Comparisons of the amplitude size and the reproducibility of three different electrodes to record the corneal flash electroretinogram in rodents

Andreas U. Bayer, Thom Mittag, Philip Cook, Scott E. Brodie, Steven M. Podos, Klaus Peter Maag

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

37 Scopus citations

Abstract

To compare corneal electrodes commonly used in rodent eyes for repeat and left versus right eye accuracy and variability to record the flash electroretinogram (ERG). Animals studied were eight C57BL/6 mice and eight rats of the Wistar strain. Scotopic ERGs were recorded from eyes of dark-adapted anesthetized rodents to compare a custom-made gold-wire contact lens electrode (CLE), a cotton-wick silver-silver chloride electrode (SCLE), and a coiled stainless steel wire electrode (SSE). Compared to SCLE and SSE, the potentials recorded by CLE are characterized by significantly larger ERG amplitudes and oscillatory potentials in both rats and mice (p <0.0001). In analyzing test-retest data comparing the three different electrodes the coefficient of variation was smaller (range, 10.3-15.5%) and the interclass correlation coefficient (0.77-0.93) showed a better agreement for the CLE. Recording scotopic ERGs with custom-made gold-wire contact lens electrodes records large amplitudes and shows a good reproducibility and reliability to monitor retinal function in rodent eyes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)233-246
Number of pages14
JournalDocumenta Ophthalmologica
Volume98
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1999

Keywords

  • Contact lens electrode
  • Electroretinogram
  • Mouse
  • Rat
  • Repeatability
  • Reproducibility
  • Rodents

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