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The Pupillary Light Reflex in Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension.

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posted on 2016-06-10, 00:00 authored by JC Park, HE Moss, JJ McAnany
PURPOSE: To evaluate the effects of idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) on rod-, cone-, and melanopsin-mediated pupillary light reflexes (PLRs). METHODS: Pupillary light reflexes elicited by full-field, brief-flash stimuli were recorded in 13 IIH patients and 13 normal controls. Subjects were dark-adapted for 10 minutes and the PLR was recorded in response to short-wavelength flashes (0.001 cd/m2: rod condition; 450 cd/m2: melanopsin condition). Subjects were then exposed to a rod-suppressing field and 10 cd/m2 long-wavelength flashes were presented (cone condition). Pupillary light reflexes were quantified as the maximum transient constriction (rod and cone conditions) and the post-illumination pupil constriction (melanopsin condition), relative to the baseline pupil size. Diagnostic power was evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. RESULTS: The IIH patients had significantly smaller PLRs under the melanopsin (P < 0.001) and rod (P = 0.04) paradigms; a trend for reduced cone-mediated PLRs was also found (P = 0.08). Receiver operating characteristic analysis indicated areas under the curves (AUC) of 0.83 (melanopsin-meditated; P = 0.001), 0.71 (rod-mediated; P = 0.07), and 0.77 (cone-mediated; P = 0.02). The AUC (0.90, P < 0.001), sensitivity (85%), and specificity (85%) were high for ROC analysis performed on the mean of the rod, cone, and melanopsin PLRs. CONCLUSIONS: Pupillary light reflex reductions in IIH patients indicate compromised RGC function. PLR measurement, particularly under rod- and melanopsin-mediated conditions, may be a useful adjunct to standard clinical measures of visual function in IIH.

Funding

Supported by National Institutes of Health Grants R00EY019510, K12EY021475, K23EY024345, and P30EY01792 (Bethesda, MD, USA); an Illinois Society for the Prevention of Blindness Research Grant (Chicago, IL, USA); Sybil B. Harrington RPB Special Scholar Award (New York, NY, USA); and an unrestricted departmental grant from Research to Prevent Blindness (New York, NY, USA).

History

Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science © 2016 Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology Publications.

Publisher

Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology

Language

  • en_US

issn

0146-0404

Issue date

2016-01-01

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