Night vision in a case of vitamin A deficiency due to malabsorption.
Open Access
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in British Journal of Ophthalmology
- Vol. 67 (1) , 37-42
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.67.1.37
Abstract
Night vision was tested electroretinographically and psychophysically in a vitamin A deficient patient before and after therapy. Vitamin A deficiency resulted from malabsorption due to a jeujunoileal bypass operation. Before therapy the patient had severely reduced cone and rod function. After the reversal operation, accompanied by 5 injections of a total of 500,000 units of vitamin A, complete recovery of cone and rod functions was observed within 7 months. Shortly after therapy rod sensitivity reached the normal level, while the time course of rod adaptation remained slower than normal and the dark-adapted electroretinographic (ERG) responses were subnormal. At later stages the ERG responses reached normal amplitudes but rod adaptation stayed slow. Only after 7 months did night vision reach the normal level with regard to the time course of rod adaptation, rod sensitivity, and ERG responses.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
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