Author:
Jeffrey Munsamy Alvin,L Brautaset Rune,A Moodley Anandan
Abstract
Purpose: The present study investigated the integrity of contrast sensitivity (CS), colour vision, and pattern evoked vision potentials (VEP) in non-immunocompromised people living with HIV (NIPLHIV) without retinitis.
Methods: All participants were visually asymptomatic and no history of ocular disorders, with CD4 counts above 350 cells/ mm3, low viral loads and on ART. Thirty NIPLHIV and 30 age-matched HIV negative control groups underwent F100 hue colour assessment, Pelli-Robson contrast sensitivity assessment and pattern-reversal VEP.
Results: The median F100 total error scores for NIPLHIV and controls was 33 (IQR: 28;41) and 28 (IQR: 26;48.50) respectively, this was statistically different (p= 0.020). The median P100 amplitude for NIPLHIV was 5.75 μV (IQR: 4.4;8.85) and 4.05 μV (IQR: 3.2;5.8) for controls, this was statistically different (p=0.045). The mean LogCS score 1.83±0.14 and the median P100 peak latency was 105.45 msec (IQR: 102.98;108.98) for NIPLHIV. Higher CD4+ counts were significantly associated with having higher F100 total error scores (OR=0.995; p=0.018), lower P100 amplitudes (OR=1.007; p=0.010) and higher P100 latencies (OR=0.994; p=0.011).
Conclusion: Contrast sensitivity function, colour vision, and VEP were uncompromised in NIPLHIV. Associations between CD4 counts with F100 total error scores and P100 latency may aid in the surveillance of vision of NIPLHIV.
Keywords: HIV; vision disorders.
Publisher
African Journals Online (AJOL)
Cited by
1 articles.
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