单眼固定标准化和定量化新方法:aallen - pacific固定精度和稳定性试验(AP-FAST)

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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:这是一篇两部分的论文,第一部分回顾了眼球固定运动,第二部分介绍了一种新的眼球固定运动准确性和稳定性的临床测试方法。第二部分还包含了这个新测试的部分验证研究和规范结果。本研究旨在探讨以下问题:1。有症状的持续性mTBI患者与没有持续性TBI的视力正常患者在临床可测量的固定稳定性和准确性方面是否存在显著差异?黄斑完整性测试仪(MIT)是否可以作为区分mTBI患者与非TBI患者固定稳定性和准确性的诊断工具?如果是这样的话,标准化测试方案(AP-FAST)的引入是否可以对单目注视行为进行更可靠和描述性的量化?方法:为了回答我们研究中提出的第一个问题,我们使用两种不同的固定测试方法比较了非mTBI和mTBI患者的数据。其中一种方法是使用眼动仪EyeLink II来比较验光学生和mTBI患者。采用定制固定模式程序测量固定精度和稳定性。比较两组固定结果。为了回答问题2a,我们使用MIT诊断来比较两组的固定行为,让每个受试者评估他/她自己固定姿势的准确性和稳定性。为了解决问题2b,我们创建了一个15分的评分系统协议,以帮助描述和量化通过海丁格的画笔感知的单目注视行为。两组测试对象:mTBI患者和视力正常的受试者使用AP-FAST网格和注视行为调查进行比较。结果:关于问题一,视力正常受试者组与mTBI患者组在单眼固定的稳定性和准确性上存在显著且具有临床意义的差异,正常受试者的精确度和稳定性更好。关于问题2a和2b, mTBI患者组感知、定位和居中的平均能力比非tbi组差(有统计学意义)。基于我们的研究结果,我们提出新开发的AP-FAST有助于描述、标准化和量化mTBI和非mTBI受试者如何感知海丁格刷全视现象。
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Introduction of a New Test for Standardizing and Quantifying Monocular Fixation: The Aalen-Pacific Fixation Accuracy & Stability Test (AP-FAST)
Background: This is a two-part paper, in which fixational eye movements are reviewed in part one, and a new clinical test of fixational eye movement accuracy and stability is introduced in part two. Part two also contains a partial validation study and normative results for this new test. The study was designed to explore the following questions: 1. Is there a significant difference in clinically measurable fixation stability and accuracy between symptomatic individuals who have sustained mTBI versus visually normal individuals who have not sustained TBI? 2a. Could the Macular Integrity Tester (MIT) be useful as a diagnostic instrument for differentiating fixation stability and accuracy with mTBI patients versus those without TBI? 2b. If so, could introduction of a standardized test protocol (AP-FAST) allow for more reliable and descriptive quantification of monocular fixation behavior? Methods: To answer the first question posed in our study, data were compared between non-mTBIs and mTBI patients using two different fixation testing methods. One of the methods employed the eyetracker EyeLink II comparing optometry students to mTBI patients. Fixation accuracy and stability were measured with a custom fixation pattern program. Fixation results were compared for both groups. To answer question 2a, we compared fixation behavior for both groups using the MIT diagnostically by having each subject rate accuracy and stability of his/her own fixation posture. To address question 2b, a 15-point rating system protocol was created to help describe and quantify monocular fixation behavior via Haidinger’s brush perception. Two groups of test subjects: mTBI patients versus visually normal subjects were compared using the AP-FAST grid and fixation behavior survey. Results: Regarding question one, there was a significant and clinically relevant difference in monocular fixation stability and accuracy between the visual normal subject group and mTBI patient group, with normals demonstrating better accuracy and stability. Regarding questions 2a and 2b, the mTBI patient group had poorer mean ability (statistically significant) to perceive, localize, and center the Haidinger’s brush than those in the non-TBI group. Based on our results, we propose that the newly developed AP-FAST is useful for helping describe, standardize and quantify how the Haidinger’s brush entoptic phenomenon is perceived monocularly by both mTBI and nonmTBI subjects.
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