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1.
Journal of Forensic Medicine ; (6): 632-638, 2021.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-984064

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES@#To study the quantitative and qualitative differences of visual evoked potential (VEP) in monocular visual impairment after different parts of visual pathway injury.@*METHODS@#A total of 91 subjects with monocular visual impairment caused by trauma were selected and divided into intraocular refractive media-injury group (eyeball injury group for short), optic nerve injury group, central nervous system injury and intracranial combined injury group according to the injury cause and anatomical segment. Pattern Reversal visual evoked potential (PR-VEP) P100 peak time and amplitude, Flash visual evoked potential (F-VEP) P2 peak time and amplitude were recorded respectively. SPSS 26.0 software was used to analyze the differences of quantitative (peak time and amplitude) and qualitative indexes (spatial frequency sweep-VEP acuity threshold, and abnormal waveform category and frequency) of the four groups.@*RESULTS@#Compared with healthy eyes, the PR-VEP P100 waveforms of the intraocular eyeball injury group and the F-VEP P2 waveforms of the optic nerve group showed significant differences in prolonged peak time and decreased amplitude in injured eyes (P<0.05). The PR-VEP amplitudes of healthy eyes were lower than those of injured eyes at multiple spatial frequencies in central nervous system injury group and intracranial combined injury group (P<0.05).The amplitude of PR-VEP in patients with visual impairment involving central injury was lower than that in patients with eye injury at multiple spatial frequencies. The frequency of VEP P waveforms reaching the threshold of the intraocular injury group and the optic nerve injury group were siginificantly different from the intracranial combined injury group, respectively(P<0.008 3), and the frequency of abnormal reduction of VEP amplitude of threshold were significantly different from the central nervous system injury group, respectively(P<0.008 3).@*CONCLUSIONS@#VEP can distinguish central injury from peripheral injury, eyeball injury from nerve injury in peripheral injury, but cannot distinguish simple intracranial injury from complex injury, which provides basic data and basis for further research on the location of visual impairment injury.


Subject(s)
Humans , Evoked Potentials, Visual , Eye , Optic Nerve , Optic Nerve Injuries , Vision Disorders/etiology
2.
Journal of Forensic Medicine ; (6): 125-128, 2017.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-984914

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES@#To study the effect of different attentional conditions on the event-related potential (ERP) components generated by the visual information stimuli related to visual acuity, and provide a theoretical reference for clinical forensic visual objective evaluation.@*METHODS@#With visual acuity optotypes as normal form of visual information stimuli, 15 volunteers as study subjects were supposed to account the visual acuity optotypes under the attentional condition of visual stimuli. Furthermore, the subjects were required to listen to the storytelling carefully under the non-attentional condition of visual stimuli, and after the examination, they needed to answer the story-related questions. All the EEG results of two different attentional conditions from the subjects were recorded by 32 channel ERP system.@*RESULTS@#Under two attentional conditions, P₁ and P₃₀₀ components were evoked by the visual acuity optotypes on supra-threshold and threshold visual acuity levels, while only P₁ component were evoked by the visual acuity optotypes on sub-threshold levels. In the ERP waveforms evoked by the visual acuity optotypes on supra-threshold, P₁ and P₃₀₀ amplitudes under attentional condition were larger than that under non-attentional condition.@*CONCLUSIONS@#Attentional conditions can influence the detection of visual acuity. P₃₀₀ component can be used to distinguish the visual acuity levels with supra-threshold and sub-threshold under non-attentional condition.


Subject(s)
Humans , Attention/physiology , Electroencephalography , Evoked Potentials , Evoked Potentials, Visual , Visual Acuity
3.
Journal of Forensic Medicine ; (6): 232-235, 2017.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-984882

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES@#To explore the composition characteristic of event related potential (ERP) in different visual acuity levels, and to provide theoretical basis for the objective assessment of visual acuity.@*METHODS@#Monocular stimulus was performed on 16 selected subjects. The subjects were required to look straight at the screen ahead and count the amount of stimuli from different directions. The pictures of optotype stimulus which corresponding to three different visual acuity levels were showed in the center of the screen. The ERP results were recorded separately.@*RESULTS@#(1) The P₁ amplitudes of match stimuli recorded under the supra-threshold visual acuity level were higher than that of match stimuli recorded under the threshold and sub-threshold visual acuity levels. There was no significant difference between the P₁ amplitudes of match stimuli recorded under the threshold and sub-threshold visual acuity levels. The tendency of conflict stimuli was similar to that of match stimuli under three visual acuity levels. (2) In the 340-500 ms post-stimulus range, P₃₀₀ component was found under supra-threshold and threshold visual acuity levels; no P₃₀₀ component was found in corresponding time window under sub-threshold visual acuity. The differences of P₃₀₀ amplitudes among three visual acuity levels were statistically significant. The amplitudes from high to low were the supra-threshold, threshold and sub-threshold visual acuity levels.@*CONCLUSIONS@#ERP can be a potential new method for the objective assessment of visual acuity in forensic medicine.


Subject(s)
Adult , Humans , Evoked Potentials , Evoked Potentials, Visual , Photic Stimulation , Visual Acuity/physiology , Visual Perception
4.
Journal of Forensic Medicine ; (6): 215-218, 2015.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-983992

ABSTRACT

Mild cognitive impairment caused by craniocerebral trauma is the key points and difficulties in judicial authentication. This article has comparative analysis of each mode of event-related potential (classical Oddball, Eriksen flanker task and so on), which can provide a more objective method for such craniocerebral trauma cases in clinical forensic judicial authentication.


Subject(s)
Humans , Cognitive Dysfunction , Craniocerebral Trauma , Evoked Potentials , Forensic Sciences
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