Abstract

The Schubert-Bornschein type congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) shows an essentially normal fundus and a negatively shaped, mixed rod-cone electroretinogram (ERG), in which the amplitude of a-wave is normal and larger than that of b-wave (1). We previously reported that CSNB cases with negative ERG can be divided into two types, complete or incomplete, based on the difference in rod visual functions, cone mediated ERGs, ERG oscillatory potentials, degree of refractive errors, and family survey (2). It has been concluded that complete and incomplete types are different clinical entities, having demonstrated several explicit differences between the two CSNB types (3,4).

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