Abstract
Hemianopia, loss of vision in half of the visual field, results from damage to the visual pathway posterior to the optic chiasm. Despite negative effects on quality of life, few rehabilitation options are currently available. Recently, several long-term training programs have been developed that show visual improvement within the blind field, although little is known of the underlying neural changes. Here, we have investigated functional and structural changes in the brain associated with visual rehabilitation. Seven human participants with occipital lobe damage enrolled in a visual training program to distinguish which of two intervals contained a drifting Gabor patch presented within the blind field. Participants performed ∼25 min of training each day for 3–6 months and undertook psychophysical tests and a magnetic resonance imaging scan before and after training. A control group undertook psychophysical tests before and after an equivalent period without training. Participants who were not at ceiling on baseline tests showed on average 9.6% improvement in Gabor detection, 8.3% in detection of moving dots, and 9.9% improvement in direction discrimination after training. Importantly, psychophysical improvement only correlated with improvement in Humphrey perimetry in the trained region of the visual field. Whole-brain analysis showed an increased neural response to moving stimuli in the blind visual field in motion area V5/hMT. Using a region-of-interest approach, training had a significant effect on the blood oxygenation level-dependent signal compared with baseline. Moreover, baseline V5/hMT activity was correlated to the amount of improvement in visual sensitivity using psychophysical and perimetry tests. This study, identifying a critical role for V5/hMT in boosting visual function, may allow us to determine which patients may benefit most from training and design adjunct interventions to increase training effects.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Homonymous visual field loss is a common consequence of brain injury and is estimated to affect more than 230,000 people in the United Kingdom. Despite its high prevalence and well-described impact on quality of life, treatments to improve visual sensitivity remain experimental, and deficits are considered permanent after 6 months. Our study shows that behavioral changes following vision rehabilitation are associated with enhanced visually-evoked occipital activity to stimuli in the blind visual field. Unlike previous behavioral studies, we observe clinical changes that are specific to the trained region of vision. This lends significant weight to such training paradigms and offers a mechanism by which visual function can be improved despite damage to the primary visual pathway.
Highlights
Hemianopia is a loss of vision on one side of visual space in both eyes, following postchiasmatic lesion along the visual pathway
Our study shows that behavioral changes following vision rehabilitation are associated with enhanced visually-evoked occipital activity to stimuli in the blind visual field
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data analysis For whole-brain analyses of blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) activity, it was necessary to align participant brains to a uniform pathologic template, so the lesion was located in the right hemisphere, corresponding to a left-sided visual deficit
Summary
Hemianopia is a loss of vision on one side of visual space in both eyes, following postchiasmatic lesion along the visual pathway. Improvements in trained regions that are deeper into the scotoma tend to be considerably weaker on perimetry (Huxlin et al, 2009; Sahraie et al, 2013; Elshout et al, 2016; Cavanaugh and Huxlin, 2017) This disparity remains unclear but may reflect a different mechanism of recovery in the border zone compared with deeper, denser areas of field loss. A group of volunteers with hemianopia were trained using the Neuro-Eye Therapy regime for 3– 6 months This training technique is associated with changes in visual sensitivity deep in the scotoma, at trained regions of the visual field (Sahraie et al, 2013). Psychophysics, visual field testing, and neuroimaging were performed both before and after training to quantify any changes in visual function and related neural underpinnings
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More From: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
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