| Literature DB >> 35015247 |
Xin Huang1,2, Huika Xia1,2,3, Qi Zhang1,2, Yan Nan1,2, Wenyao Wang1,2,4, Colin Blakemore5, Jie Gao1,2, Spencer S Ng6, Jing Wen7,8, Tiejun Huang9,10, Xiaoqing Li11,12, Mingliang Pu13,14.
Abstract
Amblyopia resulting from early deprivation of vision or defocus in one eye reflects an imbalance of input from the eyes to the visual cortex. We tested the hypothesis that asynchronous stimulation of the two eyes might induce synaptic plasticity and rebalance input. Experiments on normal adults showed that repetitive brief exposure of grating stimuli, with the onset of each stimulus delayed by 8.3 ms in one eye, results in a shift in perceptual eye dominance. Clinical studies (Clinical trial registration number: ChiCTR2100049130), using popular 3D movies with similar asynchrony between the two eyes (amblyopic eye stimulated first) to treat anisometropic amblyopia, established that just 10.5 h of conditioning over <3 weeks produced improvement that met criteria for successful treatment. The benefits of asynchronous conditioning accumulate over 20-30 45 min sessions, and are maintained for at least 2 years. Finally, we demonstrate that asynchronous binocular treatment alone is more effective than patching only. This novel treatment is popular with children and is some 50 times more efficient than patching alone.Entities:
Keywords: SED; STDP; amblyopia; synaptic plasticity; visual cortex
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35015247 DOI: 10.1007/s11427-021-2030-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci China Life Sci ISSN: 1674-7305 Impact factor: 6.038