Visão de cores e sensibilidade ao contraste em indivíduos com diabete melito: avaliação psicofísica e eletrofisiológica / Color vision and contrast sensitivity in subjects with diabetes mellitus : psychophysical and electrophysiological evaluation

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2004

RESUMO

Before the establishment of retinopathy detectable in the ophthalmologic examination, color vision and contrast sensitivity may be altered in diabetic patients. (Dean e cols., 1997; Kurtenbach e cols., 1999). The sensory deficits have been attributed to vascular alterations and to (Greenstein e cols., 2000; Lieth e cols., 2000). However, there are no definite conclusions about the pathological mechanisms involved in the vision losses. The objective of this work was to identify in patients with type 2 diabetes and normal fundus, possible alterations in color vision and chromatic and achromatic contrast sensitivity, and to correlate the sensory losses with the electrophysiological function of the retina. The psychophysical evaluation was made using the computerized Cambridge Colour Test and PSYCHO contrast sensitivity test. (Ventura e cols., 2003a, Ventura e cols., in press). Electrophysiological function was assessed using the full field electroretinogram (ERG). Patients results (n= 40; age= 56 years ± 9 time of diabetes= 7 years ± 9) with results obtained with age-matched controls. The color discrimination threshold was higher than the normal limit in 50% of the patients in the protan axis, in 37% in the deutan axis and in 28% in the tritan axis. Chromatic contrast sensitivity in both the red/green and the blue yellow axes showed a loss of about 10 dB in patients as compared to controls throughout the frequencies tested (0.2 to 2cpd). In the achromatic contrast sensitivity function the loss found in patients was smaller, of about 6 dB throughout the frequency range tested (3 to 20 cpd). In the ERG b-wave and in the oscillatory potentials the amplitudes were smaller, respectively, in 24% and 39% of the patients compared to controls. The corresponding latencies were longer in 45% and 76% of the patients. The pattern of color discrimination losses of the patients indicates that there is a diffuse loss of color vision, as opposed to most previous results indicating that tritan losses. The contrast sensitivity results showed that the chromatic pathways were more affected than the achromatic pathways. The alterations found in the full field ERG are suggestive of inner retina losses. The present findings confirm and extend previous reports. Their clinical application may change the concept of diabetic retinopathy.

ASSUNTO(S)

visão sensibilidade ao contraste diabetes melito eletrofisiologia eletrorretinograma psicofísica contrast sensitivity vision diabetes mellitus percepção de cor eletrophysiology eletroretinography color perception psychophysics

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