Visual evoked potential abnormalities in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and comparison with Friedreich's ataxia

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Abstract

Pattern-reversal visual evoked potentials (VEPs), recorded in 15 visually asymptomatic patients fulfilling the clinical and electrophysiological criteria of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTD), were abnormal in 5 and possibly abnormal in another 3. Five patients showed a prolongation of P100 latency, one a reduction of amplitude and one a possibly abnormal “scotomatous” waveform. In 9 cases abnormalities were detected on neuro-ophthalmological examination. These were poorly correlated with VEP abnormalities, except for patients with 2 or more clinical eye signs. Relative central scotomata were found in the patient with an abnormal waveform. VEP abnormalities, where present, were usually fairly comparable in the 2 eyes. In comparison with a group of Friedreich's ataxia cases there was a lower overall incidence of VEP abnormalities in CMTD, but little to suggest a qualitative difference in the nature of the visual pathway pathology.

All 4 patients with unequivocally abnormal VEPs had experienced atypical symptoms suggestive of CNS involvement. In none of these was it possible to sustain an alternative diagnosis. It is concluded that a minor degree of visual pathway involvement may be present in many CMTD cases, in spite of the fact that optic atrophy is only rarely reported, and that the VEP latency may reflect the degree to which other parts of the CNS are involved.

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