Packet 4: Monocular Fixation Flashcards

1
Q

is eccentric fixation a monocular or binocular phenomenon

A

monocular

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2
Q

what type of patients have eccentric fixation

A
  • only in strabismic amblyopic eyes, but not all amblyopic eyes
  • almost always unilateral
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3
Q

what are 3 ways to classify eccentric fixation

A
  • location (direction)
  • magnitude
  • stability
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4
Q

is the eccentric fixation associated with direction of strab?

A

yes

for example, XT will have temporal EF

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5
Q

is the EF magnitude associated with magnitude or strabismus

A

no

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6
Q

most EFs have a magnitude of

A

3 or less prism diopters

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7
Q

how does stability change from central to peripheral

A

generally more peripheral, less stable

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8
Q

what are the objective and subjective tests for EF

A

objective: visuoscopy
subjective: Haidinger’s brushes, Brock-Fivner AI Transfer

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9
Q

some important set ups for visuoscopy

A
  • monocularly
  • demo with non-amblyopic eye first
  • project target into AE with dim illumination
  • repeat several times for reliability
  • easier if dilated
  • high myopes can wear optical correction
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10
Q

how can you make it easier to appreciate Haidinger’s brushes

A
  • decrease room illumination
  • increase working distance
  • viewing through high plus lens
  • extra blue filter
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11
Q

how do you measure the magnitude of Haidinger’s brushes

A

at 40cm: 4mm= 1pd

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12
Q

what does the patient have to have for you to use Brock-Giver after image transfer test

A

normal correspondance

b/c after image tags foveal on NAE and cortical transfers to fovea of AE

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13
Q

how do you measure the magnitude of Brock-Giver after image transfer test

A

at 1m: 1cm=1pd

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14
Q

in the Brock-Giver after image transfer test: if the patient has NEF in his left eye, what would he report?

A

after image to the right of fixation point

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15
Q

normal fixation depends on the fovea having what 3 things

A
  1. best visual acuity (BVA)
  2. principal visual direction (PVD)
  3. zero retinomotor value (ZRMV)
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16
Q

what is visual direction and how does it work

A
  • direction in subjective space associated with a given retinal receptor
  • each retinal element localizes a stimulus in a certain direction