Abstract

The effect of central scotomata on pattern reversal visual evoked potential (PVEP) was investigated in patients with maculopathy and healthy subjects. PVEP was evoked monocularly by both full-field and half-field stimulations. Since the latency of ‘the major positivity at Oz’ (P100-Oz) is used as the most reliable parameter in the clinical application of PVEP, special attention was focused on its changes, comparing with ‘ipsilateral major positivity of half-field PVEP’ (P100-IHF). Although the incidence of modification was lower in the patients, central scotomata modified PVEPs of the healthy subjects and of the affected eye of the patients in a similar manner: full-field PVEP showed prolonged latency and reduced amplitude of P100-Oz. Half-field PVEP disclosed prolonged P100-Oz latency with intact P100-IHF latency. Only difference was that amplitude reduction of both P100-Oz and P100-IHF of half-field PVEP was observed only in the healthy subjects. The prolonged P100-Oz latency of half-field PVEP was accompanied, both in the healthy subjects and in the patients, by a contralateral negative-positive complex. (N105-P135) which was augmented and extended to Oz. The prolonged P100-Oz latency, thus, was due to the pronounced P135. These observations suggested that an attenuation of the afferent impulses from the central retina may cause a prolongation of the P100-Oz latency in both healthy subjects and patients, but this is not a reflection of the truly prolonged P100-IHF latency. It was concluded that, in the clinical application of PVEP, recordings of half-field PVEP from the lateral electrodes seem to be essential to distinguish true prolongation of the P100-Oz latency.

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