Lehmkuhle S, Garzia R P, Turner L, Hash T, Baro J A
School of Optometry, University of Missouri-St. Louis 63121.
N Engl J Med. 1993 Apr 8;328(14):989-96. doi: 10.1056/NEJM199304083281402.
The possibility that reading disability in children is associated with visual problems is in dispute. We sought to test the existence of this association by using electrophysiologic techniques to measure the processing of visual information in the magnicellular and parvicellular visual pathways of the brain.
Visual evoked potentials were measured with scalp electrodes in children 8 to 11 years old who were normal readers and in those with reading disability. The potentials were measured for targets with low (0.5 cycle per degree of visual angle) and high (4.5 cycles per degree) spatial frequency, surrounded by either a steady background or a uniform-field flickering 12 times per second. A flickering field normally reduces the amplitude and increases the latency of a transient potential evoked by a low-spatial-frequency target, which preferentially excites the magnicellular visual pathway, but has little effect on the response to a high-spatial-frequency target.
With a steady background, the latencies of the early components (N1 and P1) of the visual evoked potentials were longer in the reading-disabled children than in the normal readers when the low-spatial-frequency target was used, but not when the high-spatial-frequency target was used. In normal readers, the flickering background increased the latency and reduced the amplitude of the early components, whereas in the reading-disabled children only the amplitude was affected. No differences were observed in either group with the high-spatial-frequency target.
The pattern of results suggests that the response of the magnicellular visual pathway is slowed in reading-disabled children, who do not, however, have a general slowing of the visual response. The possibility that there is a cause-and-effect relation between these findings and reading disability will require further study.
儿童阅读障碍与视觉问题相关的可能性存在争议。我们试图通过使用电生理技术测量大脑大细胞和小细胞视觉通路中视觉信息的处理来检验这种关联的存在。
用头皮电极测量8至11岁正常阅读儿童和阅读障碍儿童的视觉诱发电位。针对低(每视角0.5周/度)和高(每视角4.5周/度)空间频率的目标进行测量,目标周围要么是稳定背景,要么是每秒闪烁12次的均匀场闪烁背景。闪烁场通常会降低由低空间频率目标诱发的瞬态电位的幅度并增加其潜伏期,低空间频率目标优先激发大细胞视觉通路,但对高空间频率目标的反应影响很小。
在稳定背景下,当使用低空间频率目标时,阅读障碍儿童视觉诱发电位早期成分(N1和P1)的潜伏期比正常阅读儿童长,但使用高空间频率目标时则不然。在正常阅读儿童中,闪烁背景增加了早期成分的潜伏期并降低了其幅度,而在阅读障碍儿童中只有幅度受到影响。两组在高空间频率目标下均未观察到差异。
结果模式表明,阅读障碍儿童的大细胞视觉通路反应减慢,但他们的视觉反应并没有普遍减慢。这些发现与阅读障碍之间是否存在因果关系需要进一步研究。