3 research outputs found
Multitasking Compensatory Saccadic Training Program for Hemianopia Patients: A New Approach With 3-Dimensional Real-World Objects
Producción CientíficaPurpose: To examinewhether a noncomputerized multitasking compensatory saccadic
training program (MCSTP) for patients with hemianopia, based on a reading
regimen and eight exercises that recreate everyday visuomotor activities using threedimensional
(3D) real-world objects, improves the visual ability/function, quality of life
(QL), and functional independence (FI).
Methods: The 3D-MCSTP included four in-office visits and two customized homebased
daily training sessions over 12weeks. A quasiexperimental, pretest/posttest study
designwas carried out with an intervention group (IG) (n = 20) and a no-training group
(NTG) (n = 20) matched for age, hemianopia type, and brain injury duration.
Results: The groups were comparable for the main baseline variables and all participants
(n = 40) completed the study. The IGmainly showed significant improvements in
visual-processing speed (57.34% ± 19.28%; P < 0.0001) and visual attention/retention
ability (26.67% ± 19.21%; P < 0.0001), which also were significantly greater (P < 0.05)
than in the NTG. Moreover, the IG showed large effect sizes (Cohen’s d) in 75% of the
totalQL and FI dimensions analyzed; in contrast to the NTGthat showed negligiblemean
effect sizes in 96% of these dimensions.
Conclusions: The customized 3D-MCSTP was associated with a satisfactory response in
the IG for improving complex visual processing, QL, and FI.
Translational Relevance: Neurovisual rehabilitation of patientswith hemianopia seems
more efficient when programs combine in-office visits and customized home-based
training sessions based on real objects and simulating real-life conditions, than no treatment
or previously reported computer-screen approaches, probably because of better
stimulation of patients´ motivation and visual-processing speed brain mechanisms
Visual processing speed in hemianopia patients secondary to acquired brain injury: a new assessment methodology
Producción CientíficaBackground: There is a clinical need to identify diagnostic parameters that objectively quantify and monitor the
effective visual ability of patients with homonymous visual field defects (HVFDs). Visual processing speed (VPS) is an
objective measure of visual ability. It is the reaction time (RT) needed to correctly search and/or reach for a visual
stimulus. VPS depends on six main brain processing systems: auditory-cognitive, attentional, working memory,
visuocognitive, visuomotor, and executive. We designed a new assessment methodology capable of activating
these six systems and measuring RTs to determine the VPS of patients with HVFDs.
Methods: New software was designed for assessing subject visual stimulus search and reach times (S-RT and R-RT
respectively), measured in seconds. Thirty-two different everyday visual stimuli were divided in four complexity
groups that were presented along 8 radial visual field positions at three different eccentricities (10o, 20o, and 30o).
Thus, for each HVFD and control subject, 96 S- and R-RT measures related to VPS were registered. Three additional
variables were measured to gather objective data on the validity of the test: eye-hand coordination mistakes
(ehcM), eye-hand coordination accuracy (ehcA), and degrees of head movement (dHM, measured by a head-tracker
system). HVFD patients and healthy controls (30 each) matched by age and gender were included. Each subject
was assessed in a single visit. VPS measurements for HFVD patients and control subjects were compared for the
complete test, for each stimulus complexity group, and for each eccentricity.
Results: VPS was significantly slower (p < 0.0001) in the HVFD group for the complete test, each stimulus
complexity group, and each eccentricity. For the complete test, the VPS of the HVFD patients was 73.0% slower
than controls. They also had 335.6% more ehcMs, 41.3% worse ehcA, and 189.0% more dHMs than the controls.
Conclusions: Measurement of VPS by this new assessment methodology could be an effective tool for objectively
quantifying the visual ability of HVFD patients. Future research should evaluate the effectiveness of this novel
method for measuring the impact that any specific neurovisual rehabilitation program has for these patients
Ocular Surface Pathology in Patients Suffering from Mercury Intoxication
Purpose: To report the ocular surface pathology of patients suffering from acute/subacute mercury vapor intoxication. Design: Cross-sectional study. Participants: Male workers intoxicated with inorganic mercury referred for ophthalmic involvement and healthy control subjects. Methods: The following tests were performed: dry eye (DE)-related symptoms indicated by the ocular surface disease (OSDI) index questionnaire; tear osmolarity; analysis of 23 tear cytokine concentrations and principal component and hierarchical agglomerative cluster analyses; tear break-up time (T-BUT); corneal fluorescein and conjunctival lissamine green staining; tear production by Schirmer and tear lysozyme tests; mechanical and thermal corneal sensitivity (non-contact esthesiometry); and corneal nerve analysis and dendritic cell density by in vivo confocal microscopy (IVCM). Results: Twenty-two out of 29 evaluated patients entered the study. Most had DE-related symptoms (OSDI values > 12), that were severe in 63.6% of them. Tear osmolarity was elevated (>308 mOsms/L) in 83.4% of patients (mean 336.23 (28.71) mOsm/L). Corneal and conjunctival staining were unremarkable. T-BUT was low (<7 s) in 22.7% of patients. Schirmer test and tear lysozyme concentration were low in 13.6% and 27.3% of cases, respectively. Corneal esthesiometry showed patient mechanical (mean 147.81 (53.36) mL/min) and thermal thresholds to heat (+2.35 (+1.10) °C) and cold (−2.57 (−1.24) °C) to be significantly higher than controls. Corneal IVCM revealed lower values for nerve density (6.4 (2.94) n/mm2), nerve branching density (2 (2.50) n/mm2), and dendritic cell density (9.1 (8.84) n/mm2) in patients. Tear levels of IL-12p70, IL-6, RANTES, and VEGF were increased, whereas EGF and IP-10/CXCL10 were decreased compared to controls. Based on cytokine levels, two clusters of patients were identified. Compared to Cluster 1, Cluster 2 patients had significantly increased tear levels of 18 cytokines, decreased tear lysozyme, lower nerve branching density, fewer dendritic cells, and higher urine mercury levels. Conclusions: Patients suffering from systemic mercury intoxication showed symptoms and signs of ocular surface pathology, mainly by targeting the trigeminal nerve, as shown by alterations in corneal sensitivity and sub-basal nerve morphology