Introduction to Electrophysiology Flashcards

1
Q

What is electrophysiology?

A

Study of the electrical properties of cells and tissues

Based on the principle of resting membrane potentials and action potentials

Requires the use of electrodes to detect action potentials and a monitor to display changes in electrical current

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2
Q

What is Electromyography (EMG)?

A

Used to assess both muscular activity as well as nerve supply.

Malfunctioning of skeletal muscle by either muscle or nerve will result in differences in graphs.
e.g. myasthenia gravis

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3
Q

How is the eye charged?

A

It’s a dipole. The cornea has a relative positive charge and the retina a relative negative charge

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4
Q

What happens when dipoles move?

A

They cause electric field changes which creates an electrical deflection that we can measure

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5
Q

What does an electro-oculogram (EOG) measure?

A

Records the electric dipole between the front and back of the eye (The EOG measures the corneoretinal standing potential by using lateral eye movements in conditions of varying luminance)

Reflects RPE activity (therefore tests RPE activity). Recording difference between front and back of the eye.

Can help distinguish localized from diffuse retinal disease
E.g. in Best vitelliform macular dystrophy – ERG is normal but EOG light peak is markedly reduced

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6
Q

How are measurements in EOG set up?

A

Measurements between pairs of electrodes at medial and lateral canthi are taken in scotopic conditions (rod only) followed by mesopic conditions (cone and rod)

Signal amplitude is minimum in the dark and maximum in light

The light peak to dark trough is calculated = Arden ratio

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7
Q

What are the normal and abnormal ratios for an EOG?

A

A normal ratio > 1.80

Ratio < 1.65 is significantly subnormal

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8
Q

What is an electroretinogram (ERG)?

A

Electrical mass response of the retina to a light stimulus

See response of retina itself to a light stimulus (is the retina responding to the light)
ERG – different refractive errors respond to different lights differently even in normal retinas so must look at what it is affected by during the ERG

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9
Q

What is an electroretinogram (ERG) affected by?

A

Affected by:
- Intensity of stimulus
- Duration of stimulus
- Stimulus wavelength
- Stimulus pattern

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10
Q

How are ERG electrodes placed?

A

Corneal electrodes place via a contact lens

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11
Q

What is an A-wave on an ERG?

A

Corneal -ve deflection. Signifies hyperpolarisation of rods and cones (mainly outer retina) – more positive

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12
Q

What is a B-wave on an ERG?

A

Corneal +ve deflection. Signifies depolarisation of ON-centre bipolar cells (mainly inner retina)

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13
Q

What is a C-wave on an ERG?

A

Transepithelial potential due to hyperpolarisation of inner most RPE

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14
Q

What is a D-wave on an ERG?

A

Corneal +ve deflection. Caused by depolarisation of OFF-centre bipolar cells

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15
Q

What does a slow-rising C wave depend on?

A

Slow-rising ‘c’ wave depends on intact pigment epithelium (RPE)

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16
Q

What are the 3 ERG settings and what are they used for?

A

Flash ERG =
Mixed rod-cone response (meso)

Dim white/blue flash in scotopic conditions = Isolated rod response

Bright flash with 30 Hz flicker =
Isolated cone response (rods have poor temporal resolution and unable to respond to a 30Hz stimulus)

17
Q

What is an ERG used for?

A

Can help distinguish retinal disease from optic nerve disease; it CANNOT distinguish macular disease from optic nerve disease – Because it looks at the retina as a whole, not specifically at the macular

Can help distinguish conditions affecting choroidal circulation from conditions affecting central retinal artery circulation – How? Because the c-wave relies on intact RPE (as this is supplied by the choroid)

18
Q

What settings of an ERG isolate rods and cones?

A

Different ERG settings can be used to isolate rods and cones

Rod dystrophies become apparent with a dim blue/white light in scotopic conditions (isolated rod response)

Cone dystrophies produce an abnormal flicker ERG

19
Q

How do we see conditions affecting the inner retina on an ERG?

A

Conditions affecting the inner retina only can produce a typical ‘negative ERG” where the a wave is intact (outer retina) but the b wave is abolished

20
Q

How do we see conditions like retinal disease/macular disease on an ERG?

A

For localized retinal disease/macular disease, multifocal ERG can be used

21
Q

What are VEPs?

A

Visual Evoked Potentials

22
Q

What do VEPs measure?

A

Measures visual cortex response to a visual stimulus

Based on principle of EEG

Patients must have their refractive errors corrected for the test

Reverse checkboard stimulus used

Flash VEP can be used in uncooperative patients – e.g infants and coma patients

23
Q

What test tells us if the signal is reaching the occipital lobe?

A

VEP (visual evoked potentials)
Is the signal reaching the Occipital Lobe? This will give us a physical response from the lobe to tell us that they are viewing the image
Not as often used in clinic compared to MRI or OCT as need to ensure first point of investigation is to check it’s not organic

24
Q

What are VEP’s useful in?

A
  • Flash VEP useful in assessing vision in uncooperative/preverbal/nonverbal patients
  • Can distinguish organic from functional visual loss
  • Occasionally used in demyelinating disorders – increased P100 latency