| Literature DB >> 29487827 |
Daniah Alshowaeir1,2, Con Yiannikas3,4, Clare Fraser1, Alexander Klistorner1,5.
Abstract
To test the hypothesis that latency delay in the fellow eyes of optic neuritis (ON) patients and to compensate for delayed transmission of visual information, latency change of multi-focal visual evoked potential (mfVEP) traces in fellow eyes of 15 ON patients were analyzed. Patients with low risk (LR) for developing multiple sclerosis (MS) were examined separately from MS patients to isolate effect of cortical plasticity from potential pathological changes in disseminated disease. The small increase in latency in fellow eyes of LR group was statistically not significant. In MS patients, the latency was significantly delayed (P<0.02). The magnitude of the latency change in the fellow eyes did not correlate with the severity of latency delay in the affected eyes (R2<0.02, P=0.3). The differences between ON patients with and without MS, reported here, suggest that the presence of disseminated disease plays critical role in latency delay of the fellow eye.Entities:
Keywords: fellow eyes; latency delay; multi-focal visual evoked potential; optic neuritis
Year: 2018 PMID: 29487827 PMCID: PMC5824092 DOI: 10.18240/ijo.2018.02.24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2222-3959 Impact factor: 1.779