Visual training after central retinal loss limits structural white matter degradation: an MRI study
Anna Kozak, Marco Ninghetto, Michał Wieteska, Michał Fiedorowicz, Marlena Wełniak-Kamińska, Bartosz Kossowski, Ulf T. Eysel, Lutgarde Arckens, Kalina Burnat

TL;DR
Visual training after retinal damage in cats helps preserve brain white matter structure, suggesting potential benefits for low vision patients.
Contribution
The study shows that early motion-perception training can stabilize white matter degradation after retinal lesions.
Findings
Trained cats with retinal lesions showed reduced white matter degradation in specific brain regions.
Fractional Anisotropy values in motion-sensitive area V5/PMLS were unaffected by retinal loss.
Training led to better preservation of white matter metrics compared to untrained lesioned cats.
Abstract
Macular degeneration of the eye is a common cause of blindness and affects 8% of the worldwide human population. In adult cats with bilateral lesions of the central retina, we explored the possibility that motion perception training can limit the associated degradation of the visual system. We evaluated how visual training affects behavioral performance and white matter structure. Recently, we proposed (Kozak et al. in Transl Vis Sci Technol 10:9, 2021) a new motion-acuity test for low vision patients, enabling full visual field functional assessment through simultaneous perception of shape and motion. Here, we integrated this test as the last step of a 10-week motion-perception training. Cats were divided into three groups: retinal-lesioned only and two trained groups, retinal-lesioned trained and control trained. The behavioral data revealed that trained cats with retinal lesions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOphthalmology and Visual Impairment Studies · Glaucoma and retinal disorders · Retinal Diseases and Treatments
