Cerebral achromatopsia is a type of
color-blindness caused by damage to the cerebral cortex of the brain, rather
than abnormalities in the cells of the eye's retina. It is often confused with
congenital achromatopsia but underlying physiological deficits of the disorders
are completely distinct.
Signs and symptoms
Patients with cerebral achromatopsia deny
having any experience of color when asked and fail standard clinical
assessments like the Farnsworth-Munsell 100-hue test (a test of color ordering
with no naming requirements). Patients may often not notice their loss of color
vision and merely describe the world they see as being "drab". Most
describe seeing the world in "shades of gray". This observation notes
a key difference between cerebral and congenital achromatopsia, as those born
with achromatopsia have never had an experience of color or gray.
Pathophysiology
Cerebral achromatopsia differs from other
forms of color blindness in subtle but important ways. It is a consequence of
cortical damage that arises through ischemia or infarction of a specific area
in the ventral occipitotemporal cortex of humans. This damage is almost always
the result of injury or illness.
Classification
A 2005 study examined 92 case studies since
1970 in which cerebral lesions affected color vision. The severity and size of
the visual field affected in cerebral achromatopsiacs vary from patient to
patient.
Bilateral and hemifield
The majority of cases in the 2005 study
were the result of bilateral lesions in the ventral occipital cortex. It is
unknown whether this was the result of bilateral lesions being more likely to
produce color-loss symptoms, or if it was a sampling effect of patients with
more severe brain trauma more often being admitted for treatment. In many of
the cases examined, patients reported only partial loss of color vision. The
locations of color vision loss can be restricted to one hemisphere or one
quarter of the visual field. The term "hemiachromatopsia" has been
used to denote patients who experience loss of color in only one hemisphere of
the visual field. However, as applied to achromatopia resulting from brain
trauma, the term is incomplete in characterizing the often-complex nature of
the vision loss.
Transient
In still rarer cases, temporary ischemia of
the associated ventral occipital cortex can result in transient achromatopsia.
The condition has thus far been characterized only in stroke patients and
provides further support for a color processing area.
In one case, a 78-year-old stroke victim
had lost the ability to identify color, but was unaware of his deficit until
doctors performed color discretion tests. Even when presented with this
information, the patient believed he had retained his ability to perceive color
even though the world around him appeared grey. He attributed this achromatism
to "poor lighting" and it took several weeks for the patient to fully
appreciate the extent of his disability. In addition, the characteristic
comorbidity of prosopagnosia was present. After two months and frequent
sessions with doctors, tests indicated his color had fully returned. The
ischemia caused by lesions on the posterior cerebral arteries had subsided and
follow up MRI scans indicated that blood flow had once again returned to the
VOC.
Co-occurrence with other deficits
The most common disorder seen alongside
cerebral achromatopsia is prosopagnosia, the inability to recognize or recall
faces. In some studies, the comorbidity is seen as high as 72%. This
significance has not been overlooked and is a subject of ongoing research. See
§ Difference from congenital achromatopsia below.
Cerebral achromatopsiacs often have poor
spatial acuity.
Diagnosis
The most common tests perform to diagnose
cerebral achromatopsia are the Farnsworth-Munsell 100-hue test, the Ishihara
plate test, and the color-naming test. Testing and diagnosis for cerebral
achromatopsia is often incomplete and misdiagnosed in doctor’s offices.
Remarkably, almost 50% of tested patients
diagnosed with cerebral achromatopsia are able to perform normally on the
color-naming test. However, these results are somewhat in question because of
the sources from which many of these reports come. Only 29% of cerebral
achromatopsia patients successfully pass the Ishihara plate test, which is a
more accepted and more standardized test for color blindness.
Difference from congenital achromatopsia
The most apparent distinguishing
characteristic between congenital achromatopsia and cerebral achromatopsia is
the sudden onset of color vision loss following a severe head injury or damage
to the occipital lobe following a stroke or similar ischemic event.
Non-invasive imaging techniques can be the most helpful in determining whether
the area of damage following a traumatic event is an correlated with
color-vision processing. Simple diagnostic tools can also be used to determine
whether a patient is a likely candidate for further testing, as advancing
imaging procedures can often prove expensive and unnecessary.
Co-morbid factors can be valuable
indicators of the likelihood of cerebral achromatoptsia. One disorder often
seen alongside cerebral achromatopsia is prosopagnosia, the inability to recall
or recognize faces. The correlation is still the subject of ongoing research,
but the most telltale clue in this association is the close proximity of brain
lesions seen in prosopagnosics and cerebral achromatopsiacs without
prosopagnosia. Figure 1 illustrates overlap of brain lesions compiled from
numerous case reports of both disorders. A common area of damage associated
with both disorders can be seen in the right occipital lobe.
Treatment
No current treatment is known for the
disorder.
History
The number of reported cases of cerebral
achromatopsia are relatively few compared with other forms of color-vision
loss. In addition, the severity of the color perception deficits along with
other psychological effects vary between patients.
Current research
Based on the knowledge gained from cerebral
achromatopsia case studies, current research is focusing on learning more about
the cortical area involved in color processing.
A recent study provided some of the first
direct evidence of color-specific processing in the ventral occipital cortex. A
subject with a history of seizure activity was examined using fMRI and
electrode implantation. Using the fMRI, researchers examined the areas of blood
oxygenation in the occipital lobe as the subject viewed various color-specific
stimuli. The result of the experiment was the identification of an area in the
subject, slightly anterior to the lesioned area in cerebral achromatic
patients, that responded to variance in color stimulation. The resolution of
the MRI was a limiting factor in identifying areas corresponding to specific
colors. The next portion of the study used an electrode implanted in the right
hemisphere in the location identified by the fMRI scan as pertaining to color
processing. It was found the electrical activity of the area increased when the
subject was presented with blue stimuli. The next, and most significant finding
of the study, was that when the electrode was used to present an electrical stimulus
in the subject’s brain, the subject reported the perception of the color blue.
Such a result is consistent with other reports of electrical stimulation in
visual field maps eliciting perception of phosphines in subjects’ visual field.
The color stimulus presented is not the
only factor in determining the involvement of the VOC in color processing. The
amount of attention and the type of object also affect the activiation of the
VOC. It has been noted that this area of the occipital lobe may not be a
processing center but rather a pathway that is a critical intersection of
several cortical areas involved in color perception.
Society and culture
The disorder is often presented as evidence
of our incomplete knowledge of color processing. Color vision research is a
well-studied field of modern neuroscience and the underlying anatomical
processing in the retina have been well categorized. The presence of another
factor in the perception of color by humans illustrates the need for more
research.
The case of the colorblind painter
The most famous instance of cerebral
achromatopsia is that of "Jonathan I." immortalized in a case study
by Oliver Sacks and Robert Wasserman, and published as "The Case of the
Colorblind Painter". The essay tracks Johnathan I.'s experience with
cerebral achromatopsia from the point where an injury to his occipital lobe
leaves him without the ability to perceive color, through his subsequent
struggles to adapt to a black, white and gray world, and finally to his
acceptance and even gratitude for his condition. Especially pertinent is the
analysis of how cerebral achromatopsia affects his practice as a painter and
artist. Descriptions of cerebral achromatopsia's effects on his psychological
health and visual perception are especially striking. For instance, in
recounting Mr. I.'s descriptions of flesh and foods, the authors write:
Mr. I. could hardly bear the changed
appearances of people ("like animated gray statues") any more than he
could bear his own changed appearance in the mirror: he shunned social
intercourse and found sexual intercourse impossible. He saw people's flesh, his
wife's flesh, his own flesh, as an abhorrent gray; "flesh-colored"
now appeared "rat-colored" to him. This was so even when he closed
his eyes, for his preternaturally vivid ("eidetic") visual imagery
was preserved but now without color, and forced on him images, forced him to
"see" but see internally with the wrongness of his achromatopsia. He
found foods disgusting in their grayish, dead appearance and had to close his
eyes to eat. But this did not help very much, for the mental image of a tomato
was as black as its appearance.
Source From Wikipedia
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