Clinical relevance of phase of steady-state VEPs to P100 latency of transient VEPs

Pattern visual evoked potentials (VEPs) to transient and steady-state stimulation were recorded in 10 normal subjects at 4 levels of luminance (180, 57, 22 and 11 cd/m 2). VEPs were also recorded in 5 patients with optic neuropathy at a fixed luminance (180 cd/m 2). The relationship between P100 lat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology 1991-03, Vol.80 (2), p.89-93
Hauptverfasser: Tobimatsu, Shozo, Tashima-Kurita, Shizuka, Nakayama-Hiromatsu, Miyuki, Kato, Motohiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pattern visual evoked potentials (VEPs) to transient and steady-state stimulation were recorded in 10 normal subjects at 4 levels of luminance (180, 57, 22 and 11 cd/m 2). VEPs were also recorded in 5 patients with optic neuropathy at a fixed luminance (180 cd/m 2). The relationship between P100 latency of transient VEPs (T-VEPs) and the phase of steady-state VEPs (S-VEPs) was analyzed. As luminance decreased in normal subjects, P100 latency was prolonged and the phase lag increased. A significant linear relationship between the P100 latency and phase was found. Patients showed both the prolonged P100 latency and the delayed phase. The simple linear regression line of the phase-P100 latency function of normal subjects closely matched the patients' values. These results suggest that changes in the phase may be equivalent to changes in the P100 latency. S-VEPs, therefore, may be clinically useful in assessing visual function.
ISSN:0168-5597
0013-4694
1872-6380
DOI:10.1016/0168-5597(91)90145-N