Schaadt Anna-Katharina, Schmidt Lena, Reinhart Stefan, Adams Michaela, Garbacenkaite Ruta, Leonhardt Eva, Kuhn Caroline, Kerkhoff Georg
Saarland University, Saarbuecken, Germany International Research Training Group 1457 "Adaptive Minds," Saarbruecken, Germany
Saarland University, Saarbuecken, Germany International Research Training Group 1457 "Adaptive Minds," Saarbruecken, Germany.
Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2014 Jun;28(5):462-71. doi: 10.1177/1545968313516870. Epub 2013 Dec 27.
Brain lesions may disturb binocular fusion and stereopsis, leading to blurred vision, diplopia, and reduced binocular depth perception for which no evaluated treatment is currently available. Objective The study evaluated the effects of a novel binocular vision treatment designed to improve convergent fusional amplitude and stereoacuity in patients with stroke or traumatic brain injury (TBI). Methods Patients (20 in all: 11 with stroke, 9 with TBI) were tested in fusional convergence, stereoacuity, near/far visual acuity, accommodation, and subjective binocular reading time until diplopia emerged at 6 different time points. All participants were treated in a single subject baseline design, with 3 baseline assessments before treatment (pretherapy), an assessment immediately after a 6-week treatment period (posttherapy), and 2 follow-up tests 3 and 6 months after treatment. Patients received a novel fusion and dichoptic training using 3 different devices to slowly increase fusional and disparity angles. Results At pretherapy, the stroke and TBI groups showed severe impairments in convergent fusional range, stereoacuity, subjective reading duration, and partially in accommodation (only TBI group). After treatment, both groups showed considerable improvements in all these variables as well as slightly increased near visual acuity. No significant changes were observed during the pretherapy and follow-up periods, ruling out spontaneous recovery and demonstrating long-term stability of binocular treatment effects. Conclusions This proof-of-principle study indicates a substantial treatment-induced plasticity of the lesioned brain in the relearning of binocular fusion and stereovision, thus providing new, effective rehabilitation strategies to treat binocular vision deficits resulting from permanent visual cortical damage.
脑损伤可能会干扰双眼融合和立体视觉,导致视力模糊、复视以及双眼深度感知能力下降,目前尚无经过评估的治疗方法。目的 本研究评估了一种新型双眼视觉治疗方法对中风或创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者的融合性集合幅度和立体视锐度的改善效果。方法 对20名患者(11名中风患者,9名TBI患者)在6个不同时间点进行融合性集合、立体视锐度、近/远视力、调节功能以及主观双眼阅读时间测试,直至出现复视。所有参与者采用单受试者基线设计进行治疗,治疗前(治疗前)进行3次基线评估,6周治疗期结束后立即进行评估(治疗后),治疗后3个月和6个月进行2次随访测试。患者使用3种不同设备接受新型融合和双眼分视训练,以缓慢增加融合和视差角度。结果 在治疗前,中风组和TBI组在融合性集合范围、立体视锐度、主观阅读持续时间以及部分调节功能(仅TBI组)方面表现出严重受损。治疗后,两组在所有这些变量上均有显著改善,近视力也略有提高。在治疗前和随访期间未观察到显著变化,排除了自发恢复的可能性,并证明了双眼治疗效果的长期稳定性。结论 这项原理验证研究表明,在双眼融合和立体视觉再学习过程中,受损大脑在治疗诱导下具有显著的可塑性,从而为治疗永久性视觉皮层损伤导致的双眼视觉缺陷提供了新的有效康复策略。