» Articles » PMID: 38282623

Elucidating the Visual Snow Spectrum: A Latent Class Analysis Study

Overview
Journal Behav Neurol
Publisher Wiley
Specialty Psychiatry
Date 2024 Jan 29
PMID 38282623
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: People with visual snow syndrome (VSS) experience a range of perceptual phenomena, in addition to visual snow (VS; flickering pinpricks of light throughout the visual field). We investigated the patterns of perceptual phenomena associated with VSS in a large sample of people without prior knowledge of VSS or its associated symptoms. . Two thousand participants completed a screening questionnaire assessing the frequency and severity of perceptual phenomena associated with VSS. We used latent class analysis (LCA), a clustering technique which identifies qualitatively different subgroups within a given population, to investigate whether the presence (or absence) of VS impacted class structure.

Results: Of 1,846 participants included for analysis, 41.92% experienced VS some of the time, including 4.49% who had VSS without prior knowledge. The mean number of perceptual phenomena experienced was 2.03. Optimal four-class LCA solutions did not substantially differ whether VS was included in the model; instead, classes differed in the frequency and total number of symptoms experienced. . Our results suggest that the perceptual phenomena associated with VSS are likely to be common in the general population and do not necessarily indicate an underlying pathology. We also showed that visual snow itself does not explain the presence of other perceptual phenomena.

Citing Articles

Visual Snow Syndrome is unstable: A longitudinal investigation of VSS symptoms in a Naïve population.

Thompson A, Goodbourn P, Forte J Ann Clin Transl Neurol. 2024; 11(12):3205-3214.

PMID: 39440659 PMC: 11651197. DOI: 10.1002/acn3.52228.

References
1.
Puledda F, Ffytche D, Lythgoe D, ODaly O, Schankin C, Williams S . Insular and occipital changes in visual snow syndrome: a BOLD fMRI and MRS study. Ann Clin Transl Neurol. 2020; 7(3):296-306. PMC: 7086005. DOI: 10.1002/acn3.50986. View

2.
Kondziella D, Olsen M, Dreier J . Prevalence of visual snow syndrome in the UK. Eur J Neurol. 2020; 27(5):764-772. DOI: 10.1111/ene.14150. View

3.
Puledda F, Schankin C, Goadsby P . Visual snow syndrome: A clinical and phenotypical description of 1,100 cases. Neurology. 2020; 94(6):e564-e574. PMC: 7136068. DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000008909. View

4.
Klein A, Schankin C . Visual snow syndrome, the spectrum of perceptual disorders, and migraine as a common risk factor: A narrative review. Headache. 2021; 61(9):1306-1313. PMC: 9293285. DOI: 10.1111/head.14213. View

5.
Solly E, Clough M, Foletta P, White O, Fielding J . The Psychiatric Symptomology of Visual Snow Syndrome. Front Neurol. 2021; 12:703006. PMC: 8362098. DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.703006. View