Abstract

Patients with oculocutaneous or ocular albinism have misrouting of optic fibers, with fibers from 20 degrees or more of the temporal retina crossing at the chiasm instead of projecting to the ipsilateral hemisphere. Misrouting can result in strabismus and nystagmus. Because patients with the Prader-Willi syndrome may also have hypopigmentation and strabismus, we wondered whether they too might have misrouting of optic fibers. We therefore studied six patients with Prader-Willi syndrome selected for a history of strabismus, using pattern-onset visually evoked potentials with binocular and monocular stimulation to look for evidence of misrouted retinal-ganglion fibers. Four had hypopigmentation, and three of these four had abnormal evoked potentials indistinguishable from those recorded in human albinos. The two with normal pigmentation had normal responses. These findings indicate that patients with Prader-Willi syndrome who have hypopigmentation have a brain abnormality characterized by misrouting of retinal-ganglion fibers at the optic chiasm--a finding previously reported only in forms of albinism.

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