Title: What is Low Vision
1What is Low Vision?
- Mary Bairstow
- LV Services Implementation Officer
2About the presentation
- Low Vision - what is it?
- Medical models and the role of the clinician
- Eye Examination and Refraction
3Low Vision Services Implementation
- Late 1990s
- More and better services
- Low Vision Report
- Sets standards and suggests LVSCs as a means to
change
4A person with low vision
- ..is a person who has an impairment of visual
function (not remediated by conventional specs,
contact lenses or medical treatment) and which
causes restriction in that persons life - Paraphrased version of Definition 3.1 from the LV
Report
5Defining Low Vision
- A low vision service is a rehabilitative or
habilitative process which provides a range of
services to make use of eyesightto achieve
maximum potential. - This is not just a technical process
- Low Vision Report
6A joined up, integrated,multi-disciplinary
partnership
- It is not practical for any single professional
group or agency to provide all the elements
required to provide a comprehensive low vision
service
7The person
- What if ?
- Specs or contact lenses ?
- What about a a cure ?
- What if they
- cant read or make a cup
- of tea or crochet or .
8Eye disease and its management
- 'To the epidemiologist falls the task of
reconciling the clinician's model of disease
process with the social scientist's interest in
the disability it causes. The difficulty lies in
getting the balance right' - Cullinan 1997
9Conditions, diseases,etc...
- Albinism, Bests disease, coloboma,
- diabetic retinopathy, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome,
- Fuchsdystrophy, glaucoma,
- Hermansky-Pudlak, ischaemic optic neuropathy,
- juvenile cataract, keratoconus,
- Lebers optic neuropathy..
10Eye Care Pathways
- Optometry - screening
- GP - whole person, not gate-keeping
- Hospital Eye Services
- Discharge to optometry
- Social Care
11 Low Vision Model - a Maze
Optometry
Self referral
GP
Medical/ Surgical (3)
Eye Clinic - Consultant
Rehabilitation and other services
LV /or Rehab?
Low Vision Service Assessment Equipment Supply
Review LV
Social Care Assessment
Community Care Assess-ment
Low Vision Training
Rehab Training
Key Primary Route
Secondary Route. end
of training/treatment. Blue indicates first point
of contact for patients. Red indicates
Rehabilitation based services?
12Hospital Eye Services
- Ophthalmologist
- Orthoptist
- Optometrist
- Technician
- Ophthalmic nurse
13Diagnosis and Management
- Investigate
- Diagnosis
- Treat
- Monitor
14Sort it !
- Ophthalmology - Cataract, Lumps and blockages
- Optometry - LV and Contact lenses
- Orthoptists - Double vision
15Watch it !
- Monitoring glaucoma, diabetic retinal health
- Special tests biometry (ultra-sound of eye),
pachymetry (corneal thickness), tomography
(mapping back of eye) , perimetry (peripheral
vision)
16Community Optometry
- Eye Disease -Gatekeeping role
- Correction of refractive errors - glasses
17Language
- Specificity and Sensitivity
- Sensitive - How many found
- Specific -How many correctly found
18The optometrist -Is it ever 'routine'
- The 'routine' eye examination
- History and Symptoms
- Examining the eye
- Vision
- Refraction
- Eye movements and Co-ordination
- After the examination
19History and Symptoms
- Activity 1
- In pairs - One person optometrist
- - One person patient
- - What do you want to know?
- - Why?
- As a rehabilitation worker would you ask the
same questions ?
20History and symptoms
- Reasons for visit and symptoms
- Some optometrists use questionnaires
- Eye detectives
- Symptoms - Any double vision?
- - Dry, itchy eyes
- - Flashes and floaters?
- History - medical (diabetes,blood
pressure) - - family
- - eye problems
21Examining the eye
- Inside and out (fundus and anterior eye)
A bio-microscope or slit-lamp enables a
magnified image of the front of the eye
Fluorescein -A green dye changes colour with
light shines
22Fundus (not fun dust )
- Inside the eye
- Record all normal features
- Macula, disc, periphery etc
- Check with and without magnification
23Other tests
- IOP Applannation (Touching)
- - air puff tonometer
- Narrow drainage angles gonioscopy
- Health checks
- Blood pressure
24What is visual acuity
- Vision is seeing
- Acuity is a measure of degree
- Visual acuity is a measure of the smallest detail
a person can just see
25Limit of sight
- It is the gap we can just see
- Make the same sized angle at different distances
26The eye test chart- visual acuity
- The smallest detail able to see
- Helps estimate how much can be seen
- Does not explain everything
- Can be done with very small
- babies using stripes
27Testing small children
- Preferential looking
- Stripes as borders
286/6 20/20
- Standard 6/6 20/20
- The letter I can just see at 60m (a big swimming
pool) is the biggest letter on the chart at 6m
29LogMAR chart
- Better for LV and accuracy
- Snellen acuity is usually on a row basis
- Row being recorded if most of the letters read
- Confusion if record 6/12- or 6/12
- LogMAR - 0.1 each row
- Each letter scores 0.02
- Letters equally weighed
- Progressive size change
-
30Using Symbols
31Close work
- N charts - not consistent, not linear
- - different cards different
sizes - M charts - A 1M approx. the size of lower-case
newspaper print. 2M is 2 times bigger than 1m - Bailey-Lovie n charts - logarithmic base
- Need to measure working distance !
32Activity 2 -thats the limit
- In pairs
- Hold the reading card at twice your usual reading
distance - Measure the smallest print you can see
- Measure the print you are most comfortable
reading - Discuss how you feel being tested
33Them and Us
- Threshold v Sustained vision
- Repeatable v Realistic
- Comfortable v accurate
34Peoples impressions
- Lighting conditions unrealistic
- Like to sit closer
- Tests should be easier
- Our Better Vision 1999 - Ryan and McCloughan
-
35Testing times
- Its devastating when you find out that you
cant even read the top line. And you come out
and you find that youre drained and you feel a
lump in your throat - Our Better Vision 1999 - Ryan and McCloughan
36Size reserves
- Acuity reserves
- Fluent reading
- 160 words per minute
- 31 acuity reserve
- Spot or survival reading
- 40 words per minute
- 11 acuity reserve
37Refraction
- Getting the right prescription (Rx)
- Retinoscopy
- Hand held device shines light at the back of the
eye - Children and people with learning disabilities
spectacles
38Cross-Cyl
Acknowledge- design for vision Larry Bergman -
colorxrays.com
39Refraction
- Trial Frames
- Phoropter head looks more high tech hold
lenses in front of eyes - Subjective refraction cross-cyl
- - fan and
block - - duo-chrome
- Bracketing techniques allow accuracy
40Refractive error
- Cornea power and eye length must correspond
- Emmetropia perfect focus clear sight without
specs. - Focus for near objects provided by ciliary
muscles accommodation
41Myopia
- Eye too long, cornea too curved
- Corrected by -ive lenses
- Progressive myopia has pathological changes
- Myopes gt risk glaucoma, retinal detachment
42Myopia
43Hyperopia
- Cornea too weak, eye too short
- If low to moderate can be overcome by focus
(children have accommodation) - Small eyes and eye structure more at risk acute
glaucoma
44Hyperopia
45Astigmatism
- Occurs to some degree in 100 population
- No eye is a perfect sphere
- One axis is steeper
- Trans-Atlantic misunderstandings Rugby and
football or football and baseball
46Astigmatism
47Presbyopia
- Lens thickens and loses flexibility with age
- Happens to all over 50s
- Same for children without lenses (cataracts)
- Dual correction of sight requires bifocals,
varifocals - Advances in multi-focal intra-ocular lenses
48Presbyopia
49Near Focus
- Checked in young people
- Presbyopia means ive lenses focus at close
working distance
(acknowledgement to College of Optometrists)
50Volunteers please
- Demonstrating - strong positive lenses
- Mimicking long sight
- Image difference and double vision
51Revision/Reminder
- Myopia image falls in front of retina
negative lenses (concave) - Hyperopia image would be created behind retina
(convex) - Presbyopia lack of focusing power for near
tasks (accommodation) - Astigmatism Shape of eye requires two axis's of
focus
52New words?
53Eye Movements and Co-ordination
- Simple cover test
- Maddox Rod
- Maddox Wing
- OXO tests
54Maddox Rod
- Using a Maddox Rod a red line appears across the
room
552 glaring omissions
- Contrast
- Peripheral vision
- For further discussion?
56After lunch - activity 3
- Look at the ive and -ive lenses
- Can you work out which would correct for
presbyopia - With the positive lenses - see if you can find
the focus points of the lenses. - Is there anything different about a lens that
corrects astigmatism?
57Optometric Summing up
- Advice to Patient
- Spectacles types, materials
- Referral
58Another summing up
- Low Vision definition
- The role of clinicians
- Basics of optometric care
59Contact details
- Practical bit after lunch
- M.bairstow_at_vision2020.org.uk
60Focusing lenses
- 1D Focusing power of lens of 1m
- Reciprocal of Focal Length in cms
- 4D 1/focal length 100/25
- Lens required to focus at 25 cm length is 4D
- So what lens at 10cms ?
61(No Transcript)