Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
The aim of this study was to characterize the signal processing mechanisms that lead to an ERG response and to use this characterization for obtaining more robust responses in patients who display feeble responses with standard recordings. We studied the influence of sinusoidally modulating backgrounds on flash ERGs and the relationship between the ERG components’ amplitudes and the momentary Weber fraction of the flash stimulus.
Methods
ERG recordings were performed in nine healthy subjects and three RP patients. In four normal subjects, we measured the response to flashes (500 cd/m2, 1 ms duration) on a steady background (50 cd/m2) and on a sine wave (50 cd/m2 mean luminance) modulating background at 1, 5, 10, and 25 Hz temporal frequencies. The flashes were delivered at eight different phases (0–315° in a step of 45°) during the modulating background sine wave. The responses to the backgrounds were also recorded and subtracted from the responses to flash plus modulating backgrounds to obtain the flash ERGs at the different phases. The recordings in the remaining five normal subjects and the RP patients were performed with a subset of these stimuli.
Results
The flash ERGs were strongly modulated by the backgrounds particularly at low frequencies and were enhanced when the momentary Weber fraction was large. The amplitudes of the components could be described by the Weber fraction plus a saturating nonlinearity and a delay in the processing of background luminance. The strength of the modulation decreased with increasing peak time of the component. Furthermore the background luminance delay was positively correlated with the peak time. The effect was also present in RP patients.
Conclusions
A sine wave background of about 1 Hz can be used to enhance ERG responses. Weber fraction of the flashes is an adequate quantification of stimulus for describing the amplitudes of the ERGs. The data provide basic information on how background luminance is processed in ERG generating mechanisms. The response enhancement can be used in clinical applications to obtain a more robust comparison between normal and patient data.
Funder
German Research Council
Universitätsklinikum Erlangen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Physiology (medical),Sensory Systems,Ophthalmology
Reference16 articles.
1. Robson AG, Frishman LJ, Grigg J, Hamilton R, Jeffrey BG, Kondo M, Li S, McCulloch DL (2022) ISCEV Standard for full-field clinical electroretinography (2022 update). Doc Ophthalmol 144:165
2. Lamb TD (2011) Light adaptation in photoreceptors. In: Levin LA, Nilsson SFE, Ver Hoeve J, Wu SM, Kaufman PL, Alm A (eds) Adler’s Physiology of the Eye. Saunders Elsevier, Edinburgh
3. Hood DC, Graham N, von Wiegand TE, Chase VM (1997) Probed-sinewave paradigm: a test of models of light-adaptation dynamics. Vis Res 37:1177–1191
4. Lankheet MJ, Van Wezel RJ, Prickaerts JH, van de Grind WA (1993) The dynamics of light adaptation in cat horizontal cell responses. Vis Res 33:1153–1171
5. Lee BB, Dacey DM, Smith VC, Pokorny J (2003) Dynamics of sensitivity regulation in primate outer retina: the horizontal cell network. J Vis 3:513–526