Nonselective Loss of Contrast Sensitivity in Visual System Testing in Early Type I Diabetes

Author:

Di Leo Mauro AS1,Caputo Salvatore1,Falsini Benedetto1,Porciatti Vittorio1,Minnella Angelo1,Greco Aldo V1,Ghirlanda Giovanni1

Affiliation:

1. The Department of Internal Medicine and Ophthalmology, Catholic University Rome; and the Institute of Neurophsiology, National Council of Research Pisa, Italy

Abstract

Objective Psychophysical methods in patients with diabetes mellitus reveal deficits of central or foveal vision. Our aim was to evaluate the contrast-sensitivity thresholds in 24 insulin-dependent (type I) diabetic patients with a short disease duration and without retinopathy, taking into account metabolic control. Research Design and Methods The control group consisted of age-matched nondiabetic subjects. None had visual or systemic symptoms. Contrast sensitivity measured at eight different spatial frequencies to sinusoidal bar patterns of 0.6–12.2 cycles/deg can detect functional defects in the spatially sensitive retinal ganglion cells or in higher visual pathways. We performed two different temporal types of contrast-sensitivity testing, dynamic (8 Hz) and static (0 Hz). Results Significant losses with dynamic contrast-sensitivity test at all but the highest spatial frequencies (i.e., 12.2 cycles/deg) were shown, whereas there was significant attenuation of contrast sensitivity at five spatial frequencies (1.0, 1.4, 2.2, 7.1, and 9.6 cycles/deg) in the static mode. Grating losses (<2SD of control means) of contrast sensitivity were found in 33.3% (dynamic) and in 72.9% (static) of eyes of diabetic patients. HbA1c values were positively correlated at variable spatial frequencies (1.0, 1.4, and 2.2 cycles/deg for dynamic test and 0.6, 1.0, 1.4, 2.2, 4.8, and 7.1 cycles/deg for static test). Conclusions Our results suggest an early, generally nonselective neuronal damage of visual pathways that occurs before the onset of clinically detectable retinopathy. The visual deficit may be related directly to the effects of diabetes; repetitive minor hypoglycemic insults may contribute more than a marked hyperglycemic condition to the mechanisms underlying physiological changes along the optic nerve.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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