A Multi-Center Study of Reading Rehabilitation in Macular Disease
- Conditions
- Age Related MaculopathyRetinal Degeneration
- Registration Number
- NCT00746668
- Lead Sponsor
- US Department of Veterans Affairs
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to measure the effectiveness of a newly-designed oculomotor training program for patients with macular disease, including age-related macular degeneration.
- Detailed Description
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is currently among the top three leading causes of central vision loss in veterans (Chomsky et al., 1995) and is the most prevalent cause of blindness among veterans (37.2%, Quillen \& Henry, 2000). The loss of central vision associated with these diseases has a profound impact on the quality of life to those affected, with many suffering depression. It is devastating to no longer be able to read a newspaper or recognize facial expressions. The use of preferred retinal locations (PRLs) to compensate for diseased foveae has offered hope to these patients in regaining some function. The investigators have developed a protocol that includes training in two major visual skills areas:
* Visual awareness and eccentric viewing; and
* Reading practice with sequentially lexical information
Module 1 focuses on making the patient aware of better vision at an eccentric location relative to degraded vision at the diseased fovea. Module 2 is focused on reading practice without eye movements. These program curriculums and preliminary results are provided in the present proposal. The primary aim of this proposal is to quantitatively assess the relative effectiveness for improving reading and to establish the minimum training time need for skill improvement. One hundred and twenty patients with macular disease who are already using a PRL and similar in visual characteristics (e.g., visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, size of scotoma, duration of the disease) will be included the study. All patients will be trained with both modules using a repeated measures-completely counterbalanced - design to control for training order effects. In addition, all patients will be assessed using the same outcome measures of reading (using MNRead Acuity Charts and the View Sentences Test). The performance of the patients on the outcomes battery post-training will be compared to their pre-training performance on the same battery. Questionnaires (the Veterans Administration Low Vision Visual Functioning Questionnaire, CES-D, Short Form-36, and Adaptation to Vision Loss Scale) will also be administered to assess perceived abilities to perform everyday tasks, adaptation to vision loss, moods, and general health. In addition, patients will also be assessed on the exercises practiced during the module at the end of each daily training session to determine exactly when in the training protocol an improvement in performance on the exercises being trained has occurred. These daily performance measures provide for a finer scale for detecting performance changes. Statistical analyses will be conducted to answer the following questions:
* Does a combination of eccentric viewing awareness and oculomotor training produce significant improvements in reading rate?
* Which exercises are most effective in training the visual skills associated with reading and at what point during the course of training do the patients reach asymptotic performance?
* How do co-factors such as age, PRL size and location, and cognitive capabilities relate to training outcomes?
Advancements are being made in the area of retinal cell transplantation, gene therapy, and retinal prosthetics. When these techniques become part of the standard clinical care, it is likely that all the patients will require vision rehabilitation techniques to help them make sense of their potentially fragmented percepts. This research offers an evaluation of relative successes of the components of reading rehabilitation and will lead to the design of an efficient and effective composite training strategy.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 36
- Patients with a diagnosis of macular disease, such as age-related macular degeneration
- An established preferred retinal locus
- Visual acuity of less than or equal to 20/70 and greater than or equal to 20/400 (in the better eye)
- Those with other major ophthalmologic and neurologic disease
- choroidal neovascularization ("wet" AMD)
- moderate to severe media opacities, and cognitive impairment
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- CROSSOVER
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Sentence Reading Pre-training, 6 weeks, 12 weeks, 18 weeks To assess reading performance, after each training module (1-3), two lines of text were presented at the center of the monitor. Each subject was seated with his or her forehead on a head rest at a viewing distance of 40cm. The subject read each sentence aloud and indicated whether it made sense by responding true or false. Reading speed was calculated using an algorithm similar to that used for the MNRead test. The number of words read correctly was divided by the time required to read the sentence to yield a measure of reading speed in words per minute (wpm). Sentences were displayed at sizes of 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, and 0.6 log units above the subject's letter acuity threshold. Five sentences were presented at each font size. We used 105 different sentences so that no sentence was repeated for any subject. Average speed of reading (log wpm) was plotted as a function of font size (logMAR).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Jesse Brown VAMC (WestSide Division)
🇺🇸Chicago, Illinois, United States