PURPOSE: To alert ophthalmologists to the use of Ishihara color plates in t
he detection of simultanagnosia,
METHODS:We examined seven patients referred for impaired vision. Evaluation
included color plate resting with Ishihara color plates.
RESULTS: Al seven patients had simultanagnosia, with marked difficulty in i
dentifying the numbers in Ishihara color plates despite adequate visual acu
ity and the ability to name all of the colors in the plates correctly. One
of these patients was referred with the diagnosis of a cone dystrophy becau
se of her poor performance on the Ishihara test. All of the patients had bi
lateral occipitoparietal damage or atrophy on magnetic resonance imaging.
CONCLUSIONS: Ophthalmologists must be aware that a poor performance with Is
hihara plates may not, be attributable to an impairment of color vision but
rather to occipitoparietal brain damage associated with simultanagnosia. (
Am J Ophthalmol 1998;126:850-851, (C) 1998 by Elsevier Science Inc. All rig
hts reserved.).