The electrofunctional tests were useful to detect small changes in the visual function of patients affected by initial stages of OGD. Therefore, P-VEP and PERG recordings appear to be a useful tool for early diagnosis of the optic nerve involvement in Graves' disease.
Although the final astigmatism was about the same in the two suture groups, the DRS seems to lead to faster restoration of visual function due to early stability.
Unilateral retinitis pigmentosa (URP) is a rare tapetoretinal dystrophy affecting only one eye. The François and Verriest criteria are necessary to make a correct diagnosis of URP: exclude all infective etiologies, check that the clinical signs of retinitis are present in the affected eye and ensure the total absence of any signs or symptoms of retinitis pigmentosa in the fellow eye. The standard electroretinogram and standard electro-oculogram are very useful for the correct diagnosis. Other pigmentary retinopathies simulating retinitis pigmentosa have to be excluded, such as previous retinal inflammatory diseases like syphilis, rubeola, other viral diseases and onchocerciasis. In this paper, 4 cases of URP are reported.
Pattern-reversal electroretinograms (PERG) and visual evoked potentials (P-VEP) were measured for 10 eyes from 10 rigorously selected patients with bilateral advanced primary open angle glaucoma (POAG), before and after surgical trabeculectomy. The aim was to establish whether electrofunctional examinations improved after major IOP reduction. Only one eye at random was operated, and the fellow eye was used as control. The aim of this study, using electrofunctional examinations, was to clarify whether ganglion cell damage was reversible after marked reduction of IOP by surgery. The results indicate that glaucomatous damage seems to be irreversible.
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