Background: Silicone oil is used as endotamponade following vitreoretinal surgery to maintain the retina reattached when indicated. This study investigates the hypothesis that silicone oil causes insulation effects on the retina by affecting its response to light.
Methods: Electrophysiological responses to a flash stimulus were recorded using full-field electroretinography (ERG) and visual evoked potentials (VEP).
Purpose: To explore whether adaptation reduces the interocular visual latency differences and the induced Pulfrich effect caused by the anisocoria implicit in small-aperture monovision.
Methods: Anisocoric vision was simulated in two adults by wearing in the non-dominant eye for 7 successive days, while awake, an opaque soft contact lens (CL) with a small, central, circular aperture. This was repeated with aperture diameters of 1.
Purpose: It is widely accepted that monocular deprivation results in improved visual performance in the non-pathological eye. The current study investigates the effect of deprivation due to severe impairment in one eye during late childhood or adulthood, on the spatial performance of the fellow 'good' eye.
Methods: Twenty patients (age: 29 ± 9 years) with severe visual impairment in one eye (visual acuity equal or worse than count fingers at 1 m), for a period longer than 2 years, participated in the study.
A 69-year-old male patient presented to our department with a 3-month history of nyctalopia. Reviewing of his general health revealed a history of gastrointestinal tumor treated with a modified WHIPPLE operation. Ocular findings at presentation included mild xerophthalmic features and nonspecific pigmentary retinal changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To compare visual acuity (VA) assessed in healthy eyes and eyes with diabetic retinopathy (DR) using three different logMAR charts: the Sloan letter European-wide chart, the tumbling E chart, and the Landolt C chart.
Methods: Measurements on one eye of 40 volunteers (aged 29 ± 4 years) without visual impairment and 31 DR patients (aged 70 ± 9 years) with mild/moderate visual impairment were included. Visual acuity was assessed, with habitual refractive correction, using each of the three charts.
Purpose: To explore the interocular differences in the temporal responses of the eyes induced by the monocular use of small-aperture optics designed to aid presbyopes by increasing their depth-of-focus.
Methods: Monocular and binocular pattern-reversal visual evoked potentials (VEPs) were measured at a mean photopic field luminance of 30 cd/m(2) in seven normal subjects with either natural pupils or when the non-dominant eye wore a small-aperture contact lens (aperture diameter 1.5, 2.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci
April 2011
Purpose: To assess whether there are any advantages of binocular over monocular vision under blur conditions.
Methods: The effect of defocus, induced by positive lenses, was measured on the pattern reversal visual evoked potential (VEP) and on visual acuity (VA). Monocular (dominant eye) and binocular VEPs were recorded from 13 volunteers (average age, 28 ± 5 years; average spherical equivalent, -0.
Purpose: To compare the proportions of school children with myopia and impaired visual acuity in Greece and Bulgaria.
Methods: A sample of 898 children, aged 10-15 years, was selected from two primary and two secondary schools in a Greek city (Heraklion), and one primary and secondary school in a Bulgarian city (Stara Zagora). Five hundred and eighty eight children were Greek (65.