Effect of Aging and Visual Impairment on Dynamic Visual Acuity with Telescopic Spectacles During Vertical Motion

J. Demer
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Abstract

Telescopic spectacles are frequently prescribed for visually impaired patients, but visual rehabilitation with these costly devices is often unsuccessful. The retinal slip hypothesis suggests that one major cause of rehabilitation failure with telescopic spectacles is the result of patients’ inability to maintain adequate stability of magnified images on the retina during unintended head movements caused by ambulation, tremor, and postural instability. The visual-vestibulo-ocular reflex (VVOR), which normally produces eye movements to compensate for head movements, is overwhelmed when the visual effects of head movements are magnified by head-mounted telescopes, permitting instability of images on the retina.1 It has been demonstrated in normally sighted2 and low vision subjects3 wearing telescopic spectacles that horizontal head motion significantly decreases dynamic visual acuity (DVA), the acuity during relative motion. However, clinical studies suggest that spontaneous vertical head motion is an important determinant of successful rehabilitation with telescopic spectacles.3,4 Although vertical optotype and head motion with telescopic spectacles have been demonstrated to impair the DVA of young, normal subjects through the mechanism of retinal image instability,5 DVA for vertical relative motion has not been similarly studied in elderly or low vision subjects. Impaired VVOR performance in these subjects would be expected to compromise DVA.
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老化与视力损害对戴望远镜眼镜垂直运动动态视力的影响
经常给视力受损的患者开望远镜眼镜,但使用这些昂贵的设备进行视力康复通常是不成功的。视网膜滑移假说认为,使用望远镜眼镜康复失败的一个主要原因是患者在行走、震颤和姿势不稳定引起的意外头部运动中无法保持视网膜上放大图像的足够稳定性。视觉-前庭-眼反射(VVOR)通常会产生眼部运动来补偿头部运动,但当头部运动的视觉效果被头戴式望远镜放大时,它就会被淹没,从而导致视网膜上的图像不稳定有研究表明,在正常视力和低视力人群中,头部水平运动显著降低动态视力(DVA),即相对运动时的视力。然而,临床研究表明,自发的垂直头部运动是一个重要的决定因素,成功康复的望远镜眼镜。3,4尽管已证实垂直视型和头部运动通过视网膜图像不稳定的机制损害了年轻、正常受试者的DVA,但垂直相对运动的DVA尚未在老年人或低视力受试者中得到类似的研究。这些受试者的VVOR功能受损可能会损害DVA。
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Development of a Noninvasive Video-Based Method of Measuring Transmission Properties of the Human Lens Reading Performance with Peripheral Viewing Using Rapid Serial Visual Presentation Effect of Aging and Visual Impairment on Dynamic Visual Acuity with Telescopic Spectacles During Vertical Motion ERG Flicker Sensitivity as a Function of Retinal Eccentricity and Adaptation Level. Isolation of Photopic ERGs Using Dim, Red/Green Counterphase Stimuli
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