Universidad de Almeria, Departamento de Psicología, Ctra. Sacramento S/N, 04120, La Cañada, Almería, Spain; Achucarro, Basque center for neuroscience. Science Park, edificio de la Sede UPV / EHU 48940, Leioa, Spain; NeuroDigital Technologies S.L., Prol. Camino de la Goleta 2, Edf. Celulosa I, 04007, Almería, Spain; Universidad Europea del Atlántico, Calle Isabel Torres, 21, 39011 Santander, Cantabria, Spain.
Molecular Imaging Unit, CIMES, Centro de Investigaciones Medico Sanitarias, General Foundation of the University of Malaga, C/ Marqués de Beccaria, 3, Campus Universitario de Teatinos, 29071, Málaga, Spain.
Behav Brain Res. 2019 Sep 16;370:111941. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2019.111941. Epub 2019 May 9.
Amblyopia or lazy eye is a neurodevelopmental disorder that arises during the infancy and is caused by the interruption of binocular sensory activity before maturation of the nervous system. This impairment causes long-term deterioration of visual skills, particularly visual acuity and depth perception. Although visual function recovery has been supposed to be decreased with age as consequence of reduced neuronal plasticity, recent studies have shown that it is possible to promote plasticity and neurorestoration in the adult brain. Thus, transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been shown effective to treat amblyopia in the adulthood. In the present work we used postnatal monocular deprivation in Long Evans rats as an experimental model of amblyopia and the cliff test task to assess depth perception. Functional brain imaging PET was used to assess the effect of tDCS on cortical and subcortical activity. Visually deprived animals ability to perceive depth in the cliff test was significantly reduced in comparison to their controls. However, after 8 sessions of tDCS applied through 8 consecutive days, depth perception of amblyopic treated animals improved reaching control level. PET data showed 18F-FDG uptake asymmetries in the visual cortex of amblyopic animals, which disappeared after tDCS treatment. The possibility of cortical reorganization and stereoscopy recovery following brain stimulation points at tDCS as a useful strategy for treating amblyopia in adulthood. Furthermore, monocular deprivation in Long Evans rats is a valuable research model to study visual cortex mechanisms involved in depth perception and neural restoration after brain stimulation.
弱视或懒眼是一种神经发育障碍,发生在婴儿期,是由于神经系统成熟前双眼感觉活动中断引起的。这种损伤会导致长期的视觉技能下降,特别是视力和深度知觉。尽管由于神经元可塑性降低,人们认为随着年龄的增长,视觉功能的恢复会减少,但最近的研究表明,促进成年人大脑的可塑性和神经恢复是可能的。因此,经颅直流电刺激(tDCS)已被证明可有效治疗成年人弱视。在本工作中,我们使用长耳兔的单眼剥夺作为弱视的实验模型,并使用悬崖测试任务来评估深度知觉。功能性脑成像 PET 用于评估 tDCS 对皮质和皮质下活动的影响。与对照组相比,在悬崖测试中,视觉剥夺动物感知深度的能力明显降低。然而,经过 8 天连续 8 次 tDCS 治疗后,弱视治疗动物的深度知觉得到改善,达到了对照组的水平。PET 数据显示,弱视动物的视觉皮层存在 18F-FDG 摄取不对称性,经 tDCS 治疗后消失。大脑刺激后皮层重组和立体视觉恢复的可能性表明 tDCS 是治疗成年弱视的一种有用策略。此外,长耳兔的单眼剥夺是研究刺激后大脑参与深度知觉和神经恢复的视觉皮层机制的有价值的研究模型。