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Examination Sequence
Case History
Observe the patient
Visual Acuity
External Examination
External evaluation/observation of the patient
obtain a general impression of the patient's development, health and physical and mental ability
during the External evaluation/observation of the patient, determine og any of the following are present:
physical impairment
postural deviations or body asymmetry
deviations of gait
scarring or evidence of trauma
syndrome characteristics
External testing
- gross physical inspection and evaluation as indicated
- cover test
- pupils
- EOM (versions, pursuits)
- Color vision screening
- Stereopsis
- Near Point Convergence
- Confrontation Visual Fields
Visual field
refers to the sum total of visual perception for an eye fixed on a stationary object of regard with the head and body held in fixed position
Lower animal shave eyes that point
in opposite directions to give a 36o degree field of view
Predatory animals (including humans) have eyes that face
the same direction for stereopsis
Visual fields are always documented from the _____ point of view
patients!
Monocular visual field: Nasal
60 degrees
Monocular visual field: Temporal
100 degrees
Monocular visual field: Superior
60 degree
Monocular visual field: Inferior
75 degree
Monocular visual field: Total Horizontal
160 degrees
Monocular visual field: Total Vertical
135 degreees
Binocular visual field: horizontal
200 degrees
Binocular visual field: Vertical
135
Visual field bincular/ simulatnaous
120 degrees
Hill of vision
a 3D representation of the visual field
Hill of vision center of the graph is the
Point of fixation - fovea
most sensitive!
eye can see a very small, dim point of light
All points of our VF in each eye is set by the
macula/fovea
Hill of vision slope
helps one see how the sensitivyty of the eye changes
wides part of th VF is temporally - but low sensitivity
fastr drop off on the nasal side - there is usualluy overlap from the over eye
Physiological blind spot
corresponds to the optic nerve
5 degrees in size
15 degrees temporal to fixation
How far should a paper be held to find ur blind spot
9-10 inches
Blind spot is _____
tempora
left in left eye
right in right eye
SEE SLIDES FOR DRAWINGS
Prechiasmal
retina
optic nerve
Chiasm
optic chaism
post chiasmal
optic tract
lateral geniculate nucleus
optic radiations
occipital cortext
How do we find a problem in the visual field ?
Visual acuity -- fovea only - central only
Symptoms or signs - reading VA chart
Testing:
screening - confrontation fields
additional - FDT, humphrey, VF test
Campimetry
Visual field assessment using a flat surface
eg. tangent screen
Perimetry
Visual field assessment using a curved background
Goldman or humphrey (static)
Testing Strategy
Static testing
kinetic testing
Static testing
a target of known brightness at suprathreshold level is flashed on briefly within the boundaries of the patient's visual field
Kinetic testing
a stimulus is moved from an area in which it is not seen (infathreshod) into a region where it is visible (suprathreshold)
isopters
boundary between regions of invisibility and visibility
a line that connects all points at which the same size and brightness stimulus can be seen
Infrathreshold
the stimulus intensity is below the level at which can be seen by the patient
suprathreshold
the stimulus is at a level which it can be seen by the patient
Central vision
the central 30 degrees
Peripheral Vision
beyond 30 degrees
The macula correspond to the center
17 degrees diameter of VF
The fovea correspond to the center
5.2 degrees
The foveola correspond to the center
1-1.2 degrees diamter
we name defects by the area
lost!
Complete monocular vision loss
one eye sees one eye does not
Complete binocular vision loss
both eyes are non-seeing
Scotoma
an absolute or relative area of depressed visual function surrounding normal vision
a blind spot!
a permanent or temporary area of depressed or absent vision cased by a lesion of the visual system
absolute scotoma
defects that are blind to any light, no matter how strong
nothing can be seen at all within that area
Relative scotoma
defects that retain some degree of differential light sensitivity
an area where objects of low luminance cannot be seen by larger or brighter ones can be seen - seen as blur
Positive scotoma
the patient realizes that they cannot see in this area
Negative scomtoma
the patient does not realize they are missing anything
Altitudinal field defects
the defect is present above or below the horizontal midline
usually associated with ocular abnormalities
central scotoma
defect in the middle
characteristic of optic nerve disease or macular disease
Hemianopia
blindness in one half of the visual field of one or both eyes
Homonymous
affecting the same part of the visual field of each eye
Right homonymous hemianopia
vision loss right temporal and left nasal field
left homonymous hemianopia
vision loss right nasal field and left temporal field
Binasal heteronymous hemianopia
Loss of nasal visual fields from both eyes
Bitemporal heteronymous hemianopia
Loss of temporal visual fields from both eyes
Quadrantanopia
Loss of vision in a quarter section of the visual field of one or both eyes
homonymous quadrantanopia
same side and same quadrant
Heteronymous Quadrantanopia
binasal or bitemporal
Crossed Quadrantanopia
example: upper quadrant in one eye and lower quandrant in the other eye
Congruous hemianopia
matching
incomplete hemianopia
hemianopia in which the visual fiel defects in both eyes are completely symmetric in extent and intesity
Incongruous defect
incomplete hemianopia
NOT symmetric
NOT matching
Complete
entire half of a visual field
incomplete
not the entire half of the visual field
If the defect is complete
you cannot tell if it is congruous
Vision with Glaucoma
tends to start in the periphery and progress toward the center
field loss is not truly "black"
it is a negative scotoma - do not know they are missing those areas!
Macular degeneration
affects central vision (macular area)
positive scotoma! they know they have the problem
Metamorphopsia
distorted vision
patients may notice this when they look at theur window mini blinds or vertical blinds
Types of Visual Fields
Confrontation VF
Humphrey Frequency Doubling Technology (FDT)
Tangent Screen Test
Goldman Bowl Instrument
Humphrey Field Analyzer
Octopus VF
Other
Confrontation Visual Fields (CVF) Purpose
screen for unknown defects
Quick; reasonable
Confirm known VF loss
Educate patient
Nerve fibers of the retina enter in
a very specific pattern
a defect or problem in these tissues causes a recognizable visual field defect/ scotoma
SEE SLiDE 51
Temporal Visual field is projected
onto the nasal retina
Nasal Visual Field is projected
onto the temporal retina
Lesions anterior to the optic nerve will be
unilateral
Nasal fibers
cross at the level of the chiasm
Defects after the chiasm will
respect the vertical
SEE SLIDE 52
Complete dissection on the left ON will result in
scotoma/blind spot left eye with a normal right visual field
lesion at the optic chiasm
bi temporal hemianopia
Complete interruption of the optic radiations
contralateral total homonymous hemianopia
Posterior occipital lobe lesions
homonymous hemianopic defects but may spare the macula
Important Questions to ask
Is the defect in the field of vision - in one eye or both?
one eye - in front of chiasm
Does it respect the horizontal?
if it does - in front of the chiasm
Does it respect the vertical
if it does -at or behind the chiasm
Is the field loss homonymous
if yes - behind the chiasm
if the defect is bilateral, how congruous is it?
how far back it is
CVF set up
Doc 60cm
Targets 30 cm
CVF lighting
doctor and hands is the target
overhead light on full
stand light on over patient head pointed at Dr - Stimulus
CVF position of the patient and examiner
eye level
CFV correction or no correction
no correction
Subjective test and Static test
SEE SLIDES AND MANUAL