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Examination Techniques for Accuracy and Efficiency Basic Review of the Eye as an Optical System A VOSH-Florida Presentation • • • • • • • • • • Axial length Cornea Lens Emmetropia Myopia Hyperopia Astigmatism Accommodation Presbyopia Ocular Motility and Alignment • Axial Length: 22mm – 25mm – At birth, the axial length is ~17mm and increases by ~5mm by age 3. – Changes of ~1mm occur between age 3-13, with stability usually by age 15. • Anterior Chamber Depth: – 20 year old: ~4.0mm – 70 year old: ~3.5mm – Changes are due to an increasing thickness of the lens and may result in increased myopia. • Cornea : – There is a normal distribution of corneal refractive powers. – Most normal corneas will produce 42 – 44 diopters of refractive power (~9.4mm – 6.7mm of curvature). • Lens: – Produces ~20 diopters of refractive power by age 15. Ocular Refractive Status • Emmetropia - incident parallel rays of light converge to focus on the retina. • Myopia - incident parallel rays of light converge to focus in front of the retina. • Hyperopia - incident parallel rays of light converge to focus behind the retina. • Emmetropia: – Incident parallel rays of light converge to focus on the retina. • Emmetropia – Clinical Symptoms: – Patient is happy. – Discuss sunglasses and cosmetic contact lenses! • Myopia : – Incident parallel rays of light converge to focus in front of the retina. • Uncorrected Myopia – Associated Clinical Symptoms : – Distance blur – Headaches/fatigue (squinting) – Photophobia/glare – Night vision problems (blur/glare) – Pseudo-diplopia (ghost images) • Hyperopia: – Incident parallel rays of light converge to focus behind the retina. • Uncorrected Hyperopia – Associated Clinical Symptoms : – Headaches – Fatigue when reading – Blur when reading, constant or intermittent – Distance blur later in day – Night myopia – Esotropia - accommodative strabismus • Astigmatism: – generally defined as a non-spherical or toric anterior corneal curvature, resulting in incident rays of light having multiple points of focus: – Regular – Maximum and minimum refractive angles are separated by 90 degrees. – Irregular - Maximum and minimum refractive angles are separated by other than 90 degrees (pterygia, keratoconus, corneal scars). – Lenticular – astigmatism induced by a tilting of the crystalline lens (minimal, insignificant). • Astigmatism: • Uncorrected Regular Astigmatism: – Results in a Circle of Least Confusion, or the dioptric midpoint between the major lines of focus. • Uncorrected Astigmatism – Associated Clinical Symptoms : – Headaches/fatigue (squinting) – Distance blur – Near blur – Photophobia/glare – Night vision problems (blur/glare) – Pseudo-diplopia (ghost images) • Presbyopia – the age-related, irreversible reduction in amplitude of accommodation. – Clinically significant when the accommodative demand at the patient’s normal reading distance (~ 40cm) is 50% of the available accommodative amplitude. – Example: ~2.5D accommodative demand at 40cm with 5D or less of accommodative facility = Presbyopia – Usually becomes symptomatic at ~40 years of age. • Uncorrected Presbyopia – Associated Clinical Symptoms : – Near blur – Headaches/fatigue – Accommodative spasms/transient distance blurring – Intermittent diplopia/pseudo-diplopia at near • Ocular Motility Disorders – The inability of both eyes to accurately align or maintain alignment on the target of interest. – Types: • Primary extra-ocular muscle problems – Paralytic strabismus – Convergence/Divergence infacility/insufficiency • Refractive-related problems – High uncorrected hyperopia (esotropia) – Significant uncorrected anisometropia (tropias/amblyopia) – Significant uncorrected antimetropia (tropias/amblyopia) • Ocular Motility Disorders - Associated Clinical Symptoms : – Asthenopia/fatigue – Blur – distance/near – Night vision problems (blur/glare) – Diplopia – Pseudo-diplopia (ghost images) – Depth perception problems