Oguchi's disease is also unique in the electroretinographic responses in the light- and dark-adapted condition. Recent identification of the arrestin gene mutation in patients with Oguchi's disease may account for the characteristic fundus and
functional abnormality.
The fundus oculi presents a most peculiar appearance. The posterior pole and in many cases the whole of fundus, instead of having a normal orange-red colour, presents a curious shining greyish-pink background, on which the retinal vessels stand out sharply. The vessels appear dark with little distinction between the arteries and the veins. The finer divisions of the blood vessels can be easily followed to their finest ramifications. At places a dark shadow or a bright white line may be seen alongside the blood vessel.
The most interesting feature of this disease in well marked cases is the reversal of all the features described above, if the patient sits in the dark for about one hour. This is called Mizuo's phenomenon. The retina looks normal and the night-blindness disappears. After the fundus has resumed the normal colour, exposure to room light of 40-50 foot candles soon leads to the appearance of fundus discolouration. It begins with a spotty distribution after about 15 minutes' exposure and within one hour the colour transformation is complete.
In some cases the discolouration of the fundus is mild and Mizuo's phenomenon is slight or absent, but night-blindness is definitely complained of.
Mizuo–Nakamura phenomenon. (A) A golden sheen is seen in the mid-peripheral fundus of both eyes before dark adaptation. (B) The golden sheen is extinguished after 30–45 min of dark adaptation. |
1. The cones are unusually numerous and are present to the practical exclusion of the rods in a large area. Many of the cones are abnormally long and their nuclei are ectopic,i.e. they are outside the outer limiting membrane. The bipolar layer is thicker than normal and the ganglion cell layer is eight to ten cell deep.
2. There is an anamolous layer of tissue between the cones and the pigment epithelium. It is not a true cellular layer, but rather appears as a degenerated syncytial structure containing many pigment granules.
Classification |
Oguchi's disease has been further classified into various types
Type I : Typical cases with marked fund us discolouration, Mizuo's phenomenon and recovery of dark adaptation.
Type II:
(a) slight fundus discolouration, partial Mizuo's phenomenon and without recovery of dark adaptation.
(b) slight fundus discolouration without Mizuo's phenomenon and without recovery of dark adaptation.
Heredity |
It is universally agreed that the condition is transmitted as an autosomal recessive without sex discrimination. Consanguinity also plays an important part.
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