BROAD-BAND VISUAL CAPACITIES ARE NOT SELECTIVELY IMPAIRED IN ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE

Citation
Dd. Kurylo et al., BROAD-BAND VISUAL CAPACITIES ARE NOT SELECTIVELY IMPAIRED IN ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE, Neurobiology of aging, 15(3), 1994, pp. 305-311
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
01974580
Volume
15
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
305 - 311
Database
ISI
SICI code
0197-4580(1994)15:3<305:BVCANS>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Histological examination of the optic nerves of Alzheimer's disease (A D) patients has revealed a selective degeneration of large axon gangli on cells. This morphological abnormality raises the possibility of a s elective impairment of broad-band channel visual function. To test thi s hypothesis, we administered visual psychophysical tests associated w ith either the color-opponent or the broad-band retinocortical channel to 14 AD patients and 29 elderly control subjects (ECS). In previous studies in monkeys, these tests had been sensitive to the effects of e ither parvocellular or magnocellular LGN lesions. In the present study , the color-opponent channel was assessed by tests of texture and colo r discrimination; the broad-band channel was assessed by tests of flic ker and motion detection. Logistic regression analysis indicated that all tests collectively discriminated diagnostic groups at a borderline level of significance (p = 0.09). ANOVA also indicated a trend toward s overall depressed function for AD patients on some capacities tested . Analyses comparing the prevalence of deficits in the AD and ECS grou ps showed that a significantly greater number of AD patients than ECS had deficits on texture discrimination, blue-violet discrimination, an d 4.72-degrees/s motion detection. No individual subject demonstrated a selective impairment of broad-band channel function. The visual defi cits in AD did not resemble those caused by lesions of magnocellular L GN in monkeys, indicating that the visual impairment in AD is not a fu nctional reflection of damage limited to the broad-band channel. Rathe r, the perceptual deficits we observed may be due to neuropathological changes in visual association cortices, particularly the ventral visu al pathway, in which parvocellular as well as magnocellular capacities are represented. The deficits are found in a subset of AD patients, s uggesting that they are not an obligatory correlate of mild to moderat e AD but, instead, reflect individual differences in the distribution of neuropathological changes in visual cortices.