Plummer D J, Sample P A, Arévalo J F, Grant I, Quiceno J I, Dua R, Freeman W R
Department of Ophthalmology, Shiley Eye Center, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0946, USA.
Am J Ophthalmol. 1996 Oct;122(4):542-9. doi: 10.1016/s0002-9394(14)72115-4.
To determine the extent of vision loss in a cross-sectional study of HIV-positive individuals who had no infectious retinopathy.
Visual field loss was determined by computerized achromatic automated perimetry and short-wavelength automated perimetry in both eyes in 65 HIV-positive individuals without infectious retinopathy and in one randomly selected eye each in 57 age-matched normal controls. Results were analyzed using the global index of mean defect and the Glaucoma Hemifield Test, and significance was determined through analysis of variance, chi-square, and Tukey-Kramer tests.
We found that HIV-positive patients, compared with age-matched HIV-negative controls, demonstrated significant (at least P < .01) localized defects as well as an increased mean defect. The HIV-positive patients also had a significantly greater number of defective points, especially on short-wavelength automated perimetry, even while ophthalmoscopic examination and fundus photographs suggested that the retinas were normal.
There is a significant loss of visual function in HIV-positive individuals that is not the result of infectious retinopathies. The finding by short-wavelength perimetry of more severe defects suggests that the vision defects are not caused by attentional or other suprachiasmatic problems because the neurologic difficulty of both achromatic and short-wavelength perimetry is similar. The effects of this vision loss on the daily living and occupational tasks of this population require further study.