Cause of Disease
Cause of Disease
Cause of disease
Ocular dominance columns (stripes of neurones in visual cortex that respond preferentially
to one eye or the other) established during critical period of neonatal development (1-2
years in humans). Normally, the primary visual cortex develops so it receives input from
both eyes equally.
Ambylopia caused by a problem with the eye which interferes with normal cortical visual
development, cells in primary visual cortex became dominated by input from one eye.
Causes a progressive deterioration of visual acuity in amblyopic eye until the end of the
critical period, at which time visual acuity will stabilise, unless treated.
Ambylopia often asymptomatic not aware because vision in stronger eye is normal, so only
aware when stronger eye is occluded. Occasionally patients complain one eye is blurry
Usually parents bring child to ophthalmologist because underlying cause (e.g. strabismus,
ptosis etc.).
Signs: problems with binocular vision (e.g. stereoscopic depth perception). Depth perception
from monocular cues (e.g. perspective and motion parallax) remains normal.
May also have poor pattern recognition and poor acuity, anisometropic amblyopia usually
undetected until picked up by vision screening
Current interventions:
Conclusion
Amblyopia - decreased vision in one or both eyes due to abnormal development of vision
Three main causes strabismus, anisometropia and deprivation/occlusion disrupts normal
visual cortex development, leading to reduced visual acuity in amblyopic eye and
subsequently patient may present with problems with binocular vision
Treatment involves first treating underling cause, then treating amblyopia if present, by
occlusion or pharmacological penalization of stronger eye