Purpose: To analyze cone and rod phototransduction parameters from ERG a-waves in patients with RP and to determine the relationships among these parameters, age, and mode of inheritance.
Methods: Sets of four white flashes (3.2-4.4 log scotopic troland [scot td-s]) were presented in the dark. The same stimuli were later presented against a rod-saturating background and the generated cone a-waves were subtracted from the dark-adapted responses to produce rod-only a-waves. The rod-only and cone a-waves were fit with computational models.
Results: Of 418 consecutive patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP), cone a-waves were quantifiable in 136 (33%), whereas rod a-waves were quantifiable in 125 (30%). Cone R(max) (maximum response) and cone S (sensitivity) parameters were significantly below normal in all RP subgroups. Cone R(max) was lower in XlRP than in other forms of inheritance (P < 0.05). Cone S was abnormal in 77.9% of all patients with RP and in 96.8% of those with XlRP. More than 95% of the rod R(max) values were abnormal, whereas rod S was abnormal in 61.6% of these patients.
Conclusions: The efficiency of cone phototransduction appears to be affected in all forms of RP, even in some patients in whom the sensitivity of rod phototransduction is normal. In this cross-sectional sample, there was no evidence that transduction efficiency decreased with increasing age of the patient. The X-linked mode of inheritance is associated with greater abnormalities in cone and rod photoreceptor function at a younger age compared with the other modes of inheritance.