NeuroImage | 2019

Two cortical deficits underlie amblyopia: A multifocal fMRI analysis

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


ABSTRACT Amblyopia is a relatively common (incidence 3%) developmental disorder in which there is loss of vision as a consequence of a disruption to normal visual development. Although the deficit is monocular and known to be of cortical origin, the nature of the processing deficit is controversial. Human behavioral studies have identified two main deficits — a loss of contrast sensitivity and perceived spatial distortions. Here we use a multifocal fMRI approach to ascertain, in a group of anisometropic amblyopes, whether these two deficits have a single common cause or whether they are the result of two underlying independent cortical disorders. We found that fMRI magnitudes were attenuated in amblyopic eye stimulation, and that there was poor fidelity for co‐localization of the activity clusters between the amblyopic and fellow‐fixing eye stimulation. These effects varied across eccentricities and correlate with the degree of amblyopia but not with one another, suggesting two independent cortical deficits: a reduced responsiveness as well as reduced fidelity of spatial representation. These deficits are independent of eccentricity within the central field and consistent across early cortical visual areas. HighlightsA multi‐focal fMRI analysis was used to map the deficits of the amblyopic brain.The diseased brain had deficits in response magnitude.The diseased brain had deficits in response localization.These two cortical deficits are independent in amblyopia.

Volume 190
Pages 232-241
DOI 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.09.045
Language English
Journal NeuroImage

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