LV 2009
LV 2009
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Outline
Revision
Introduction
Optical LV aids
Non optical LV aids
Mobility and orientation
Sensory substitution
Training patients with low vision
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Assignment
1. Basis to classify LV aids as optical or non optical & their difference?
2. What are the advantages and disadvantages of hyper ocular & clip
on spectacle magnifiers?
3. Can telescopes be used for near vision? If so, how?
4. How can we record VA using Log MAR at different distances for a
low vision patient?
5. Discus about the revised visual impairment and blindness
categories (from grade 0-9).
6. How can you differentiate hand magnifiers from stand magnifiers?
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Revision
• Definitions
– Disease
– Impairment
– Disability ICIDH
– Handicap
– Low vision
– Blindness ICD 10th, WHO, revised def (ICO &WHO)
– Legal blindness
– Typical low vision patient
• Impacts of VI
• Low vision assessment:- Hx taking, VA, CS, refraction
• Magnification: types, determination, ways
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Introduction
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For any low vision device to be effective and comfortable,
– The Px must be motivated to use the device for specific task
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Management Goals
Improving distance, intermediate or near vision
Maintaining independence
– Hyper oculars
– Clip on magnifiers
Hand magnifiers
Stand magnifiers
Electronic (CCTV)
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Spectacle magnifiers
High reading adds
• High plus reading glasses also called "microscopes"
• Given as an add to the best distance refraction
• Amount of add needed depends on the accommodation
and the reading distance
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• If the patient is monocular, the poorer eye may be occluded
if it improves visual functioning
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Advantages
– Hands free
– Good field of view (Can read several
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Hyper oculars
– Very high plus aspheric lenses
– bi convex, lenticular forms
– x4 to x12
– Monocular usually
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Clip on magnifiers
– binocular up to x3
– monocular up to x7
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Hand magnifiers
Used for spot reading
Available from + 4.0 to + 68.0Ds
Most patients accept up to x6 magnification
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Advantages
Wide range of powers
Socially acceptable
Inexpensive
Portable
The eye to lens distance can be varied
Patient can maintain normal reading distance
Work well with patients having eccentric viewing
Illuminated hand held's available
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Disadvantages
• Need good dexterity and occupies both hands
Patients with tremors, arthritis etc have difficulty holding the
magnifier
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Stand magnifiers
• Simplest device for reading
• The patient needs to place the stand magnifier on the
reading material and move across the page to read
• Has a fixed focus
• Up to x22
• Commonly prescribed x3 to x7
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Advantages
• Fixed accurate working distance
– Useful if hand tremor/weakness
• Inexpensive
• Can be used in combination with spectacles
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Disadvantages
• Short working distance can reduce illumination
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•Bright field/ flat field magnifier
•Up to x 2.2
•Gathers light
•Bar magnifier
•Up to x2 in 1 direction
•Gathers light
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Closed circuit television system(CCTV)
• Consists monitor, camera and platform to place the reading text
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Advantage
• Very high powers up to X70
• Binocular viewing
• Psychologically acceptable
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Disadvantages
• Not portable
• Expensive
• Difficult to use
• Not available /provided to patient by employer or
education services /
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Types
TV screen mounted over X-Y table
Portable
Head mounted
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Problems using low vision aids
• Case scenario
– You dispensed a 3x hand magnifier to your patient, who read N5
easily at the low vision assessment. The patient returns
complaining that he cannot see anything with it at home.
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What factors affect reading performance?
• Near VA
• Size/position of scotoma
• Contrast sensitivity
• Binocular stability
• Acuity reserve
• Posture, dexterity
• Contrast reserve
• Cognitive function
• Reading speed
• Poor understanding of LV aid
use
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Acuity reserve
• If you want to read comfortably for a sustained period of time e.g. a
book then you will need an acuity reserve.
• This means that the text should be around 3x larger for fluent reading
than your threshold acuity otherwise your reading speed will be too
slow and you may feel like giving up.
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Acuity reserve and contrast reserve
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Low vision optical devices for
Distance
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Telescopes
• Afocal systems- parallel rays of light enter the telescope
from an infinitely distant object, and parallel rays leaving
the telescope form a final image at infinity
• Usually x2 to x10 are prescribed
• Field of view decreases with magnification
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How does a telescope work?
• In a essence
– System of 2 lenses; objective and eyepiece
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How does a telescope work?
• Galilean
– Positive objective
– Negative eyepiece
– Positive eyepiece
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Galilean telescope
FO FE
M = b/a
a b
fo
fe
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Keplerian telescope
FO FE
M = b/a
a b
fo fe
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Magnification = - dioptric power of eyepiece
dioptric power of objective
i.e. M = - FE
FO
• Keplerian
– longer, heavier, more expensive
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Is this telescope Galilean or Keplerian?
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What’s the exit pupil?
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Where’s the exit pupil?
exit
pupil
exit
pupil
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Looking for the exit pupil
• Hold telescope 20cm from the eye, eyepiece towards you
• Exit pupil is small bright circle of light
• Move head side to side
• Observe movement of exit pupil
– With movement: Galilean
– Against movement: Keplerian
• Keplerian exit pupil much easier to see
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Why’s the exit pupil important?
• When eye placed at exit pupil,
– eye receives all light entering telescope
– maximum light
– maximum field of view
• Keplerian:
– exit pupil outside telescope
– eye at /close to exit pupil
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Telescopes: field of view
Depends on
• Magnification
• Vertex distance
• Diameter of objective
• Tube length
FOV better with Keplerian than Galilean
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What do the numbers on the telescope mean?
• e.g. 8 x 20 6.5o
– magnification = x8
– diameter of objective = 20mm
– field of view = 6.5o
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Types
– Hand held telescopes
– Clip on design
– Spectacle mounted telescope
– Bioptic design: mounted on a pair of eyeglasses
– Telemicroscope design
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A. Hand-Held Telescopes
• The most common type of distance optical device
Advantages
– Inexpensive, small and portable
– Available in a range of magnification powers
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Disadvantages
– Restriction of the FOV (Depth perception is distorted)
• Walking or moving about while looking through the telescope is
not recommended
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B. Clip-on telescopes
• Monocular telescopes also come in clip-on versions that
attach to eyeglass frames and leave both hands free.
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C. Spectacle-Mounted Telescopes
• Spectacle-mounted telescopes are permanently attached
to the lens of an eyeglass
Advantage
• They can be monocular or binocular
• They leave both hands free and are more stable than
hand-held telescopes
• They are available in a range of magnification powers
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Disadvantage
• They are the least "normal" looking of any low vision
device
• Walking or moving about while looking through the
telescope(s) is not recommended because depth
perception is distorted and balance is affected
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D. Bioptic telescopes
• are mounted on the upper part of each eyeglass lens
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Field expanding devices
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Non optical low vision aids
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Making things Bigger (RSM)
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Making things Bolder
By increasing the contrast
To aid vision but did not affect the vergence system
Did not increase size or improve the focus of retinal image
Can be using
Luminance contrast
Chromatic( color) contrast
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Using color contrast
o using different colors for the object and background
• Patient specific
• Should be tried against d/t backgrounds provided by coloured
sheets of paper
E.g.
o Colored electrical sockets
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Making things Brighter
Increasing the illumination
Lighting preference varies
Be aware of glare
Increase in lighting = increases glare
• Glaucoma
• Diabetic retinopathy
Reduced illumination
• Albinism
• Aniridia 65
Aspects of optimizing illumination
– Increasing ambient illumination
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Optimizing the use of magnifiers/improving
reading and writing
Reading stands
Maintained required WD without undue effort
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To decide which model to buy,
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Double ended clamp
To convert a hand magnifier into stand magnifier
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Clipboards
– Helpful for anyone using a magnifier
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Glare reduction – unwanted reflection
Possible approaches
– Changing the environment
– Umbrella, cape
– PH
– Artificial iris CL
– Typoscope
– Visors and shields
– Tints
For discomfort glare
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Mobility and orientation
assists a person to navigate safely and comfortably from
one position to another in an environment
Can be
o Obstacle detectors
o Environmental sensors
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Obstacle detectors
Sighted guide
A sighted person guides a person with visual impairment
Proper training is required
o How to hold the sighted guide
o To stop
o To sit
– fit and active enough to walk and care for the dog
– Applicants must attend extensive training with the dog
– The owner must be able to direct the dog as to a given route
– the dog assists with crossing roads, avoiding obstructions
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White sticks and canes
available from social services and needs some instruction in their use.
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Environmental sensors
– To have full information about the environment
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Sight substitution
To use hearing, touch and smell senses
o Different shaped buttons
o Audio-described videos
o Talking microwaves, clocks, watches, thermometers and scales and
mobiles
o Games with tactile counters, boards and cards
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o Balls that produce sound such as football & cricket
o Bump on can be used
o Talking calculator
o Braille
o Talking books, Computers
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Notex(Money finder)
It is a rectangular piece of cardboard with steps on top right
corner which helps in identifying the currency of the note
Signature guide
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Training patients with low vision
– To use eccentric fixation
– Steady eye strategy
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Quiz 5%
1. How can you differentiate a telescope as Galilean or
astronomical?
2. What are the advantages of stand magnifiers compared
with hand magnifiers?
3. How can you improve the reading performance of the low
vision patient?
4. What factors determine the FOV of a telescope?
5. What do we mean by legal blindness?
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What the low vision practitioner needs to
know about AMD
“I can’t find the macula”
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Viewing the macular region
• Direct ophthalmoscopy
– macula stop
• Indirect ophthalmoscopy
Using condensing lens and dilators
Good FOV but lower magnification
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• Wet AMD
It depends
– early or late
– may not see anything much
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How do we know which type of AMD?
1. Patient may know
2. Vision loss: gradual or sudden
3. Distortion
4. Visual acuity (caution)
• 6/18 or better: dry or early wet
• 6/60 or worse: wet or advanced dry (GA)
5. Funduscopy
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Wet AMD: visual symptoms
• “Last week the vision in my left eye suddenly went and I can’t see at
all”
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Management of AMD
1. Risk reduction
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Risk factor Is it modifiable?
• Age no
• Family history no
• Smoking yes
• Hypertension yes
• Sunlight exposure yes
• Diet yes
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Stop smoking
Thornton, J. et al. Smoking and age-related macular degeneration: a
review of association. Eye (2005) 19, 935−944.
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Do statins help?
• Smeeth et al. A case control study of age related macular
degeneration and use of statins. Br J Ophthalmol. (2005) 89: 1171-
1175.
• Not sure yet
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Dietary advice
• There is evidence that eating a healthy balanced diet with fresh
fruit and vegetables can help prevent AMD (i.e. prevent
progression to wet)
• Sweet corn and yellow peppers
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“Is there any treatment?” wet
• Laser:
– Some people with wet AMD eligible for PDT (newer cold ‘gentle’ laser)
Sight detectors
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Summary: be positive!
• “You’ll always keep your peripheral vision”
• Low vision assessment to preserve most of the remaining
vision
• Regular eye examinations to detect new problems
• Wear sunglasses
• Eat a healthy diet
• Stop smoking
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Management strategies for various
ocular conditions
Nystagmus
• Involuntary oscillation of the eyes
• Congenital
– Idiopathic
– Associated with aniridia, albinism, ROP, congenital cataracts
• Amblyopia develops
• VA related to the extent of movement & other pathology
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Management
• Correct the refractive error
Other considerations
– Often high astigmatism > 3.00 DC, with the rule
– Contact lenses
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Albinism
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Management
• Correct refractive error
• Manage nystagmus
• Manage glare
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Glare management options
• Modify the environment
– school, home, window blinds
• Rx sunglasses
• fixed tint
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Aniridia
• Absence of iris
Management
• Control glare
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• One or both eyes can be affected
• Surgery depends on severity of VA reduction
– pseudophakia
– aphakic
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Management
– treatment of amblyopia
– IOL
– aphakic contact lens (1 or both eyes)
– aphakic spectacles
Normal view
Constricted field
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RP: night blindness
normal night blindness normal
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RP: glare
• Eyedrops
– can Px comply?
– stress compliance
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Diabetic retinopathy
• Other eye conditions? Referral needed?
– e.g. cataract, AMD, glaucoma
• DR getting worse?
– refer/upgrade registration
– stress the importance of control of blood glucose, blood pressure and cholesterol
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Hemianopia: management
• Typoscope
• Training: head and eye scanning (younger Pxs)
it might be easier
Read text vertically as
Or
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Hemianopia: management
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Constricted fields: management
• Often gradual constriction therefore Px adapts
• Training
– head and eye scanning (younger Pxs)
– Hold print further away, sit further back from TV, board at school
– Field expander
• Younger Pxs may derive more benefit than older Pxs from
– spec mounted aids, telescopes, CCTV, eccentric viewing training
and mobility training
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In general our treatment option depends on:
• Degree of visual impairment, disability, or handicap
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• Patient's adjustment to vision loss
• Patient's expectations and motivation
• Patient’s cognitive ability to participate in the
rehabilitation process
• Visual requirements, goals, and objectives
• Lens systems or technology available
• Support systems available
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SIGHT IS NEXT TO LIFE
– Protect it
– Save it
– Restore it
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״HELP WHEN THERE IS NO CURE״.
THANK YOU!
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