Kelly John P, Phillips James O, Weiss Avery H
Roger H. Johnson Vision Clinic, Division of Ophthalmology, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington; Department of Ophthalmology, University of Washington, Seattle.
Roger H. Johnson Vision Clinic, Division of Ophthalmology, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington; Department of Otolaryngology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle.
J AAPOS. 2018 Feb;22(1):50-55.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jaapos.2017.10.008. Epub 2017 Dec 29.
To use eye movement recordings of young children to determine whether eye velocity from infantile nystagmus (IN) deprives the developing visual system of normal visual acuity.
The video-oculography recordings and visual acuity measurements (including Teller cards) of 15 children ≤6.0 years of age with IN without visual sensory disease (idiopathic IN) were reviewed retrospectively. Eye velocity that would limit visual acuity development was predicted from both empirical adult data adjusted for age and a temporal limitation model using published photoreceptor density data with age. Foveal alignment onto a target was measured in 5 subjects using confocal retinal imaging.
All subjects had periods (85-2440 ms) during which eye velocity was below the limit that would reduce age-appropriate visual acuity. The percentage of time eye velocity was below the limit varied by 4%-54% across all eye movement recordings. Eye movement metrics (eye position variability, average eye velocity, maximum duration of foveation, and the nystagmus optimal foveation fraction) correlated poorly with age or with age-corrected visual acuity (r < 0.27 for each metric). Longitudinal visual acuity development overlapped between subjects with different nystagmus waveforms.
Eye velocity was not predicted to completely deprive visual acuity development in subjects with idiopathic IN. Nystagmus may decrease visual acuity development in children with idiopathic IN by interfering with visual-cortical development in the context of increased visual noise due to image motion with imprecise foveation.
利用幼儿的眼动记录来确定婴儿型眼球震颤(IN)的眼速度是否会剥夺发育中的视觉系统的正常视力。
回顾性分析了15名年龄≤6.0岁、患有无视觉感觉疾病的IN(特发性IN)儿童的视频眼震图记录和视力测量结果(包括泰勒视力卡)。根据针对年龄调整的成人经验数据和使用已发表的不同年龄光感受器密度数据的时间限制模型,预测了可能限制视力发育的眼速度。使用共焦视网膜成像对5名受试者的中央凹与目标的对齐情况进行了测量。
所有受试者都有眼速度低于会降低相应年龄视力的限度的时间段(85 - 2440毫秒)。在所有眼动记录中,眼速度低于该限度的时间百分比在4% - 54%之间变化。眼动指标(眼位变异性、平均眼速度、中央凹注视的最长持续时间以及眼球震颤最佳中央凹注视分数)与年龄或年龄校正后的视力相关性较差(每个指标的r < 0.27)。不同眼球震颤波形的受试者之间纵向视力发育存在重叠。
预计特发性IN患者的眼速度不会完全剥夺视力发育。眼球震颤可能会通过在因中央凹注视不精确导致图像运动而增加视觉噪声的情况下干扰视觉皮层发育,从而降低特发性IN儿童的视力发育。