Colour perception deficits after posterior stroke: Not so rare after all?

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Cerebral achromatopsia is an acquired colour perception impairment caused by brain injury, and is generally considered to be rare. Both hemispheres are thought to contribute to colour perception, but most published cases have had bilateral or right hemisphere lesions. In contrast to congenital colour blindness that affects the discrimination between specific hues, cerebral achromatopsia is often described as affecting perception across all colours. Most studies of cerebral achromatopsia have been single cases or case series of patients with colour perception deficits. Here, we explore colour perception deficits in an unbiased sample of patients with stroke affecting the posterior cerebral artery (N = 63) from the Back of the Brain project. Patients were selected based on lesion location only, and not on the presence of a given symptom. All patients were tested with the Farnsworth D-15 Dichotomous Colour Blindness Test and performance compared to matched controls (N = 45) using single case statistics. In patients with abnormal performance, the patterns of colour difficulties were qualitatively analysed. 22% of the patients showed significant problems with colour discrimination (44% of patients with bilateral lesions, 28% with left hemisphere lesions and 5% with right hemisphere lesions). Lesion analyses identified two regions in ventral occipital temporal areas in the left hemisphere as particularly strongly related to impaired performance in colour perception, but also indicated that bilateral lesions are more strongly associated with impaired performance that unilateral lesions. While some patients only had mild deficits, colour perception impairments were in many cases severe. Many patients had selective deficits only affecting the perception of some hues. The results suggest that colour perception difficulties following PCA stroke are common, and that they vary in severity and expression. In addition, the results point towards bilateral processing of colour perception with a left hemispheric domination, contradicting previous reports.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCortex
Volume159
Pages (from-to)118-130
ISSN0010-9452
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This project was funded by the Independent Research Fund Denmark (Sapere Aude to RS; DFF - 4180-00201 ).

Funding Information:
The conditions of our ethics approval do not permit public archiving of anonymised imaging data. Readers seeking access to the data should contact the corresponding author Prof. Randi Starrfelt (randi.starrfelt@psy.ku.dk). Access will be granted to named individuals in accordance with ethical and data sharing procedures governing the reuse of sensitive data, and a formal data sharing agreement approved by legal consultants at University of Copenhagen must be signed by both parties. Requestors must have the necessary infrastructure to receive and store the data securely.This project was funded by the Independent Research Fund Denmark (Sapere Aude to RS; DFF - 4180-00201).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s)

    Research areas

  • Achromatopsia, Colour perception, Dyschromatopsia, Posterior cerebral artery, Stroke

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