Sight can recover quickly in amblyopiaOctober 20, 2005New research findings led by Thomas Krahe and Ary S. Ramoa of Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine offer two pieces of good news for treating children with amblyopia. First, the researchers have found evidence that the neural wiring in the brain's visual system is not dismantled by visual deprivation-for example, due to a cataract-during what is known as the "critical period" of vision development. Rather, the wiring is merely deactivated, capable of being rapidly reactivated when vision is restored. And secondly, the researchers wrote in an article published in the October 20, 2005, issue of Neuron, their findings suggest that allowing children with amblyopia to use both eyes-rather than patching the stronger eye to encourage use of the weaker one-enables better recovery. Such findings are clinically important because about three percent of people suffer loss of visual acuity in one eye during early development. In their experiments, Krahe, Ramoa, and their colleagues first deprived ferrets of vision in one eye for six days. They then uncovered the deprived eye for different periods and followed the course of recovery of the eye. Measurement of neural signals in the ferret's visual system revealed that restoration of binocular vision began in as little as 30 minutes to two hours and was similar to normal in about four hours. The researchers also found that blocking protein synthesis in the brain with drugs did not affect recovery. Such protein synthesis is necessary if neuronal regrowth is required for recovery, indicating that the basic visual wiring had been preserved during deprivation. In a preview of the paper in the same issue of Neuron, Takao Hensch wrote that "The results reported here are wonderfully harmonious with the rapid improvement in the acuity of human infants upon restoring visual input during the critical period. Adapting these principles may also motivate therapeutic strategies to aid the precise recovery of function in older, well-established circuits once thought to be beyond repair." Krahe, Ramoa, and their colleagues concluded that "The results presented here may have important implications for understanding recovery in infants that have relatively short periods of visual deprivation, as occurs in the case of congenital cataracts. These patients, who typically undergo eye operations within the first one or two months of postnatal life, were found to start recovering visual acuity as early as 1 hr after restoration of normal visual input. Our findings suggest a neurobiological basis for this rapid improvement in visual acuity. Latent deprived eye connections may rapidly reactivate upon recovery of normal vision. "Another implication of our study is that binocular vision is likely to play an important role in recovery from amblyopia," they wrote. "Although clinical evidence suggests that patching the better eye of a child is required to improve spatial resolution in the amblyopic eye, strong support for a role of binocular recovery in the initial stages of amblyopia has been reported, and large ongoing clinical studies are re-examining the roles of patching and binocular vision in recovery.\\\ Cell Press |
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| Related Amblyopia Current Events and Amblyopia News Articles Treating Lazy Eyes with a Joystick Four percent of all children suffer from amblyopia, better known as "lazy eye syndrome." Preclinical work shows how one gene causes severe mental retardation Researchers at Duke University Medical Center and the University of North Carolina have discovered in mice how a single disrupted gene can cause a form of severe mental retardation known as Angelman syndrome. Serious vision problems in urban preschoolers rare but not that rare, Hopkins study shows In what is believed to be the first comprehensive eye disease study among urban pre-schoolers, Johns Hopkins investigators report that while vision problems are rare, they are more common than once thought. Also, they say, a small group of children with easily treatable visions problems go untreated, while others get treatments they don't need. Test allows early detection of vision problems in infants with hemangiomas of eyelids In children with vascular birthmarks around the eye, even partial blockage of vision can lead to visual loss due to amblyopia. Action video games improve vision Video games that involve high levels of action, such as first-person-shooter games, increase a player's real-world vision, according to research in today's Nature Neuroscience. Genetic mutation identified for eye complaint An international research collaboration including research teams from the Children's Hospital in Boston (USA), King's College London and the Peninsula Medical School, has identified a gene that, when mutated, causes Duane syndrome. Corneal transplant technique shows promise in children For infants and children with blinding diseases of the cornea, a sophisticated new corneal transplantation technique offers the hope of improving vision while overcoming the technical difficulty and low success rate of traditional penetrating keratoplasty (PK) in children, according to reports in the current issue of the Journal of AAPOS (American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus). Antidepressants enhance neuronal plasticity in the visual system In the April 18 issue of Science, scientists from the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Italy and the Neuroscience Centre at the University of Helsinki, Finland, provide new information about the mechanism of action of antidepressant drugs. Early vision screening associated with better eyesight in children with amblyopia Children who screen positive for amblyopia, reduced vision in one eye, before age 2 appear to have better visual outcomes than those whose vision problems are detected during screenings between ages 2 and 4. USC study -- largest of its kind -- finds older children more likely to develop vision disorders In a study of more than 6,000 Los Angeles-area children - the largest study of its kind - researchers at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California (USC) found that both strabismus (commonly known as cross-eyed or wall-eyed) and amblyopia (often referred to as lazy eye) were more prevalent in older children than in younger children. More Amblyopia Current Events and Amblyopia News Articles |
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