Ocular motility Flashcards
Which muscles do the cranial nerves supply?
• Cranial nerve III: Superior, inferior, medial rectus and inferior oblique
• Cranial nerve IV: superior oblique
• Cranial nerve VI : Lateral rectus
What do you look for when doing ocular motility?
• Corneal reflexes
- Move eyes in 9 cardinal positions, looking at reflex
- Ask px to report diplopia
How is ocular motility recorded?
• SAFE
- Smooth, Accurate, Full, Extensive
• If faltered
- Under action superior rectus, R+L
- No pain
What 3 things can affect visual field, pre-retinal disease?
• Cornea (SPK)
• Crystalline lens (cataract)
• Vitreous (haemorrhage)
Describe confrontation visual fields
• Gross overview, fast to administer
• Detects large defects (e.g. hemianopia)
• Insensitive to small or subtle defects (glaucoma)
• Test monocular
• compares px vision to own
• Move target from non-seeing to point first detection, continue to move asking for changes in appearance
Describe supra-threshold
• Most common visual field investigation in Primary care
• Dots presented above patient’s threshold
• Point seen = pass; Point missed = fail
• Some tests measure central threshold (e.g. 32dB)
• Fast to administer
• Sensitive to most defects (e.g. hemianopia, arcuate scotoma)
• May miss shallow (mild) defects
• Screening test- use for any of the Indications
Describe threshold
• Measure threshold at each location
• Determine extent and depth of defect
• Indication: failed supra-threshold test
• Primary/Secondary Care: Glaucoma
• Use as basis for glaucoma referral