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Vision and Driving in Multiple Sclerosis
Authors:Maria T Schultheis  Kevin Manning  Valerie Weisser  Alison Blasco  Jocelyn Ang  Mark E Wilkinson
Institution:a Department of Psychology, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA
b School of Biomedical Engineering, Science, and Health Systems, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA
c University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, IA
Abstract:Schultheis MT, Manning K, Weisser V, Blasco A, Ang J, Wilkinson ME. Vision and driving in multiple sclerosis.

Objective

To examine the relationship between measures of visual dysfunction and driving performance in persons with multiple sclerosis (MS).

Design

Between-group comparison.

Setting

All data were collected in an outpatient research setting.

Participants

Persons (N=66) with MS of the relapsing remitting type (26 self-reporting visual difficulties; 40 self-reporting no visual difficulties) and 26 age- and sex-matched healthy controls.

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures

Measures of vision included visual acuity, depth perception, and color perception. Driving was measured using documented accident/violation rate and self-reported driving behaviors.

Results

Quantitative analysis only revealed that MS persons with self-reported visual difficulties performed significantly worse than healthy controls on color perception (Kruskal-Wallis; χ22=8.89, P=.01). There were no group differences on driving behaviors, and correlational analysis revealed a lack of relationship between the selected visual (visual acuity, depth perception, color perception) and driving performance measures (documented accident/violation rate and self-limiting driving behaviors).

Conclusions

Persons with MS who self-reported difficulties with vision had acceptable visual acuity, despite demonstrating impairment in color perception. The fact that visual acuity remains the most common measure for visual fitness to drive remains problematic. There is a need to further define measures of visual dysfunction relevant to driving among this clinical population.
Keywords:Automobile driving  Multiple sclerosis  Rehabilitation  Visual acuity
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