4.7 Article

Local neuroplasticity in adult glaucomatous visual cortex

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-24709-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union [641805, 661883]
  2. Graduate School of Medical Sciences (GSMS), University of Groningen, The Netherlands

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This study investigated the neuroplasticity of the adult visual cortex in glaucoma patients using fMRI and neural modeling. The results showed differences in fMRI signals and population receptive fields (pRFs) between glaucoma patients and controls, with these differences correlating with disease severity. Additionally, glaucoma patients exhibited local pRF shifts and enlargements in early visual areas. These findings are important for understanding the mechanisms of visual impairment in glaucoma patients.
The degree to which the adult human visual cortex retains the ability to functionally adapt to damage at the level of the eye remains ill-understood. Previous studies on cortical neuroplasticity primarily focused on the consequences of foveal visual field defects (VFD), yet these findings may not generalize to peripheral defects such as occur in glaucoma. Moreover, recent findings on neuroplasticity are often based on population receptive field (pRF) mapping, but interpreting these results is complicated in the absence of appropriate control conditions. Here, we used fMRI-based neural modeling to assess putative changes in pRFs associated with glaucomatous VFD. We compared the fMRI-signals and pRF in glaucoma participants to those of controls with case-matched simulated VFD. We found that the amplitude of the fMRI-signal is reduced in glaucoma compared to control participants and correlated with disease severity. Furthermore, while coarse retinotopic structure is maintained in all participants with glaucoma, we observed local pRF shifts and enlargements in early visual areas, relative to control participants. These differences suggest that the adult brain retains some degree of local neuroplasticity. This finding has translational relevance, as it is consistent with VFD masking, which prevents glaucoma patients from noticing their VFD and seeking timely treatment.

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