SENSITIVITY IN THE NASAL AND TEMPORAL HEMIFIELDS IN CHILDREN TREATED FOR CATARACT

Citation
Er. Bowering et al., SENSITIVITY IN THE NASAL AND TEMPORAL HEMIFIELDS IN CHILDREN TREATED FOR CATARACT, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 34(13), 1993, pp. 3501-3509
Citations number
57
Categorie Soggetti
Ophthalmology
ISSN journal
01460404
Volume
34
Issue
13
Year of publication
1993
Pages
3501 - 3509
Database
ISI
SICI code
0146-0404(1993)34:13<3501:SITNAT>2.0.ZU;2-2
Abstract
Purpose. To determine if form-deprived aphakes, like normal infants, s how especially poor sensitivity in the nasal visual field. The purpose of this article was also to examine the influence on their peripheral sensitivity of the timing and duration of deprivation, of whether dep rivation was monocular or binocular, and of having patched the fellow nondeprived eye. Methods. Static perimetry was used to measure intensi ty thresholds at 20-degrees in the nasal visual field and at 30-degree s in the temporal visual field in normal subjects (n = 20 7-year-old c hildren, 20 8-year-old children, 12 9-year-old children, and 20 adults ) and in 46 children treated for a dense and central cataract in one ( n = 21) or both (n = 25) eyes. The deprivation began either at birth o r after a normal early history, and the duration of deprivation varied widely among patients. Also tested were two adults who had been treat ed promptly for unilateral cataracts that had developed after the age of 40 years. Results. In normal subjects, sensitivity was slightly hig her at 20-degrees nasally than at 30-degrees temporally, with no devel opmental changes in sensitivity at either location. The deprived eyes of the children had losses in sensitivity at both locations but only c hildren treated for unilateral congenital cataract had larger losses a t 20-degrees nasally than at 30-degrees temporally. There were no sign ificant effects on their sensitivity of the duration of deprivation or , in children treated for unilateral cataract, of patching of the nond eprived eye. In contrast, the two patients in whom cataracts did not d evelop until adulthood had normal sensitivity. Conclusions. Pattern de privation interferes with the development of peripheral sensitivity at both 30-degrees temporally and 20-degrees nasally. Nasal sensitivity, which is slow to mature, is affected more by early monocular deprivat ion than by early binocular deprivation. The results are consistent wi th the hypothesis that unfair interocular competition during early inf ancy especially affects visual functions that are slow to mature.