Camille S. Corre , Melissa Bambery , Christopher R. Bennett , Amanda Nagy , Claire E. Manley , Ellen Winter , Cary Peregoy , Daniel Kelly , Haley Andonian , Stacy Maciel , Catherine Becker , Lotfi B. Merabet , Florian S. Eichler
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and objectives
Cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy (CALD) can cause visual impairment, but early symptoms are often missed or misdiagnosed. The framework of cerebral visual impairment (CVI) distinguishes deficits in sensory detection (“lower order”) from those of perception and interpretation (“higher order”). This study describes visual deficits in patients with CALD and higher order visual function assessed with a virtual reality (VR) interface combined with eye tracking.
Methods
A retrospective medical record review assessed the prevalence of visual deficits in patients with CALD, as well as lesion burden on brain MRI using the Loes MRI severity score. A VR-based task measured visual spatial processing performance in participants with CALD and controls.
Results
Out of 89 CALD patients, 69 % had at least one sign or symptom of visual impairment. Lower order deficits were seen in 56 % of patients, and higher order deficits were seen in 59 % of patients who underwent neuropsychological testing. Even in early stage disease (Loes MRI severity score ≤ 3), visual impairment was present in more than half of patients (58 %). On prospective VR-based assessment, the CALD group (n = 30) had impaired visual search performance (lower success rate and longer reaction time) compared with controls (n = 38). In both groups, there was a trend of worsening performance with increasing task difficulty.
Discussion
Higher order visual deficits, not just impairment of visual acuity, visual fields, or oculomotor function, are common in all stages of CALD. Beyond neuropsychological testing, VR-based functional testing allows for quantitative assessment of higher order visual perceptual deficits that are relevant to everyday tasks and may serve as an important marker of neurological decline.
期刊介绍:
Brain and Development (ISSN 0387-7604) is the Official Journal of the Japanese Society of Child Neurology, and is aimed to promote clinical child neurology and developmental neuroscience.
The journal is devoted to publishing Review Articles, Full Length Original Papers, Case Reports and Letters to the Editor in the field of Child Neurology and related sciences. Proceedings of meetings, and professional announcements will be published at the Editor''s discretion. Letters concerning articles published in Brain and Development and other relevant issues are also welcome.