Diurnal variation of visual field size in patients with postretinal lesions
- 1 March 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Experimental Brain Research
- Vol. 27-27 (3-4) , 245-249
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00235501
Abstract
Perimetry at various times of day in patients with large visual field defects due to postretinal lesions showed significant variations of visual field size. The largest visual fields were observed at noon, the smallest in the evening. Such systematic variations were observed only in patients who showed a gradual increase of increment threshold between the intact parts of the visual field and the scotoma. In two patients who showed an abrupt transition between intact and blind areas of the visual field, no obvious diurnal variation was observed. It is suggested that an endogenous modulation of neuronal sensitivity coupled to a hypothetical circadian oscillator is the basis of the diurnal variation.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effect of reticular stimulation on spontaneous and evoked activity in the cat visual cortexBrain Research, 1976
- VISUAL CAPACITY IN THE HEMIANOPIC FIELD FOLLOWING A RESTRICTED OCCIPITAL ABLATIONBrain, 1974
- The effect of mesencephalic reticular stimulation on intracellular potentials of cat lateral geniculate neuronsBrain Research, 1973
- Residual Visual Function after Brain Wounds involving the Central Visual Pathways in ManNature, 1973
- The Tubinger Perimeter of Harms and AulhornArchives of Ophthalmology (1950), 1971
- Rhythmic variations in energy metabolism.1970
- Diurnal variation of time perceptionPsychological Research, 1970
- Circadian rhythm in indices of human performance, physical fitness and stress resistance.1968
- [Brain temperatures in awake chickens].1968
- Circadian Rhythms in ManScience, 1965