Author:
de Seze J.,Hache J. C.,Vermersch P.,Arndt C. F.,Maurage C. A.,Pasquier F.,Laplanche J. L.,Ruchoux M. M.,Leys D.,Destée A.,Petit H.
Abstract
Objective: The predictive value of electrophysiologic visual testing in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) was investigated, and the retinal pathologic findings in three cases are reported.Background: The fatal prognosis of CJD, its transmissibility, and the lack of treatment make early diagnosis essential in averting human-to-human transmission. Electroretinogram and visual evoked potentials have been studied in few cases of CJD.Methods: A visual electrophysiologic examination was performed in 41 consecutive patients referred with suspected CJD. The disease had been diagnosed in 24 patients (CJD group; 15 were confirmed neuropathologically and 9 by clinicolaboratory methods in accordance with diagnostic criteria). The remaining 17 patients were diagnosed with other neurologic disorders, and served as a control group.Results: Flash electroretinogram revealed a significant decrease in the amplitude of the B1 wave (<60 µV) and the B/A ratio (<2) in the CJD group compared with those in the control group. Flash visual evoked potentials revealed no significant difference in latency, but amplitude was increased (>10 µV) in the CJD group, especially in patients with myoclonus.Conclusions: The visual electrophysiologic abnormalities provide an interesting noninvasive diagnostic tool in idiopathic CJD. The B1-wave decrease is closely correlated with the outer plexiform layer abnormalities observed on neuropathologic examination.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
32 articles.
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