Amblyopia Lecture 12 Flashcards

1
Q

What is amblyopia commonly known as?

A

Lazy eye

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2
Q

What is amblyopia?

A

A developmental disorder of vision

An imbalance between the two eyes

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3
Q

Who does amblyopia affect and why?

A

Children and it affects them because it can not be corrected with spectacles.

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4
Q

What is the most common causes of amblyopia?

A

anisometropia (blurring in one eye, other is sharp i.e refractive error b/w eyes)

Strabismic amblyopia (Misalignment between the eyes)

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5
Q

What can cause amblyopia in third world countries?

A

Congenital cataract

deprivation amblyopia

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6
Q

What are the implications of a child having amblyopia?

A

Once amblyopia has developed vision does not improve even if glasses correct the eye component (can do sometimes…)

I.e visual loss has a cortical basis

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7
Q

Why may amblyopia cause cortical change?

In lay man terms

A

Because when the child is growing they receive a bad visual diet and this alters cortical structure in development,

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8
Q

What is the nature of amblyopia impairment?

A

Impaired monocular vison:

  • Acuity (poorer)
  • Sensitivity to contrast (reduced)
  • Spatial distorsions (i.e fractures in reproduced drawings of lines)
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9
Q

For diagnosis of amblyopia using an letter chart what must occur?

A

There must be a two line difference between the impaired eye and the follow eye.

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10
Q

What is the most diagnostic tool of amblyopia?

A

Crowding

(everyone experiences crowding which caused by less dedication to the peripheral field so it is in poor quality i.e can’t distinguish letters)

People with amblyopia experience crowding centrally in their affected eye.

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11
Q

What has crowding been likened to?

A

Crowding is like seeing images as texture.

overall properties of things. i.e recognise a russian book as lines of writing.

Amblyopia is like crowded vision

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12
Q

Are crowding and loss of acuity etc all seperate things?

A

No it is likely that they are all linked and a result of one another.

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13
Q

How does amblyopia affected binocular vision?

A
  • Impaired stereopsis (sense of depth)
  • Suppression (cause or symptom?) (abnormal binocular input results in the the worse eye being ignored/ better eye being favoured, input of bad eye surpassed)
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14
Q

what is suppression?

A

Intraoccular suppression is when one eye s output is suppressed and the others is favoured.

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15
Q

In new zealand how many children have amblyopia?

A

3%

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16
Q

What are the monocular treatments for amblyopia?

A
  • Patching and atropine (eye drop)
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17
Q

How often is acuity improved with patching and whats the compliance of patching?

A

70% reported acuity improvement

40-60% compliance (poor)

50% dont gain stereo vision back (proper binocular vision)

18
Q

Whats the concept of patching?

A

Patch the better seeing eye to make the amblyopic eye work harder and correct.

19
Q

How does atropine work?

A

Eye drops go into better seeing eye and it makes things blurry.

(has to wear off and can’t be taken off thus better compliance)

20
Q

What are the treatments for amblyopia in adults?

A

No treatments

21
Q

Why are there no treatments for adult amblyopia?

A

Beyond the critical period. (deprivation drives loss and treatments don’t really work as not so plastic any more)

22
Q

What part of the cortices are first looked disrupted in amblyopia?

A

The LGN

23
Q

What is a histological feature of amblyopia in the LGN?

A

Cell body shrinkage in cells that receive input from the amblyopic eye.

24
Q

How doe the LGN function in amblyopia?

A

Normal or only slightly abnormal function

25
Q

Why is there a light function and histological discrepancy in the LGN in amblyopia?

A

Minority of cells ~6% feed forward, most are modularity.

Anaesthesia affects LGN studies….. (so these rat studies are unreliable but we can use MRI..)

26
Q

What does MRI of amblyopia in the LGN show?

A

Reduced grey matter in strabismic amblyopes. (quite reduced)

27
Q

What does a functional (blood flow) MRI show in the LGN of someone with amblyopia?

A

Reduced LGN activation when driven by the amblyopic eye. (substantial difference between the eyes)

28
Q

Does amblyopia affect a particular parallel l processing pathway in front he LGN?

A

Parvocellular loss would be consistent with a loss in visual acuity.

29
Q

How would you measure if the parallel pathways were affected?

A

Accesse funtional activation for stimuli targeting different pathways. (m, p, k)

30
Q

Using stimuli to access parallel pathway processing, what dot he results indicate?

A

selective loss of the parvocellular response at the LGN in adult amblyopes.

31
Q

How else can parallel pathways function be assessed?

A

By using high (parvo) vs low (magno) contrast stimuli. you can assess function by measuring activation of these pathways.

32
Q

What is seen using contrast stimuli in amblyopic patients ?

A

Only a small loss of low contrast response for the amblyopic eye. (low difference)

But

There is a big difference in activation for high contrast response that is a high loss of response in the amblyopic eye for high contrast stimuli. - consistent with a parvocellular deficit.

33
Q

What is the idea of patching?

A

A method to overcome suppression but shutting down completely the input from the fellow eye.

34
Q

Describe a binocular treatment for amblyopia:

A

Using manipulation of contrast in the fellow eye in a binocular tool to overcome suppression and improve stereo vision. (depth)

35
Q

Whats an example of binocular treatment to improve stereo vision? in the lab

A

Perceptual learning - improving acuity, contrast, orientation by repeated performance of an acuity task.

Flaw- hard to get compliance in kids

36
Q

Whats an example of binocular treatment for amblyopia that is targeted at kids? that uses a different form of patching

A

First person video games with a patch. Gains in acuity better and faster than traditional patching (no stereopsis gains)

37
Q

What is active suppression therapy?

A

Uses a tetris video game. improves acuity rapidly and stereopsis!!! (binocularity) - don’t see in regular patching (must use 3d for stereo)

Has red/blue glasses and the blocks are designed to be seen by the different eyes Requires the eyes to work together to succeed. Cant win if the glasses aren’t used thus good compliance.

38
Q

What are the limitations of recent innovations of treatment?

A
  • Mechanisms of improvement unknown
  • Critical components unknown i.e what makes it work better.
  • Not tested on children
39
Q

What does his treatment involve?

A

Watching movies with specialised ski goggles.

  • They manipulate depth relative to background plane.
  • Blur to unaffected eye to match crowded acuity in affected eye. (like patching)

High compliance

Every minute, vac man comes up and he must eat the whitest ghost (black to one eye and white to the other), this measures suppression. Glasses are required for ghosts. no ghost = non compliant. This also shows eye preference.

After 2 months, acuity improved 3 lines.

Good improvements in stereo acuity.

Shows that intraoccular suppression remains largely unchanged. Despite acuity and stereopsis.

Therefore suppression is a manifestation of amblyopia not the cause.

40
Q

What are the conclusions?

A

Both LGN and visual cortex are susceptible to abnormal development

Functional deficits are consistent with a primary parvocellular loss

Binocular stimulation treats amblyopia
- not reduction in intraoccular suppression.