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Preserved retinotopic brain connectivity in macular degeneration
Author(s) -
Haak Koen V.,
Morland Antony B.,
Rubin Gary S.,
Cornelissen Frans W.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
ophthalmic and physiological optics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.147
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1475-1313
pISSN - 0275-5408
DOI - 10.1111/opo.12279
Subject(s) - extrastriate cortex , neuroscience , visual cortex , retinotopy , macular degeneration , functional magnetic resonance imaging , fixation (population genetics) , visual field , eye movement , retina , visual system , retinal , psychology , medicine , ophthalmology , population , environmental health
Purpose The eye disease macular degeneration ( MD ) is a leading cause of blindness worldwide. There is no cure for MD , but several promising treatments aimed at restoring vision at the level of the retina are currently under investigation. These treatments assume that the patient's brain can still process appropriately the retinal input once it is restored, but whether this assumption is correct has yet to be determined. Methods We used functional magnetic resonance imaging ( fMRI ) and connective field modelling to determine whether the functional connectivity between the input‐deprived portions of primary visual cortex (V1) and early extrastriate areas (V2/3) is still retinotopically organised. Specifically, in both patients with juvenile macular degeneration and age‐matched controls with simulated retinal lesions, we assessed the extent to which the V1‐referred connective fields of extrastriate voxels, as estimated on the basis of spontaneous fMRI signal fluctuations, adhered to retinotopic organisation. Results We found that functional connectivity between the input‐deprived portions of visual areas V1 and extrastriate cortex is still largely retinotopically organised in MD , although on average less so than in controls. Patients with stable fixation exhibited normal retinotopic connectivity, however, suggesting that for the patients with unstable fixation, eye‐movements resulted in spurious, homogeneous signal modulations across the entire input‐deprived cortex, which would have hampered our ability to assess their spatial structure of connectivity. Conclusions Despite the prolonged loss of visual input due to MD , the cortico‐cortical connections of input‐deprived visual cortex remain largely intact. This suggests that the restoration of sight in macular degeneration can rely on a largely unchanged retinotopic representation in early visual cortex following loss of central retinal function.

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