These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Human cone photoreceptor responses measured by the electroretinogram [correction of electoretinogram] a-wave during and after exposure to intense illumination. Author: Paupoo AA, Mahroo OA, Friedburg C, Lamb TD. Journal: J Physiol; 2000 Dec 01; 529 Pt 2(Pt 2):469-82. PubMed ID: 11101655. Abstract: We recorded the a-wave of the electroretinogram from human subjects with normal vision, using a corneal fibre electrode and ganzfeld stimulation under photopic conditions, so as to extract the parameters of cone phototransduction. The amplitude of bright flash responses provided a measure of the massed circulating current of the cones, while the amplitude of dim flash responses provided a measure of the product of the fraction of cone photopigment present, and the amplification constant of transduction within the cones. In the presence of steady background illumination, the cone circulating current declined to half at 3000 photopic trolands, and to a quarter at 20 000 photopic trolands. At very early times after the delivery of a near-total bleach, we could not determine the level of circulating current as our bright flashes did not appear to saturate the a-wave (presumably because so little pigment was present). However, by 20-30 s after a total bleach, the cone circulating current had returned to its dark-adapted level. Following smaller bleaches (when ca 50 % of the pigment remained present) the bright flashes were able to saturate the a-wave even at very early times. Within 3 s of extinction of the illumination, the cone circulating current had returned to its dark-adapted level. This is at least a factor of 300 times faster than the period of ca 15 min required for full recovery of rods exposed to the same level of bleach, and indicates a major difference between rods and cones in the way that they cope with the photoproducts of bleaching. Despite the very rapid recovery of circulating current after bleaches, the recovery of dim-flash sensitivity was much slower, with a time constant of ca 1.5 min after a near-total bleach. This time course is very similar to previous measurements of the regeneration of cone photopigment, and it seems highly probable that the reduction in dim-flash sensitivity results from pigment depletion.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]