Author/Editor     Šuštar, Maja; Stirn-Kranjc, Branka; Brecelj, Jelka
Title     Children with complete or incomplete congenital stationary night blindness:: ophthalmological findings, standard ERGs and ON-OFF ERGs for differentiation between types
Translated title     Otroci s prirojeno stacionarno nočno slepoto: oftalmološke značilnosti, standardni ERG ter ON-OFF ERG razlikovanje med kompletno in nekompletno obliko
Type     članek
Source     Zdrav Vestn
Vol. and No.     Letnik 81, št. Suppl
Publication year     2012
Volume     str. I-16-28
Language     eng
Abstract     Purpose: Congenital stationary night blindness (CSNB) is a group of retinal disorders with diverse clinical characteristics. The most common types are complete and incomplete CSNB. Both can have normal fundus appearance and an electronegative waveform of the electroretinogram (ERG). Our aim was to defineERG differences between complete and incomplete CSNB in a pediatric population. Subjects and methods: In 12 children (5-18 years old) with clinical signs of stationary night blindness, standard full-field ERGs and ON-OFF ERGs were recorded. These were abnormal if the implicit time was above 95 % of the upper confidence limit and the amplitude below 5 % of the lower confidence limit of the normative data. Comparisons between the data were performe with Mann-Whitney U tests, with p < 0.01 considered as significant. Results: According to the ERG characteristics, complete CSNB was diagnosed in 8 of the children, and incomplete CSNB in the remaining 4 children. Dark-adapted ERGs showed negative waveforms of the combined rod-cone response in all 12 children, with normal a-waves and reduced b-waves, which indicated post-photoreceptor dysfunction. No rod response was detectable in the childrenwith complete CSNB, with reduced rod response in those with incompleteCSNB. Light-adapted ERGs showed normal or subnormal amplitudes of the cone response and the 30-Hz flicker response in complete CSNB, where the cone response a-waves were also distinctly broadened. In the children with incomplete CSNB, the light-adapted ERGs were significantly reduced. In complete CSNB, the ON-OFF ERGs showed alterations of only the ON-response component (ON-bipolar cell dysfunction), while in incomplete CSNB, both the ON- and OFF-responses were reduced (ON- and OFF-bipolar cell dysfunction). (Abs. trunc. at 2000 ch.)