| Literature DB >> 32714129 |
Chunwen Tao1, Zhifen He1, Yiya Chen1, Jiawei Zhou1, Robert F Hess2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Recently, Lunghi et al. (2016) showed that amblyopic eye's visual acuity per se after 2 months of occlusion therapy could be predicted by a homeostatic plasticity, that is, the temporary shift of perceptual eye dominance observed after a 2-h monocular deprivation, in children with anisometropic amblyopia. In this study, we assess whether the visual acuity improvement of the amblyopic eye measured after 2 months of occlusion therapy could be predicted by this plasticity.Entities:
Keywords: amblyopia; interocular suppression; ocular dominance plasticity; patching therapy; visual acuity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32714129 PMCID: PMC7344240 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2020.00625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Visual acuity before and after 2 months of treatment.
| ID | Age (years) | Cycloplegic refractive errors (OD/OS) | Visual acuity (logMAR) | Balance point (FE/AE) before treatment | |||
| Before treatment | 2 Months of treatment | ||||||
| OD | OS | OD | OS | ||||
| S1 | 5 | −1.00/−1.00 × 180 | 0.275 | 0.575 | 0.175 | 0.375 | 0.432 |
| −6.00/−2.00 × 180 | |||||||
| S2 | 6 | +1.50 | –0.025 | 0.575 | –0.025 | 0.275 | 0.285 |
| +5.00 | |||||||
| S3 | 8 | Plano | –0.025 | 0.575 | –0.025 | 0.475 | 0.192 |
| +2.50/+1.75 × 80 | |||||||
| S4 | 6 | +3.50 | 0.175 | 0.675 | 0.175 | 0.275 | 0.158 |
| +4.00/+0.75 × 95 | |||||||
| S5 | 8 | +4.50 | 0.475 | –0.025 | 0.275 | –0.025 | 0.329 |
| Plano | |||||||
| S6 | 9 | +4.00 | 0.575 | –0.125 | 0.4 | –0.125 | 0.135 |
| Plano | |||||||
| S7 | 6 | Plano | –0.025 | 0.875 | –0.025 | 0.775 | 0.234 |
| +2.00/+1.75 × 85 | |||||||
FIGURE 1An illustration of the experimental design. Seven newly diagnosed child amblyopes (6.86 ± 1.46 years old; SD) participated, in which the treatment effect of 2 months’ patching therapy (4-h daily patching with an opaque patch) was tested after 2 months of refractive adaptation. The short-term monocular deprivation effect was quantified by the shift of perceptual eye dominance in binocular phase combination after 2 h of amblyopic eye patching before the initiation of the treatment.
FIGURE 2Individual’s binocularly perceived phase as a function of the interocular contrast ratio measured before the patching treatment. Each panel plots results of one patient. Error bars represent standard errors from eight repetitions of the test. The curve in each panel represents fits with a contrast-gain-control model (Zhou et al., 2013b). The purple triangle represents where the two eyes were balanced. The corresponding interocular contrast ratio (in short “BP”) and the goodness-of-fit are provided in each panel.
FIGURE 3The relationship between the amblyopic eye acuity improvement after 2 months of treatment and the short-term monocular deprivation effect. (A) Results from the present study. The horizontal axis represents the effect of short-term monocular deprivation on the perceptual eye dominance (PED) shift. The value, if larger than 0, indicates the patched eye was getting stronger after the short-term monocular deprivation. The larger the value indicates the larger PED plasticity. The dashed line is a linear fit of the data. The error bars represent standard deviation based on the three posttest sessions measured within 10 min after patients finished the 2 h of monocular deprivation. A 2-tailed Pearson correlation analysis showed that the correlation between the amblyopic eye acuity improvement after 2 months of treatment and the normalized PED index difference was not significant: r = 0.20, P = 0.66. (B) Reports from Lunghi et al. (2016) study. Their work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. The results from Figure 4B and Table 1 in Lunghi et al. (2016) article are replotted here. Ten patients [6.2 ± 1.0 years (SD)] accepted Bangerter filter patching therapy (whole walking time in each day) after 2 months of refractive adaptation. The PED index difference was quantified using a binocular rivalry task before the start of the patching therapy. The dashed line is a linear fit of the data. A two-tailed Pearson correlation analysis showed that the correlation between the amblyopic eye acuity improvement after 2 months of treatment and the PED index difference was not significant: r = −0.22, P = 0.54.