | 0.09 (Fisher’s exact) |
| Corrective lenses distance | 36% (9) | 68% (17) | 0.15 (Fisher’s exact) |
| Corrective lenses near | 52% (13) | 72% (18) | 0.56 (Fisher’s exact) |
| Additional refractive correction | 52% (13) | 68% (17) | 0.53 (Fisher’s exact) |
| ALSFRS-R (mean, range) | 37.25 (15–48) | ||
| Symptom duration (mean, range)) | 2.5 yrs (0.2–7.7) | ||
| MMT (mean, range) | 21.5 (0–73) |
*t-test for continuous variables, chi square or fisher exact test for dichotomous variables
** correction provided in addition to habitual lenses following refraction protocol
Fig 1Binocular visual acuity by contrast level and ALS status.
Gray boxes show ALS subjects and white bars show control subjects with similar high and low contrast acuity to ALS subjects. Boxes represent 25th-75th percentiles. Error bars represent 5th-95th percentile. Single markers represent outliers.
Regression model coefficient point estimates (95% CI) for models of VA outcomes as a function of ALS disease variables with control subjects assumed to have no limitations.
| Visual acuity outcome | Functional impairment (48-ALSFRS-R) | Functional impairment (MMT) | Disease duration (years) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100% HCVA | -0.10 (-0.32, 0.11) | -0.01 (-0.09, 0.10) | 0.24 (-0.74, 1.22) |
| p = 0.35 | p = 0.93 | p = 0.63 | |
| 2.5% LCVA | -0.15 (-0.50, 0.21) | -0.04 (-0.21, 0.17) | -0.71 (-2.95, 1.53) |
| p = 0.41 | p = 0.68 | p = 0.53 | |
| 1.25% LCVA | -0.30 (-0.61, 0.02) | -0.04 (-0.19, 0.12) | -1.92 (-3.42, -0.42) |
| p = 0.07 | p = 0.64 | p = 0.01 |
HCVA: high contrast visual acuity, LCVA: low contrast visual acuity, ALSFRS-R: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis functional rating score with respiration, MMT: manual motor testing,
Coefficients are from generalized estimating models of monocular VA accounting for age and within subject correlation