ND - Visual Development and Amblyopia - Week 3 Flashcards
Infants have poorer visual acuity. Is this due to poor optics?
No
Explain the state of the peripheral and central retina of an infant and how this contributes to the state of their visual acuity. Also mention the state of the visual cortex.
The rod-dominated peripheral retina appears normal.
The all-cone fovea contains widely-spaced cells and poorly developed cones.
The visual cortex is not fully developed.
Do the afferent pathways from the two eyes separate before birth or do they remain segregated?
They remain segregated as they project to the visual cortex
What does monocular deprivation lead to?
Ocular dominance shift
contralateral deprivation results in ipsilateral domination
Consider a deprived eye inducing ocular dominance shift. Does the non-deprived eye take over most of the available cortical space or does it remain confined to its normal half?
It takes over most of the available space
What occurs with binocular deprivation? Are receptive fields abnormal?
Causes only fewer binocular cells
Receptive fields are not very abnormal
What can be said of the LGN afferents terminating in layer 4? What happens to them in early development?
They have markedly overlapping arbors. With early development, distinct ocular dominance patterns are evident.
Is there competition between the geniculocortical inputs of the two eyes for cortical space?
Yesd
What is essential to establishing normal connectivity in the LGN and visual cortex?
Form vision
What kind of changes occur earlier along the visual pathway, in the retina and LGN?
Shrinkage of cells in the deprived LGN laminae
Is there a critical period for susceptibility to ocular dominance shifts or is it relatively equal (2)?
There is a critical period, and the different visual functions have different critical periods (stereopsis, contrast sensitivity, motion perception etc)
Define occlusion amblyopia.
When one eye is occluded by congenital cataract or lid ptosis
Define anisometropic amblyopia.
When the two eyes have very different refractive errors
Define strabismic amblyopia.
When one eye is deviated
Why is visual acuity poor in one eye in conditions like occlusion/anisometropic/strabismic amblyopia? Explain why.
Abnormal neural development, few cortical cells are driven by the amblyopic eye