Title of article :
Evaluation of Contrast Sensitivity, Color Vision and Visual Acuity in Patients with and without Diabetes
Author/Authors :
Heravian, Javad Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Shoeibi, Naser Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Azimi, Abbas Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Ostadi Moghaddam, Hadi Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Yekta, AbbasAli Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Esmaily, Habibollah Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Yasini, Shayesteh MSc in Optometry
Abstract :
Purpose: To investigate the discriminative ability of contrast sensitivity (CS), color vision and best
corrected visual acuity (BCVA) in detecting functional losses in diabetic participants with and
without retinopathy
Methods: In this cross sectional study we examined 105 patients in Khatam-Al-Anbia Eye Hospital
of Mashhad University of Medical Sciences including 70 diabetic patients (35 with retinopathy and
35 without retinopathy in fundus photography) with 35 control non-diabetic subjects matched for
age and sex. The diabetic participants were subgrouped according to the level of retinopathy
(EDTRS classification). CS was examined by means of CSV-1000 E instrument at 3, 6, 12 and 18
cpd, respectively in each eye. Color discrimination ability was measured with the Farnsworth D-15
test and BCVA by Snellen chart.
Results: When comparing visual performance of the right and left eyes of patients in each group,
only the mean CS values at 6 cpd differ significantly in diabetics without retinopathy (P=0.01). CS
was significantly lower in the diabetic eyes with retinopathy than in the normal eyes in all spatial
frequencies. Comparing to control group, there was a statistically significant CS loss in spatial
frequencies of 3, 6, 18 cpd in the diabetic eyes without retinopathy (P<0.05). The mean logMAR
BCVA and color vision abnormalities were significantly higher in the diabetic eyes with retinopathy
than in the normal eyes or the diabetic eyes without retinopathy (P<0.001). There was no
significant difference between the visual performance of those diabetics without retinopathy
compared to the control group. The sensitivity and specificity were almost identical for all tests of
visual function in the right and left eyes. The sensitivity and specificity of the CS test in 6 cpd were
71% and 82% which were significantly higher than other spatial frequencies. So the discriminative
ability of this spatial frequency in detecting diabetics with retinopathy was 71% and in detecting
those without was 82%. The sensitivity and the specificity of the color vision test and BCVAs
(logMAR≥0.05, Snellen≤9/10) were 79% and 94% respectively.
Conclusion: There was significant difference between the visual performance of those diabetics
with retinopathy compared to those without. There was excellent agreement between the results of
these three tests. The findings also suggest that the appropriate combination of existing tests may
be a useful method of improving screening accuracy in diabetic patients.
Keywords :
Diabetic Retinopathy , Color Vision , Best Corrected Visual Acuity , Contrast Sensitivity
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics