Denniss Jonathan, Astle Andrew T
Visual Neuroscience Group, School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2016 Jul;36(4):453-8. doi: 10.1111/opo.12304. Epub 2016 May 4.
Perimetry is increasingly being used to measure sensitivity at central visual field locations. For many tasks, the central (0°, 0°) location is functionally the most important, however threshold estimates at this location may be affected by masking by the nearby spatial structure of the fixation target. We investigated this effect.
First we retrospectively analysed microperimetry (MAIA-2; CenterVue, Padova, Italy) data from 60 healthy subjects, tested on a custom grid with 1° central spacing. We compared sensitivity at (0°, 0°) to the mean sensitivity at the eight adjacent locations. We then prospectively tested 15 further healthy subjects on the same instrument using a cross-shaped test pattern with 1° spacing. Testing was carried out with and without the central fixation target, and sensitivity estimates at (0°, 0°) were compared. We also compared sensitivity at (0°, 0°) to the mean of the adjacent four locations in each condition. Three subjects undertook 10 repeated tests with the fixation target in place to assess within-subject variability of the effect.
In the retrospective analysis, central sensitivity was median 2.8 dB lower (95% range 0.1-8.8 dB lower, p < 0.0001) than the mean of the adjacent locations. In the prospective study, central sensitivity was median 2.0 dB lower with the fixation target vs without (95% range 0.4-4.7 dB lower, p = 0.0011). With the fixation target in place central sensitivity was median 2.5 dB lower than mean sensitivity of adjacent locations (95% range 0.8-4.2 dB lower, p = 0.0007), whilst without the fixation target there was no difference (mean 0.4 dB lower, S.D. 0.9 dB, p = 0.15). These differences could not be explained by reduced fixation stability. Mean within subject standard deviation in the difference between central and adjacent locations' sensitivity was 1.84 dB for the repeated tests.
Perimetric sensitivity estimates from the central (0°, 0°) location are, on-average, reduced by 2 to 3 dB, corresponding to a 60-100% increase in stimulus luminance at threshold. This effect can be explained by masking by the nearby fixation target. The considerable within- and between-subject variability in magnitude, and the unknown effects of disease may hamper attempts to compensate threshold estimates for this effect. Clinicians should interpret central perimetric sensitivity estimates with caution, especially in patients with reduced sensitivity due to disease.
视野检查越来越多地用于测量中央视野位置的敏感度。对于许多任务而言,中央(0°,0°)位置在功能上最为重要,然而该位置的阈值估计可能会受到注视目标附近空间结构的掩盖影响。我们对这种影响进行了研究。
首先,我们回顾性分析了60名健康受试者的微视野检查(MAIA-2;意大利帕多瓦的CenterVue公司)数据,这些受试者在一个中央间距为1°的定制网格上进行测试。我们将(0°,0°)处的敏感度与八个相邻位置的平均敏感度进行比较。然后,我们前瞻性地使用间距为1°的十字形测试图案,在同一仪器上对另外15名健康受试者进行测试。测试分别在有和没有中央注视目标的情况下进行,并比较(0°,0°)处的敏感度估计值。我们还比较了每种情况下(0°,0°)处的敏感度与相邻四个位置的平均值。三名受试者在有注视目标的情况下进行了10次重复测试,以评估该效应在受试者内的变异性。
在回顾性分析中,中央敏感度比相邻位置的平均值低2.8 dB(95%范围为低0.1 - 8.8 dB,p < 0.0001)。在前瞻性研究中,有注视目标时中央敏感度比没有注视目标时低2.0 dB(95%范围为低0.4 - 4.7 dB,p = 0.0011)。有注视目标时,中央敏感度比相邻位置的平均敏感度低2.5 dB(95%范围为低0.8 - 4.2 dB,p = 0.0007),而没有注视目标时则无差异(平均低0.4 dB,标准差0.9 dB,p = 0.15)。这些差异无法用注视稳定性降低来解释。重复测试中,受试者内中央与相邻位置敏感度差异的平均标准差为1.84 dB。
来自中央(0°,0°)位置的视野敏感度估计平均降低2至3 dB,相当于阈值处刺激亮度增加60 - 100%。这种效应可以用附近注视目标的掩盖来解释。该效应在受试者内和受试者间的大小存在相当大的变异性,以及疾病的未知影响可能会妨碍对该效应进行阈值估计补偿的尝试。临床医生在解释中央视野敏感度估计时应谨慎,尤其是在因疾病导致敏感度降低的患者中。