Two-color pupillometry in enhanced S-cone syndrome caused by NR2E3 mutations

Apr 2, 2016Documenta ophthalmologica. Advances in ophthalmology

Using two-color pupil tests to study enhanced blue-sensitive vision in people with NR2E3 gene mutations

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Abstract

Transient pupillary light reflexes (PLRs) to low-luminance stimuli were unrecordable in all four patients with enhanced S-cone syndrome (ESCS).

  • Short-wavelength stimuli elicited larger amplitude responses in light-adapted full-field ERGs compared to long-wavelength stimuli.
  • Three of four patients exhibited super-normal a-wave amplitudes in response to short-wavelength stimuli.
  • All patients showed lower-than-normal cone-mediated PLRs, although these were larger for short-wavelength stimuli at high luminances compared to long-wavelength stimuli.
  • Sustained PLRs to high-luminance stimuli were normal, indicating preserved melanopsin-mediated responses.
  • The findings suggest intact inner-retinal function in ESCS patients, with potential for two-color pupillometry to assess retinal function.

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