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PRINCIPLES OF VISUAL FIELD TESTING AND PERIMETRY Chris A. Johnson, Ph.D, D.Sc, FAAO, FARVO Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics 200 Hawkins Drive Iowa City, IA 52240 1 I. Why are visual fields done ? A. It is the only clinical test of peripheral vision B. Many ocular and neurologic diseases affect peripheral vision before central vision C. Visual fields can assist in the detection of ocular and neurologic diseases D. Visual fields have differential diagnostic value and help to localize where the problem is occurring E. Reduced visual acuity is rather non-specific (cannot localize the source of the problem), but the pattern and location of visual field loss can localize where the deficit is occurring. F. Many people are unaware of peripheral vision loss (particularly if it is only in one eye) even though it affects their activities of daily living and quality of life. II. A “cookbook” for visual field interpretation A. Place the left eye visual field on the left and the right eye visual field on the right B. For each eye, is the visual field normal or abnormal ? (If normal in both eyes, you’re done) C. If abnormal, is it one eye or both eyes ? If on only one eye, it’s ocular media, retina or optic nerve. If its both eyes, then its chiasm, post-chiasm or bilateral disease in both eyes. D. Where is the defect in general terms ? (superior, inferior, nasal, or temporal) If it’s extensive, where is the majority of the defect ? (Nasal or binasal is glaucoma, optic nerve or retina, bitemporal is chiasm, nasal in one eye and temporal in the other (homonymous, or same side of vision), it is postchiasmal E. What is the shape of the defect (respect the horizontal, respect the vertical, point to the blind sopt, point to fixation, fan shaped, candleflame shaped (centrocecal), central quadrant, hemifield, etc) F. How do the two eyes compare (homonymous, congruent ?) 2 G. Where is the most likely location of the defect ? H. Key features to remember 1. Respect the nasal horizxontal meridian – glaucoma, optic nerve or retinal casculature 2. Respect the vertical – chiasm or post-chiasm 3. Point to the blind spot – optic nerve, glaucoma 4. Point to fixation – chiasm, post-chiasm 5. Bitemporal – chiasm 6. Binasal – glaucoma optic nerve, retina 7. Ring – retina 8. Scalloped edges of deficit – retina 9. Homonymous – post-chiasm 10. Congruous – Occipital lobe 11. Moderately incongruous – Parietal lobe 12. Highly incongruous – Temporal lobe 13. Pie in the sky (like a piece of pie cut out of the visual field superiorly temporal lobe 14. Pie on the floor – Parietal lobe 15. Total homonymous hemianopsia – post-chiasmal 3 III. Kinetic Perimetry A. Target is moved from the periphery towards fixation to map out areas of equal sensitivity (isopters). Multiple isopters are created by doing this for different sizes and luminances of targets. Areas of non-seeing (scotomas) are also mapped out. This is a highly acquired skill and requires much interaction between the examiner and the patient. Few instruments have automated this procedure. IV. Static Perimetry A. Target is stationary and luminance is adjusted to find the threshold for detection (minimum amount of light needed for detection). This has been automated and has a strong normative database and sophisticated analysis packages, and is standardized. V. Suprathreshold Static Perimetry A. Is a rapid screening procedure that is able to determine normal and abnormal sensitivity locations in the visual field and in some instances the extent of the abnormality. VI. Reliability A. Eye Movements (fixation losses – blind spot technique, and gaze tracking) B. False positive responses C. False negative responses VII. Visual Field Indices A. Mean Deviation (MD) B. Pattern Standard Deviation (PSD) C. Glaucoma Hemifield Test (GHt) VIII. Probability Plots 4 IX. X. XI. A. Total Deviation B. Pattern Deviation Type of test A. 30,2, 24-2, 10-2, macula B. screening tests (full field, 1 level, 3 level, quantify defects) Test strategy A. Full Threshold B. Swedish Interactive Threshold Algorithm (SITA) Target Size A. Goldmann sizes I through V XII. Diffuse Loss and Localized loss A. Use of the Total and Pattern Deviation plots to distinguish them XIII. Artifactual Visual Field Results A. Small pupil size B. Refractive error C. Droopy Eyelid (ptosis) D. Lens rim artifact E. 1. Total lens rim artifact 2. Partial lens rim artifact Fatigue or limited attention span XIV. Localization of visual field loss 5 A. Cornea, lens and media opacities 1. B. C. D. E. Usually produce diffuse or widespread visual sensitivity loss Retinal problems 1. Deficits do not generally correspond to anatomical visual pathway organization. 2. Retinitis pigmentosa and related diseases produce a ring or partial ring scotoma 3. Branch artery occlusions have an arcuate shape extending from the optic nerve (blind spot) and usually “respect” the nasal horizontal meridian 4. Macular defects produce central scotomas Glaucoma 1. Produces deficits that correspond to the nerve fiber bundle arrangement 2. Deficits “respect” the nasal horizontal meridian 3. Defects are arcuate, point to the blind spot and fan out towards the nasal visual field. 4. Superior and inferior arcuate nerve fiber defects are the most common, along with nasal steps. Temporal wedge defects are less common. 5. Other optic neuropathies produce central scotomas, glaucoma-like defects, centrocecal scotomas, and visual field constriction. Chiasmal defects 1. Bitemporal visual field defects (especially superior bitemporal defects) are most commonly seen with chiasmal lesions. The defects “respect” the vertical meridian and “point” to fixation. 2. Junction scotomas (dense central visual field loss in one etye accompanied by a temporal defect respective the vertical meridian in the other eye) can occur of the deficit is at the anterior portion of the chiasm where the optic nerve enters. Lateral geniculate defects (very, very uncommon) 6 1. F. Post chiasmal and lateral geniculate defects 1. Respect the vertical meridian and point to fixation. Also they are homonymous (on the same side of vision) for both eyes. 2. In general the greater the congruity (the more similar the visual field of both eyes appears) the lesion is farther back in the optic radiations. 3. Temporal lobe lesions have the most incongruous visual field (visual field loss is greater in one eye than in the other), while parietal lobe lesions have greater congruity, and occipital lobe lesions are highly congruous (cookie cutter punched out lesions). Temporal lobe lesions often produce a “pie in the sky” appearance like a pience of pie has bee cut out of the visual field superiorly. Parietal lobe lesions often produce “pie on the floor” visual field appearance. a 4. G. Because of the distribution of nerve fibers, the defects tend to resemble a “tongue” extending from the blind spot horizontally through to the nasal visual field. Conversely, the remainder of the visual field can be affected and this region can be the only remaining visual field. Things to remember – a total homonymous hemianopsia (half of the visual field missing for both eyes) means that all of the fibers have been damaged, so the only localizing ability is to assess that it is postchiasmal; some cookie cutter defects may link up with the blind spot for one eye, and this should be considered; because the temporal visual field extends farther than the nasal visual field, so there may be a rim of visual field for one eye (the temporal crescent) that does not appear for the nasal visual field of the other eye. Use the “cookbook” to perform visual field evaluations for a single test and it will get you through most of the diagnostic dilemmas, but be sure to perform these steps in the proper order (don’t change the order or skip steps). XV. Analysis of progression A. There are four methods of evaluating progression: clinical judgment, classification or staging of disease, event analysis (change from baseline) and trend analysis (linear or nonlinear regression). All of these procedures have been used in multicenter glaucoma clinical trials. 7 B. 1. Clinical judgment: advantages – easy to perform, can be conducted in a busy clinic. disadvantages – is not quantitative, varies greatly from one practitioner to another, is not evidence-based, users tend to “overcall” progression or change. 2. Staging or classification systems – advantages – is simple to use, has a minimal number of rules. disadvantages - is an ordinal scale (level of severity is ordered) but intervals are not necessarily equal, the criteria for a meaningful change for clinical management is not well determined, all staging systems are different 3. Event analysis – advantages – establishes a baseline result that is quantitative and standardized, procedures are available on many automated devices. Disadvantages – only compares the current visual field to the baseline results and all intermediate findings are not considered, because of variability and response errors (false positives and negatives) single test results can sometimes be questionable. 4. Trend analysis performs a regression of results from all test procedures, either using a linear or a nonlinear model. advantages – utilizes all of the data and can minimize the influence of “outliers”; disadvantages – requires at least 6 or 7 visual fields over a reasonable time period of 3 years or more to achieve good clinical performance; is limited by the assumptions associated with a linear or nonlinear model. Event and trend analysis are the procedures that have been most commonly used for clinical trials and for assessment of individual patient status. XVI. One factor that is a problem for all of these approaches is within and between test variability. Unlike detection of visual field loss, there has been no consensus as to the most appropriate method to determine visual field progression (all of the various methods of assessing visual field progression only agree with each other about 5060% of the time) A. What can be done: 1. Do not rely completely on the visual field for a determination 2. When in doubt, repeat the test to confirm a suspected change (In the Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study, more than 87% of initial visual field losses were not confirmed on the next test) 8 3. Use all the information available in conjunction with the visual field (optic disc appearance, retinal nerve fiber bundle, other relevant clinical information) 4. Use as many different forms of evaluating progression as possible and look for concordance 5. Get opinions from your colleagues. XVII. Structure-function relationships A. For the past 150 years or more, structure-function relationships (visual field and noninvasive assessment of the retina, optic nerve fibers, and brain locations involved with vision) show good agreement if large, general criteria are used, but the agreement becomes smaller as the questions become more specific B. In spite of tremendous technological advances, there has not been much change in the general issue of structure-function relationships. Why ? 1. Each procedure has its own variability 2. Visual field typically examine only a portion of the entire visual field, while structural assessments are usually associated with all of the neural fibers associated with vision 3. The method of assessing these topics is not completely definitive and different answers can occur with various approaches. 4. Use the methods that you are most familiar with and don’t change them unless there is a significant, meaningful reason to do so. XVIII. New test procedures in perimetry A. SWAP (Short Wavelength Automated Perimetry) B. HEP (Heidelberg Edge Perimetry) and Flicker perimetry C. Motion perimetry D. Frequency Doubling Perimetry (Matrix perimetry) E. Pulsar Perimetry F. Microperimetry 9 G. High Pass Resolution Perimetry H. Rarebit perimetry XIX. Questions ? 10