Scotopic threshold responses to infrared irradiation in cats

Florian Gekeler, Kei Shinoda, Georgios Blatsios, Annette Werner, Eberhart Zrenner, Florian Gekeler, Kei Shinoda, Georgios Blatsios, Annette Werner, Eberhart Zrenner

Abstract

Infrared (IR) irradiation is frequently used in ophthalmological diagnosis and treatment. It has been used to selectively stimulate photodiode-based retinal prostheses to prove their function. Data concerning the natural IR-sensitivity of the retina are contradictory. In our experiments in dark-adapted cats an IR-laser (826 nm) and IR emitting diodes (875 nm) elicited clear scotopic threshold responses. Comparison of the two lasers (IR and a visible laser at 670 nm) using Lambs template and our experimental data revealed very similar differences in retinal sensitivity (4.28 and 3.94+/-0.29 log units, respectively). The fact that the cat retina is sensitive to IR-irradiation under certain conditions has important implications in interpreting the results from retinal prostheses and rewards further attention in its use in many ophthalmological applications.

Source: PubMed

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