Convergent strabismic amblyopia in cats
- 1 September 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Experimental Brain Research
- Vol. 60 (1) , 1-9
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00237012
Abstract
Experiments were carried out to determine the effects of different types of experimental strabismus on the acuities of retinal ganglion cells. Six kittens were raised from twenty-one days of age with an esotropia surgically induced by myectomy of the lateral rectus muscle and a large portion of the superior oblique muscle. The results are compared with those, previously reported, from five other cats also made esotropic, but by tenotomy of the lateral rectus. All animals tested behaviourally were amblyopic in the strabismic eye. For square wave gratings, the visual acuities were 1.0 to 2.5 cyc/deg through the strabismic eye compared with 6.0 to 7.5 cyc/deg through the non-deviating eye. The cut-off spatial frequencies were determined for 132 brisk sustained cells from five of the myectomized strabismic cats. There was a loss of approximately 20% in cut-off spatial frequency when compared with both normal and tenotomized cats. A correlate of the physiologically observed difference between the tenotomized cats and the myectomized cats was also found in the morphology of cells in the lateral geniculate nucleus. The tenotomized cats showed no evidence of cell shrinkage in laminae receiving a projection from the amblyopic eye whereas in the myectomized cats large differences were observed in cell cross-sectional areas between laminae receiving input from the amblyopic eye and those receiving input from the non-deviating eye. Together, these findings indicate that the presence of a neural deficit in the retina of strabismic cats is associated with the actual removal of extra-ocular muscle and probably has little to do with the optical quality of images arriving at the retina.This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Loss of Retinal X-cells in Cats with Neonatal or Adult Visual Cortex DamageScience, 1982
- Functional amblyopia in kittens with unilateral exotropiaExperimental Brain Research, 1980
- Retrograde axonal transport of target tissue-derived macromoleculesNature, 1980
- Development of receptive field properties of retinal ganglion cells in kittens raised with a convergent squintExperimental Brain Research, 1980
- Visual resolution of retinal ganglion cells in monocularly-deprived catsBrain Research, 1980
- Visual Resolution and Receptive Field Size: Examination of Two Kinds of Cat Retinal Ganglion CellScience, 1979
- Development of receptive-field properties of retinal ganglion cells in kittensJournal of Neurophysiology, 1977
- Extraocular proprioceptive projections to the visual cortexExperimental Brain Research, 1977
- Visual resolution in young kittensVision Research, 1976
- Is amblyopia due to inappropriate stimulation of the "sustained" pathway during development?British Journal of Ophthalmology, 1974