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Lesion location influences perception of homonymous scotomata during flickering random dot pattern stimulation
Authors:U Schiefer  M Skalej  M Kolb  TJ Dietrich  R Kolb  C Braun  D Petersen
Affiliation:University Eye Hospital, Department II, Tübingen, Germany. ulrich.schiefer@uni-tuebingen.de
Abstract:An attempt was made to clarify whether the site of postchiasmal lesions affects subjective perception of homonymous visual field defects during stimulation with flickering random dot patterns (white noise-field). Out of 56 patients with homonymous hemianopia, 38 (68%) perceived scotomata in this situation, but 18 (32%) discerned none at all. Neuroradiologic superposition of cerebral lesions detected by computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed that nearly all patients who perceived their scotomata had lesions involving the primary visual cortex or the perigeniculate region, whereas those who received no scotoma had lesions centered within the optic radiation. Functional MRI of six normal subjects during stimulation with flickering random dot patterns indicated predominant activation of the primary visual cortex. Since noise-field defects were most frequently perceived by patients whose lesion involved the primary visual cortex, it appears that the sensitivity of noise-field campimetry depends on the site of damage in the visual pathway. The explanation for this may be that damage to long-range horizontal connections impairs filling-in processes.
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