Letter Distortion Mapping in Amblyopia: Spatial Patterns, Stability, and Relationship to Visual Acuity.
Molaei Haneieh, Abbas Farishta Reza, Farivar Reza
AI Summary
Amblyopic letter distortions are common, stable, and spatially unique to individuals, yet correlate strongly with visual acuity loss, offering a valuable measure of dysfunction.
Abstract
Purpose
To investigate whether letter-based perceptual distortions in amblyopia follow spatially consistent patterns across different letters and to determine if these spatial distortion maps are letter specific or reflect a common underlying spatial organization of visual distortion in the amblyopic eye.
Methods
Twenty-one individuals with amblyopia completed a distortion mapping task using the letters A, D, and E, shown at 36 visual field locations. Each letter was first viewed with the fellow eye and then with the amblyopic eye. Participants reported distortions, which were recorded to generate binary spatial maps. The task was repeated over three sessions to assess within-subject consistency, and spatial correlations were analyzed across letters and subjects.
Results
Letter distortions were reported by 95% of participants and remained consistent across sessions. Within subjects, spatial distortion maps were significantly correlated across letters in 62% of cases (P ≤ 0.028), suggesting shared spatial patterns. However, across subjects, maps were largely uncorrelated, indicating individualized distortion profiles. No single letter consistently showed more distortion across the group, χ2(2) = 1.279, P = 0.5. A strong positive correlation was found between interocular visual acuity difference and overall distortion intensity (r = 0.70, P < 0.001), consistent across all letters.
Conclusions
Letter distortions in amblyopia are highly prevalent, reliable, and spatially organized within individuals but idiosyncratic across subjects. These distortions correlate strongly with visual acuity loss, highlighting their potential as a clinically valuable and perceptually relevant measure for characterizing amblyopic visual dysfunction.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts5
Letter distortions were reported by 95% of participants with amblyopia and remained consistent across sessions in a study of 21 individuals with amblyopia.
Within individuals with amblyopia, spatial distortion maps were significantly correlated across letters (A, D, and E) in 62% of cases (P ≤ 0.028), suggesting shared spatial patterns, in a study of 21 individuals with amblyopia.
Across subjects with amblyopia, spatial distortion maps were largely uncorrelated, indicating individualized distortion profiles, in a study of 21 individuals with amblyopia.
A strong positive correlation was found between interocular visual acuity difference and overall distortion intensity (r = 0.70, P < 0.001) in individuals with amblyopia, consistent across all letters (A, D, and E), in a study of 21 individuals with amblyopia.
Letter distortions in amblyopia are highly prevalent, reliable, and spatially organized within individuals but idiosyncratic across subjects, correlating strongly with visual acuity loss, highlighting their potential as a clinically valuable and perceptually relevant measure for characterizing amblyopic visual dysfunction, in a study of 21 individuals with amblyopia.
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