Vision Defects
Chat Highlights
September 29, 2004
Norma Devine, Editor
On Wednesday, September 29, 2004, Dr. Elliot Werner, a glaucoma
specialist at Wills, and the glaucoma chat group discussed "Vision
Defects."
Moderator: Welcome back,
Dr. Werner. Tonight's topic concerns glaucomatous defects
in vision. Are the defects revealed by visual field tests?
*
Dr. Elliot Werner: Vision defects
include much more than just defects in the measured visual field.
We know that glaucoma has profound effects on a variety of visual
functions.
P: Does the visual field test
indicate the cause of the defects?
Dr. Elliot Werner: The visual field
test rarely identifies the cause. Often, a visual field
test can localize the lesion; that is, it can tell the doctor
where in the eye or brain the problem is located, but determining
the cause usually requires other testing or a more thorough eye
examination.
P: How is the visual field measured?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Visual fields
are measured by projecting a small light, called the target, onto
an illuminated background in various locations in the field of
vision. The patient is asked whether or not he or she can
see the target. On the basis of which target locations are
seen or not seen, a map of the visual field is created and areas
of loss are identified.
P: Does the pattern (shape) and
location of visual field defects reveal anything about the cause
of a glaucoma patient's loss, such as from trauma?
Dr. Elliot Werner: No. All
glaucomas produce pretty much the same type of visual field defects.
You cannot reliably distinguish one form of glaucoma from another
by the appearance of the visual field.
P: Where does visual field loss
usually occur first?
Dr. Elliot Werner: That varies a
lot. Most patients develop loss in the mid-periphery of
the visual field on the nasal side (that is, towards the nose),
but almost any pattern can be seen in glaucoma.
P: How many visual field tests
are needed for a baseline?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Usually, if the
patient is a good tester and gives reliable, consistent results,
two visual field tests are adequate for a baseline. Some
patients, however, have a harder time learning how to take field
tests and need more tests to learn before a stable baseline can
be established.
P: If a visual field test shows
a new area of loss, do you accept that or wait until that loss
shows up again in one or two subsequent tests?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Visual field tests
are notoriously variable from test to test. No change should
be accepted unless it has been confirmed on at least one more
test.
P: How much of the visual field
must be lost before glaucoma is considered to be advanced?
Dr. Elliot Werner: The average sensitivity
of the visual field is about 30 decibels ( the unit used to measure
this sort of thing). A loss of more than 10 decibels, or
about one third, is considered advanced.
P: How often should a glaucoma
patient take a visual field test?
Dr. Elliot Werner: That depends upon
how bad the glaucoma is and how long the patient has been stable.
Generally, between one and four times per year, based on those
factors.
Moderator: Doctor Werner, have you ever taken a visual field
test?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Yes, I have taken
many visual field tests. My mother had glaucoma, so
I get tested about every other year. I also take the tests
when I am training new technicians to give them practice administering
the test. It's a terrible test. I hate it. I
recently had a colonoscopy. That was much easier than the
visual field test.
P: In reviewing my visual field
tests, my doctor bases his judgments on Pattern Deviation, rather
than on Total Deviation. Can you explain this, please?
Dr. Elliot Werner: The Pattern Deviation
is an index of localized loss, the type that occurs in glaucoma.
The Total Deviation measures a combination of generalized
and localized loss, so it is less specific.
P: A patient who takes her visual
field tests on an Octopus is concerned because she hears many
of us discussing taking tests on a Humphrey.
Dr. Elliot Werner: The difference
between an Octopus perimeter and a Humphrey perimeter is like
the difference between a Ford and a Chevy -- the same thing
by different manufacturers. It makes no difference.
P: What can or should be done
if the visual field gets progressively worse?
Dr. Elliot Werner: That means the
glaucoma is not adequately controlled and the pressure needs to
be lowered, if possible.
P: I understand you have to have
a visual field of 20 degrees or less to qualify for SSDI (Social
Security Disability Insurance). Is that the same as legal
blindness?
Dr. Elliot Werner: If the peripheral
visual field is lost to within 20 degrees of the center, that
is considered legal blindness. The normal visual field extends
about 90 degrees in each direction from the center.
P: How is loss of contrast sensitivity
measured?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Contrast sensitivity,
a person's ability to distinguish an object from its background,
is measured by what are called "gratings." These are alternating
dark and light stripes. In low contrast targets, the dark
and light stripes are almost the same shade of gray. In
high contrast targets, the stripes are almost black and white.
Depending on which target the patient can see, the contrast loss
can be measured. A new test called FDT depends on contrast
testing.
P: What does "FDT" stand for?
Dr. Elliot Werner: FDT strands for
Frequency Doubling Technology. It uses contrast gratings
to test the visual field. FDT is gaining popularity
as a screening test, or for evaluating glaucoma suspects to see
if they have early damage.
P: Is there a way to measure
depth perception?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Depth perception
is usually not affected early in glaucoma. Loss of depth
perception is usually a later manifestation, especially if the
loss of vision in one eye is more advanced than in the other.
Functions that seem to be affected early in glaucoma include contrast
sensitivity, color vision, and dark adaptation.
P: Why is color perception lost
early in glaucoma?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Color perception
depends on an intact optic nerve. If the nerve is damaged,
the ability of the eye and brain to perceive color decreases,
due to decreased input from the eye. It's like if the cable
to your TV is cut in half, the picture quality will suffer.
P: Can contrast sensitivity,
color vision, and dark adaptation be measured?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Yes. There
are good tests for these and they are sometimes used for evaluating
glaucoma patients. Their best use is in early glaucoma.
P: How can you tell if loss of
contrast sensitivity is from glaucoma or cataracts if both are
present?
Dr. Elliot Werner: The best way to
tell is to take out the cataract and see what happens. Patients
with early glaucoma also usually do not have loss of central visual
acuity, whereas cataract patients often do.
P: What is dark adaptation?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Technically, dark
adaptation is the ability of the retina to increase its sensitivity
in low light situations. Strictly speaking, dark adaptation is
not directly affected in glaucoma, but as visual field and contrast
sensitivity and color vision are lost as the disease progresses,
the ability of patients to see things in low light situations
becomes very poor.
Moderator: Do you know why those
functions are affected?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Probably because
the patient's optic nerve fibers are destroyed. All visual
functions are carried back to the brain by the optic nerve.
So, if you lose some of your optic nerve, your vision will be
adversely affected.
P: How is blurred or hazy vision
measured, and what are some of the causes?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Blurred vision
is usually measured with a simple visual acuity chart, like the
letters on the wall. Causes of blurred vision can be almost
any chronic eye disease, such as cataract, macular degeneration,
glaucoma, etc.
Moderator: Why would a glaucoma
patient have hazy vision intermittently?
Dr. Elliot Werner: It has been observed
for a long time that glaucoma patients complain of intermittent
fluctuation of vision. They have good days and bad days.
There are a lot of theories why that might be, but no good scientific
explanation.
P: Should the clinician select
one of the thresholding tests in automated perimetry and use it
as the default test in most cases?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Yes. In
evaluating and following patients known to have glaucoma, a screening
test should not be used. Thresholding strategies should be used.
P: Have you ever observed an
improvement in vision for a glaucoma patient? If so, to
what have you attributed that?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Yes, if the patient
has very high pressures that are lowered with treatment, some
improvement can be observed in many patients.
P: Why do bright lights seem
to blind a patient with advanced glaucoma?
Dr. Elliot Werner: I'm not sure,
but probably because of the marginal function of the optic nerve
and retina. The ability of the system to adapt to different
levels of light is poor, causing glare and discomfort.
P: What is the basis for SWAP's
putative ability to detect axonal loss earlier than white-on-white
testing? Is it because the axons that mediate perception
along the blue/yellow axis are lost earliest, as I think I've
read? Or is there a newer theory?
Dr. Elliot Werner: SWAP (Short-Wavelength
Automated Perimetry) uses colored targets and backgrounds.
It seems to be capable of detecting early damage before the standard
white-on-white perimetry. The reason is that it tests only
a small proportion of the ganglion cells of the retina, so that
if some are lost it is easier to detect. It's like looking
at a herd of forty cattle. If two are missing, it's hard
to detect. If you look at a group of five cattle and two
are missing, it's a lot easier to see that two are missing.
P: Is there any machine that
can cope with nystagmus and get good results from visual field
tests?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Let me first explain
that nystagmus is uncontrolled movements of the eyes, usually
from side to side. It has many possible causes, but is often
congenital (present at birth) as a kind of birth defect in the
control system of the eye movements. Now, to answer your
question, not really. If the nystagmus is not too bad,
we can usually get usable fields. Severe nystagmus, however,
makes taking the test difficult.
P: Can the corneal thickness
of a nystagmus patient be measured?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Yes. But
corneal topography or measuring corneal curvature, as is done
in determining the appropriate power for an intraocular lens
before cataract surgery, can be a problem. Interestingly,
nystagmus goes away when you sleep or are under general anesthesia.
P: Can defects of the cornea
be measured?
Dr. Elliot Werner: Yes,
quite easily with a routine eye examination using the slit lamp.
[*See: "Understanding Visual Field Testing" by Jeffrey Henderer, M.D. http://www.willsglaucoma.org/testing/vf.html]
End of highlights for September 29, 2004.
On October 6, Dr. Wilson discussed "Stem Cell Research" in the
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of that meeting.
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