Abstract
Small areas of retinal pathology may pose diagnostic difficulties. The noninvasive multifocal electroretinogram (MF-ERG) provides a topographical mapping of retinal function. Its role in the diagnosis of macular diseases is examined in age-related macular degeneration (AMD). AMD is a main cause of central visual loss in the elderly population, affecting the second eye in 75%. MF-ERG recordings of three patients with AMD were compared to the findings of fundus photography and fluorescein angiography. During the MF-ERG recordings the central 50 degrees of the retina was stimulated. The visual stimulus consisted of 241 hexagons that alternated, independently and pseudorandomly, between black and white according to a special predetermined binary sequence. Local retinal response components were extracted using the Fast m-Transform Algorithm. Three of six eyes had undergone cataract surgery with implantation of a posterior chamber lens (PCL). In accordance with an increase in light transmission through PCLs, these eyes showed an increase in the MF-ERG responses. MF-ERG allowed accurate topographic mapping of focal areas of retinal dysfunction in all patients tested. There was good correspondence to anatomical changes detected by fluorescein angiography. The high resolution of the MF-ERG enables detection of small areas of retinal pathology. It thus presents a clinically useful, noninvasive method in the early diagnosis and follow-up of macular disease.
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More From: Der Ophthalmologe : Zeitschrift der Deutschen Ophthalmologischen Gesellschaft
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