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Disclosing disease mechanisms with a spatio-temporal summation paradigm.

Zele AJ, O'loughlin RK, Guymer RH, Vingrys AJ

Department of Optometry and Vision Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, 3010, Australia, algis@unimelb.edu.au.

BACKGROUND: We develop the logic for a stimulus that can evaluate cone-dependent spatial summation and detail the modelling and interpretation of thresholds obtained with this stimulus. METHODS: Fifteen observers participated, including two young normals tested extensively in control experiments, and a clinical trial based on four observers with age-related macular degeneration (AMD), four age-similar controls and five young observers. Monocular spatial summation functions were measured with contrast-modulated Gabor targets that approximated the optimal visual contrast detector. Thresholds were returned from a yes/no adaptive psychophysical algorithm. By fine titration along the size domain it was demonstrated that the spatial summation of normal observers can be adequately described by a two-component model. A reduced set of variables are proposed for clinical applications and the model was applied to data derived using these variables in persons with AMD and age-similar controls. RESULTS: We do not find a significant age-related loss of contrast sensitivity in our normal group. On the other hand, persons with early AMD exhibited a 0.41 log unit loss of sensitivity (P=0.04) from age-similar controls, without any change in their maximum summation area (A(max)). CONCLUSIONS: The nature of the spatial summation is consistent with the interpretation that early AMD produces a decrease in cone input to post-receptoral mechanisms in the absence of neural remodelling.

Published 11 April 2006 in Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol, 244(4): 425-32.
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