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. 1999 Feb;106(2):258-68.
doi: 10.1016/S0161-6420(99)90064-7.

Yearly rates of rod and cone functional loss in retinitis pigmentosa and cone-rod dystrophy

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Yearly rates of rod and cone functional loss in retinitis pigmentosa and cone-rod dystrophy

D G Birch et al. Ophthalmology. 1999 Feb.

Abstract

Objective: To provide the first measures of the relative rates of rod and cone functional loss in patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) or cone-rod dystrophy (CRD).

Design: Five-year, prospective natural history study.

Participants: Ninety-six patients (67 with RP and 29 with CRD) retaining measurable rod-mediated visual function and 5 normal subjects were tested at baseline and annually for 4 consecutive years.

Main outcome measures: Tests of visual function included visual acuity, dark-adaptation thresholds, dark-adapted static perimetry, and rod and cone computer-averaged electroretinograms (ERGs), which were obtained over a range of retinal illuminances. Intervisit variability for each measure was obtained in a subset of patients who were tested twice within a 2-month interval and was used to determine whether an individual patient had shown progression, regression, or no change over a particular study interval.

Results: Over a 4-year interval, a significant number of patients with RP (60%) and CRD (62%) showed a decline in cone ERG amplitude. For rod ERG amplitude, the percentage of patients with RP or CRD showing progression was 64% and 45%, respectively. Although visual acuity, dark-adapted threshold, and rod visual field area also declined significantly over the 4-year period, the mean rate of change and the numbers of patients showing progression on these measures were lower than those for ERG measures. On specialized ERG testing, the yearly change in rod ERG threshold in RP was greater than the yearly change in cone ERG threshold, and the rate of progression varied significantly among inheritance types. For patients with CRD, the yearly change in rod threshold was comparable to the yearly change in cone ERG threshold.

Conclusions: This study helps to define the natural progression of rod-mediated and cone-mediated functional loss in patients with RP and CRD.

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