4.4 Article

Full-field electroretinography in age-related macular degeneration: an overall retinal response

Journal

ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA
Volume 99, Issue 2, Pages E253-E259

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/aos.14571

Keywords

age-related macular degeneration; full-field electroretinography; functional testing; peripheral retina

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The study used full-field electroretinography to examine the response of eyes with AMD, finding significant differences in light-adapted 3.0 a-wave implicit time and 30-Hertz flicker peak time between patients with late AMD and those without vitreoretinal disease. In early AMD patients, only the difference in light-adapted 3.0 a-wave implicit time compared to the control group was significant.
Purpose Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is generally considered a disease of the macula. However, recent studies show peripheral retinal lesions are prevalent in patients with AMD, indicative of a disease process that is more widespread. Full-field electroretinography (ffERG) measures an electrical response, not only from the macula, but from the entire retina. We wanted to study the ffERG response in eyes with AMD. Methods We performed full-field electroretinography (RETI-port/scan 21, Roland, Berlin) in 13 patients with early AMD, 25 patients with late AMD and 24 individuals without vitreoretinal disease as a control group. Dawson-Trick-Litzkow fibre electrodes were used. Statistical analysis was performed and a p-value After adjusting for multiple comparisons, both the light-adapted 3.0 a-wave implicit time (p < 0.001) and 30-Hertz flicker peak time (p = 0.012) showed significant difference between patients with late AMD and individuals without vitreoretinal disease. There was a significant difference in the light-adapted 3.0 a-wave implicit time (p = 0.011) between patients with early AMD and the control group, but the difference in 30 Hz flicker peak time was not significant (p = 0.256). Conclusion The difference in cone function measured by light-adapted 3.0 a-wave implicit time and 30-Hertz flicker peak time in early and late AMD when compared to healthy controls suggests a more diminished overall response when AMD has reached later stages.

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