Light-Adapted Electroretinogram Differences in Autism Spectrum Disorder.

Light-Adapted Electroretinogram Differences in Autism Spectrum Disorder. J Autism Dev Disord. 2020 Feb 07;: Authors: Constable PA, Ritvo ER, Ritvo AR, Lee IO, McNair ML, Stahl D, Sowden J, Quinn S, Skuse DH, Thompson DA, McPartland JC Abstract Light-adapted (LA) electroretinograms (ERGs) from 90 individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), mean age (13.0 ± 4.2), were compared to 87 control subjects, mean age (13.8 ± 4.8). LA-ERGs were produced by a random series of nine different Troland based, full-field flash strengths and the ISCEV standard flash at 2/s on a 30 cd m-2 white background. A random effects mixed model analysis showed the ASD group had smaller b- and a-wave amplitudes at high flash strengths (p < .001) and slower b-wave peak times (p < .001). Photopic hill models showed the peaks of the component Gaussian (p = .035) and logistic functions (p = .014) differed significantly between groups. Retinal neurophysiology assessed by LA-ERG provides insight into neural development in ASD. PMID: 32034650 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders - Category: Psychiatry Authors: Tags: J Autism Dev Disord Source Type: research