University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Graefes Arch Clin Exp Ophthalmol. 2011 Jun;249(6):801-8. doi: 10.1007/s00417-011-1689-6. Epub 2011 Apr 19.
First described in 1922 by Carl Pulfrich, the Pulfrich effect is a stereo-illusion thought to be caused by an inter-ocular signal latency difference stimulating neurons jointly tuned to disparity and motion. Clinically, this can be a spontaneous manifestation due to various ocular and central visual pathway pathologies, and cause symptoms independent of a range of routine visual parameters which may seem bizarre to both the patient and the clinician. Eliciting such symptoms of difficulties with motion and depth perception in a clinical history should direct the clinician to the possibility of the presence of the spontaneous Pulfrich effect, and to proceed to test for it. A spontaneous Pulfrich effect may be the first presentation of a previously undiagnosed condition, and warrants further investigation to identify the underlying cause. Alternatively, a spontaneous Pulfrich effect may be the unrecognized complication of a previously diagnosed condition. The symptoms associated with a spontaneous Pulfrich effect can be managed by treating the underlying cause in reversible conditions, or by prescribing appropriate monocular tinted lenses in front of the unaffected or less affected eye in persistent conditions.
普氏效应用于描述由双眼间信号延迟差异刺激共同调谐到视差和运动的神经元引起的立体幻觉,于 1922 年由卡尔·普吕弗尔首次描述。临床上,这可能是由于各种眼部和中枢视觉通路病变引起的自发表现,并导致与一系列常规视觉参数无关的症状,这可能对患者和临床医生来说都很奇怪。在临床病史中引出对运动和深度知觉困难的这些症状,应引导临床医生考虑存在自发普氏效应的可能性,并对其进行测试。自发普氏效应可能是以前未确诊疾病的首次表现,需要进一步调查以确定潜在原因。或者,自发普氏效应可能是以前诊断出的疾病的未被识别的并发症。在可逆转的情况下,通过治疗潜在病因,或在持续存在的情况下,在前一只未受影响或受影响较小的眼睛前佩戴适当的单眼有色镜片,可以控制与自发普氏效应相关的症状。