PC - Retinoscopy - Week 2 Flashcards
How do retinoscopes work?
Emits light towards the pupil, allowing the operator to view the red reflection of the retina.
Describe the basics of how a retinoscope is used.
Practitioner sweeps the beam across the eye. The movement of the red refex relative to the direction of the sweep indicates the type of refractive error, and the speed indicates magnitude.
What is the objective of retinoscopy?
The eye should illuminate with the red reflex all at once.
Done by finding the far point of the eye, and adjusting it with lens.
Define a with movement in retinoscopy. What does this kind of movement indicate?
The red reflex in the pupil is in the same direction as the direction of sweep used by the practitioner.
Indicates hyperopia.
Define an against movement in retinoscopy. What does this kind of movement indicate?
The red reflex in the pupil is in the opposite direction as the direction of sweep used by the practitioner.
Indicates myopia.
Define a neutral movement in retinoscopy. What does this kind of movement indicate?
The red reflex has no direction as the eye illuminates at once.
Indicates emmetropia.
Define static retinoscopy and dynamic retinoscopy.
Static - used to quantify amount of ametropia objectively
Dynamic - used to objectively investigate accommodative state of the eye - near vision
Describe the basic clinical procedure for static retinoscopy.
Align the phoropter or trial frame, with both patients eyes open.
Have them focus at distance
Face the patient, with a working distance of 50-67cm
View their RE with your RE, their LE with your LE
Do not obscure their distance target
How is retinoscopy performed if the patient has astigmatism?
The beam must be aligned to their meridian axis.
Instrument must always be moves perpendicular to the streak. If horizontal, beam should be moved up/down.
In an astigmatic patient, when meridia is found, how can the second one be determined?
Rotate the beam to 90 degrees of the first meridia.
If it isnt present, the patient may be spherical.
In an astigmatic patient with 2 meridia, which should be neutralised first?
Most hyperopic/least myopic first.
What happens to the movement speed and brightness as you approach neutralisation?
Movement will quicken, and brightness will increase.
At neutralisation, movement is undetectable, and and brightness is highest.
Describe how neutralisation is achieved.
Continue adding powers until the reversal of movement. At that point, powers can be removed by a step or so.
Once a meridian is neutralised, what lens is used for the second meridian? What should the axis coincide with?
Minus cylindrical lens, with axis coinciding with the same direction as the streak/beam orientation, perpendicular to the sweep direction.
Whena cylinder is added, would the orientation of the reflex change?
No, if it does, it indicates obliquely crosses cylinder.