Binocular and Fellow Eye Acuity Deficits in Amblyopia: Impact of Fixation Instability and Sensory Factors.

IF 1.3 4区 心理学 Q3 OPHTHALMOLOGY
Journal of Eye Movement Research Pub Date : 2025-06-03 eCollection Date: 2025-06-01 DOI:10.3390/jemr18030020
Yulia Haraguchi, Gokce Busra Cakir, Aasef Shaikh, Fatema Ghasia
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Abstract

Amblyopia, a neurodevelopmental disorder, is commonly assessed through amblyopic eye visual acuity (VA) deficits, but recent studies also highlight abnormalities in the fellow eye. This study quantified binocular and fellow/dominant eye VA in individuals with amblyopia and strabismus without amblyopia and examined factors influencing these measures, including fixation eye movement (FEM) abnormalities. Identifying which subsets of patients-such as those with nystagmus, concurrent strabismus, or greater fixation instability-exhibit more pronounced deficits in binocular visual acuity and binocular summation can enhance clinical decision-making by enabling tailored interventions and aiding patient counseling. Sixty-eight amblyopic, seventeen strabismic without amblyopia, and twenty-four control subjects were assessed using an adaptive psychophysical staircase procedure and high-resolution video-oculography to evaluate FEMs and fixation instability (FI). Binocular and fellow eye VA were significantly lower in amblyopia, regardless of type or nystagmus presence, whereas binocular and dominant eye VA in strabismus without amblyopia did not differ from the controls. Despite reduced binocular acuity, amblyopic and strabismic subjects exhibited binocular summation, with binocular VA exceeding fellow/dominant eye VA. Reduced binocular VA correlated with greater fellow eye VA deficits, diminished binocular summation, and increased FI in the amblyopic eye. Fellow eye VA deficits were linked to greater amblyopic eye VA deficits, an increased degree of anisometropia, higher FI, and stronger nystagmus correlation. These findings suggest amblyopia affects both visual sensory and motor systems, impacting binocular function and fixation stability, with potential consequences for everyday visuomotor tasks like reading.

弱视的双眼和其他视力缺陷:注视不稳定和感觉因素的影响。
弱视是一种神经发育障碍,通常通过弱视眼视力(VA)缺陷来评估,但最近的研究也强调了同侧眼的异常。本研究量化了弱视和无弱视的斜视患者的双眼和同眼/主眼VA,并检查了影响这些测量的因素,包括固定眼运动(FEM)异常。确定哪些亚群的患者——如眼球震颤、并发斜视或固定不稳定性更强的患者——表现出更明显的双眼视力和双眼综合缺陷,可以通过定制干预和帮助患者咨询来增强临床决策。68名弱视患者,17名无弱视的斜视患者和24名对照患者采用自适应心理物理阶梯程序和高分辨率视频视觉术评估FEMs和固定不稳定性(FI)。在弱视患者中,双眼和同侧眼的视差显著降低,而在无弱视的斜视患者中,双眼和主侧眼的视差与对照组没有差异。尽管双眼敏锐度降低,但弱视和斜视受试者表现出双眼总合,双眼VA超过同眼/主眼VA。双眼VA降低与弱视眼更大的同眼VA缺陷、双眼总合降低和FI增加相关。眼内视功能缺陷与弱视眼内视功能缺陷、参差程度增加、高FI和强眼球震颤相关。这些发现表明,弱视影响视觉感觉和运动系统,影响双眼功能和注视稳定性,对阅读等日常视觉运动任务有潜在影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
33.30%
发文量
10
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Eye Movement Research is an open-access, peer-reviewed scientific periodical devoted to all aspects of oculomotor functioning including methodology of eye recording, neurophysiological and cognitive models, attention, reading, as well as applications in neurology, ergonomy, media research and other areas,
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