黄斑疾病患者的双眼视觉功能和注视控制:综述。

IF 2.4
Irina Sverdlichenko, Mark S Mandelcorn, Galia Issashar Leibovitzh, Efrem D Mandelcorn, Samuel N Markowitz, Luminita Tarita-Nistor
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引用次数: 3

摘要

对于正常视力的观察者来说,黄斑的中心——中央凹——提供了最清晰的视觉,并作为动眼肌系统的参考点。通常,健康的观察者具有精确的眼球运动控制和优于单眼的双眼视觉表现。这些功能在失去中央凹视力的黄斑病患者中受到干扰。对中心视力丧失的适应是在功能性偏心视网膜中形成首选视网膜位点(PRL),这是由单眼观看时的注视任务决定的。黄斑疾病通常对两只眼睛的影响不均匀,但其对双眼功能和注视控制的影响尚不清楚。鉴于黄斑病患者的自然视觉状态为双眼,本文就目前黄斑病患者的双眼视觉功能及注视性动眼力控制的研究进展进行综述。我们的研究结果表明,尽管有明确的证据表明,根据患者双眼的临床特征,存在表现出双眼聚合或双眼抑制的亚组患者,但在一系列视觉功能中没有整体的双眼增益。较好眼的单眼PRL与较差眼的单眼PRL具有不同的特征,但在双眼观看时,较好眼的PRL可驱动注视控制,并可作为眼球运动系统的新参考位置。我们的结论是,评估黄斑疾病患者的双眼功能揭示了重要的临床方面,否则不能仅通过检查单眼功能来确定,并且可以导致更好的疾病管理和干预。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Binocular visual function and fixational control in patients with macular disease: A review.

Binocular visual function and fixational control in patients with macular disease: A review.

Binocular visual function and fixational control in patients with macular disease: A review.

Binocular visual function and fixational control in patients with macular disease: A review.

For normally sighted observers, the centre of the macula-the fovea-provides the sharpest vision and serves as the reference point for the oculomotor system. Typically, healthy observers have precise oculomotor control and binocular visual performance that is superior to monocular performance. These functions are disturbed in patients with macular disease who lose foveal vision. An adaptation to central vision loss is the development of a preferred retinal locus (PRL) in the functional eccentric retina, which is determined with a fixation task during monocular viewing. Macular disease often affects the two eyes unequally, but its impact on binocular function and fixational control is poorly understood. Given that patients' natural viewing condition is binocular, the aim of this article was to review current research on binocular visual function and fixational oculomotor control in macular disease. Our findings reveal that there is no overall binocular gain across a range of visual functions, although clear evidence exists for subgroups of patients who exhibit binocular summation or binocular inhibition, depending on the clinical characteristics of their two eyes. The monocular PRL of the better eye has different characteristics from that of the worse eye, but during binocular viewing the PRL of the better eye drives fixational control and may serve as the new reference position for the oculomotor system. We conclude that evaluating binocular function in patients with macular disease reveals important clinical aspects that otherwise cannot be determined solely from examining monocular functions, and can lead to better disease management and interventions.

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