Automated Perimetry in Glaucoma

Author(s):  
Hylton R. Mayer ◽  
Marc L. Weitzman

Clinical experience and multiple prospective studies, such as the Collaborative Normal Tension Glaucoma Study and the Los Angeles Latino Eye Study, have demonstrated that the diagnosis of glaucoma is more complex than identifying elevated intraocular pressure. As a result, increased emphasis has been placed on measurements of the structural and functional abnormalities caused by glaucoma. The refinement and adoption of imaging technologies assist the clinician in the detection of glaucomatous damage and, increasingly, in identifying the progression of structural damage. Because visual field defects in glaucoma patients occur in patterns that correspond to the anatomy of the nerve fiber layer of the retina and its projections to the optic nerve, visual functional tests become a link between structural damage and functional vision loss. The identification of glaucomatous damage and management of glaucoma require appropriate, sequential measurements and interpretation of the visual field. Glaucomatous visual field defects usually are of the nerve fiber bundle type, corresponding to the anatomic arrangement of the retinal nerve fiber layer. It is helpful to consider the division of the nasal and temporal retina as the fovea, not the optic nerve head, because this is the location that determines the center of the visual field. The ganglion cell axon bundles that emanate from the nasal side of the retina generally approach the optic nerve head in a radial fashion. The majority of these fibers enter the nasal half of the optic disc, but fibers that represent the nasal half of the macula form the papillomacular bundle to enter the temporal-most aspect of the optic nerve. In contrast, the temporal retinal fibers, with respect to fixation, arc around the macula to enter the superotemporal and inferotemporal portions of the optic disc. The origin of these arcuate temporal retinal fibers strictly respects the horizontal retinal raphe, temporal to the fovea. As a consequence of this superior-inferior segregation of the temporal retinal fibers, lesions that affect the superotemporal and inferotemporal poles of the optic disc, such as glaucoma, tend to cause arcuateshaped visual field defects extending from the blind spot toward the nasal horizontal meridian.

2012 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihiko Tawara ◽  
Rie Miyamoto ◽  
Norihiko Tou ◽  
Shingo Ishibashi ◽  
Hiroyuki Kondo

2009 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 30
Author(s):  
Fotis Topouzis ◽  
Panayiota Founti ◽  
◽  

Glaucoma progression can be assessed based on the worsening of functional and/or structural damage. The importance of assessing structural changes relies on the fact that these usually precede visual field defects in the course of glaucoma. Changes in specific optic disc features denoting glaucoma progression can be clinically observed, while the occurrence of disc haemorrhages is considered to be a risk factor for glaucoma progression. To date, colour photography of the optic disc is the standard method for documenting and monitoring glaucoma in clinical practice and research studies. However, there are several limitations related to the use of colour photography. These mainly involve moderate to poor reproducibility in assessing glaucoma progression and limited information provided on the amount of glaucomatous damage progression.


1997 ◽  
Vol 211 (6) ◽  
pp. 338-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Marraffa ◽  
C. Mansoldo ◽  
R. Morbio ◽  
R. De Natale ◽  
L. Tomazzoli ◽  
...  

PLoS ONE ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. e0222347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfonso Casado ◽  
Andrea Cerveró ◽  
Alicia López-de-Eguileta ◽  
Raúl Fernández ◽  
Soraya Fonseca ◽  
...  

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