Abstract

Purpose: to investigate the changes of electrophysiological activity of healthy rabbit retina occurring in courses of fractal stimulation (FS) of varied duration in order to obtain new scientific data on how fractal visual signals of low intensity, self-similar with respect to time, affect the retina.Material and methods. 12 healthy Chinchilla rabbits (24 eyes), were examined before and after FS courses that lasted 1, 4 or 12 weeks, using electroretinographic (ERG), morphometric (optical coherence tomography) and biochemical methods (detection of dopamine in the tear). For FS of rabbits, a device with an LED emitter was developed, which generates nonlinear brightness fluctuation based on the Weierstrass — Mandelbrot fractal functions. The choice of fractal signal parameters used in the work was substantiated. Pattern ERG and ganzfeld ERG were registered according to ISCEV standards; also, photopic flicker ERG was recorded at 8.3, 10, 12, and 24 Hz.Results. No negative effects of a 12-month FS course on the activity and morphology of the retina, or on dopaminergic processes in the eye of a healthy animal were found, which confirms the safety of using low-intensity FS in the clinic. A statistically significant increase in the amplitude of low-frequency flicker ERGs, a shortening of peak latency, and an increase in the amplitude of the b-wave of the scotopic and photopic ERGs was noted.Conclusion. To assess possible therapeutic effects of FS, we need to continue the investigation on animal models and human patients with retinal pathology. Considering the changes of retinal activity as revealed in the present paper, we recommend the duration of FS courses from 1 week to 1 month for future studies.

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