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Training in Cortically Blinded Fields Appears to Confer Patient-Specific Benefit Against Retinal Thinning.

Authors :
Fahrenthold BK
Cavanaugh MR
Tamhankar M
Lam BL
Feldon SE
Johnson BA
Huxlin KR
Source :
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science [Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci] 2024 Apr 01; Vol. 65 (4), pp. 29.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Purpose: Damage to the adult primary visual cortex (V1) causes vision loss in the contralateral hemifield, initiating a process of transsynaptic retrograde degeneration (TRD). Here, we examined retinal correlates of TRD using a new metric to account for global changes in inner retinal thickness and asked if perceptual training in the intact or blind field impacts its progression.<br />Methods: We performed a meta-analysis of optical coherence tomography data in 48 participants with unilateral V1 stroke and homonymous visual defects who completed clinical trial NCT03350919. After measuring the thickness of the macular ganglion cell and inner plexiform layer (GCL-IPL) and the peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL), we computed individual laterality indices (LI) at baseline and after ∼6 months of daily motion discrimination training in the intact or blind field. Increasingly positive LI denoted greater layer thinning in retinal regions affected versus unaffected by the cortical damage.<br />Results: Pretraining, the affected GCL-IPL and RNFL were thinner than their unaffected counterparts, generating LI values positively correlated with time since stroke. Participants trained in their intact field exhibited increased LIGCL-IPL. Those trained in their blind field had no significant change in LIGCL-IPL. LIRNFL did not change in either group.<br />Conclusions: Relative shrinkage of the affected versus unaffected macular GCL-IPL can be reliably measured at an individual level and increases with time post-V1 stroke. Relative thinning progressed during intact-field training but appeared to be halted by training within the blind field, suggesting a potentially neuroprotective effect of this simple behavioral intervention.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1552-5783
Volume :
65
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38635245
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1167/iovs.65.4.29