Abnormalities in color vision and contrast sensitivity in Parkinson's disease

Abstract
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter found in the retina. Delays in the visual evoked responses and abnormalities in contrast sensitivity occur in patients with Parkinson's disease. Improvement in the P100 has followed L-dopa therapy. Suspected abnormalities at the retinal level in Parkinson's disease are observed in reductions in photopic, scotopic, and pattern-derived electroretinograms. We studied 35 patients with Parkinson's disease and 26 controls of comparable age and visual acuities using visual evoked responses, color vision, and contrast sensitivity testing. Contrast sensitivity thresholds were significantly different at most frequencies tested, using both stationary and temporally modulated sinusoidal gratings. The total error score of the Farnsworth-Munsell 100 Hue Test revealed significant differences between the patients and controls. The contrast thresholds derived from certain spatial frequencies and the total error in color score were significantly related to the duration of disease. A stepwise discriminant analysis correctly identified 94% of the patients and 94% of the controls. The significant error in chromatic discrimination observed in Parkinson's disease patients may be due to altered intraretinal dopaminergic synaptic activity in these patients.