Abstract
ABSTRACTMultiple sclerosis (MS) without optic neuritis causes color-vision deficit but the evidence for selective color deficits in parvocellular-Red/Green (PC-RG) and koniocellular-Blue/Yellow (KC-BY) pathways is inconclusive. We investigated selective color-vision deficits at different MS stages. Thirty-one MS and twenty normal participants were tested for achromatic, red-green and blue-yellow sinewave-gratings (0.5 and 2 cycles-per-degree (cpd)) contrast orientation discrimination threshold. Red-green mean threshold at 0.5cpd in established-MS and blue-yellow mean threshold in all MS participants were abnormal. These findings show blue-yellow versus red-green color test is useful in differentiating MS chronicity, which helps to better understand the mechanism of colour-vision involvement in MS.
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