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Created on behalf of NHS NES as supplement to workshops on binocular vision and additional techniques. Acuity Testing in Children and how to cope with hysterical vision . Observations. Navigation in clinic / reaching for quiet small toys Holding new toys close for inspection
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Created on behalf of NHS NES as supplement to workshops on binocular vision and additional techniques. Acuity Testing in Children and how to cope with hysterical vision
Observations • Navigation in clinic / reaching for quiet small toys • Holding new toys close for inspection • Eye contact – often avoided in autistic spectrum • Photophobia
Observations • Obvious squint • Alternating – VA equal • Fixation preference – suspect amblyopia • Infantile esotropia – amblyopia rare • Intermittent exotropia –amblyopia rare • Accommodative esotropia – VA may be good but hypermetropia may prevent habitual clear VA • Squint may be secondary to poor unilateral VA e.g cataract or retinoblastoma • Infants → esotropia • Older children / adults → exotropia
Qualitative Tests • Fixation & following both eyes together • Infants prefer their mother’s face • Illuminated / moving small toys • Do not use noisy toys to assess VA • Smooth pursuit should be tested slowly • Jerky smooth pursuit does not mean low VA
Observations • Nystagmus • VA rarely better than 6/12 – often much worse • Amplitude of nystagmus not related to VA • Test VA uniocularly AND both eyes open • Use +6.0D lens as occluder if significant latent element • Near VA much better than distance • Test reading acuity at 1/3m and habitual near distance (even if 10cm) • Allow to adopt head posture during testing (usually face turn to fixing eye)
Observations • Ptosis • Lid ever obscuring pupil? • Using chin ↑ head posture • Using chin ↑ head posture on upgaze
Qualitative Tests • Fixation • Fixation of deviating eye in manifest squint • Fixation should be brisk and accurate • Slow / delayed fixation often means low VA • Unsteady / no movement to fix indicates eccentric fixation and very low VA
Qualitative Tests • Fixation preference • Spontaneous alternation • Alternation after initial occlusion • Hold fixation through blink • Hold fixation up to blink • Hold fixation for few seconds • Hold fixation momentarily • Immediately return to originally fixing eye • Slow to fix • Unable to fix EQUAL VA DENSE AMBLYOPIA
Qualitative Tests • Cross fixation if squinting
Qualitative Tests • Cross fixation if squinting
Qualitative Tests • Cross fixation if squinting
Qualitative Tests • Cross fixation if squinting Tripartite field of fixation
Right eye fixing looking left Left eye fixing looking right
Qualitative Tests • Objection to occlusion • Look around an occluder / hand • Not significant if object to both eyes occluded • Different behaviour when occluded
Qualitative Tests • Daylight / darkroom comparisons • Useful in delayed visual maturation / severe disability
Qualitative Tests • 100’s & 1000’s
Qualitative Tests • 10 vertical prism • Either alternate to look at diplopia or always fix with • uncovered eye if VA equal • Always fix with same eye if amblyopic
Qualitative Tests • 10 vertical prism • Either alternate to look at diplopia or always fix with • uncovered eye if VA equal • Always fix with same eye if amblyopic
Qualitative Tests • 10 vertical prism • Either alternate to look at diplopia or always fix with • uncovered eye if VA equal • Always fix with same eye if amblyopic
Qualitative Tests • 10 vertical prism • Either alternate to look at diplopia or always fix with • uncovered eye if VA equal • Always fix with same eye if amblyopic
Qualitative Tests • 10 vertical prism • Either alternate to look at diplopia or always fix with • uncovered eye if VA equal • Always fix with same eye if amblyopic
Qualitative Tests • Optokineticnystagmus • Asymmetrical monocular in infants under 4m and infantile esotropia • Rotate SLOWLY • Lab methods using different frequency gratings overestimate acuity
Preferential Looking (PL) Tests • Keeler /Teller Cards (with/without “puppet screen”) • Cardiff Acuity Cards • 100s & 1000s / crumbs against light/dark backgrounds
Single Optotypes • logMAR single letters • Sheridan Gardiner singles (not logMAR) • Kay pictures • Easier but overestimate VA in amblyopia • Make decision-making in young amblyopes difficult
LogMAR Tests • More consistent than Snellen notation • 6/60 = 1.0 6/6 = 0.0 • Each line and letter difference standard over chart • Letters equally difficult • “Crowded”
Crowded LogMAR Tests • Bailey-Lovie chart • Glasgow Acuity Test (Keeler) - at 3 metres • (Cambridge Crowding Cards) • LogMAR Kay Pictures - at 3 metres • LEA symbols • Sonksen test replacing Snellen & Sheridan Gardiner linear tests at 6 metres
Near Tests • Reduced Snellen • Maclure Bar Reading Book • Reduced linear Kay pictures • Reduced LEA symbols With most VI children test at 1/3m and wherever they prefer to hold text
Refraction • Cycloplegic refraction • Undilated retinoscopy – gross refractive error • media opacities • Bruckner reflex • Anisometropia • Gross astigmatism • “Mohindra” retinoscopy in dark
Crowding / Separation Difficulties • Present at threshold in everyone • Characteristics • Ends of rows clearer • Letters correct but jumbled up • Exaggerated ++ in amblyopia • ?Worse if initial VA very low • Occlusion may improve singles acuity, but less for linear • VA may regress at end of occlusion • Record more details of VA e.g. 6/12, but crowding from 6/36
Electro-diagnostic tests • VEP, ERG, • Indicated when VA appears to be, or is suspected of being, reduced despite normal appearance on conventional examination e.g. Inherited retinal conditions • VEP acuity overestimates recognition acuity • Generally used in diagnosis • Occasionally used to monitor progress in children with congenital cataracts
Practical Tips • If occlusion likely to be difficult, do all both eyes open tests first • On first visit test likely better eye first • On subsequent visits test amblyopic eye first before co-operation lost • When moving on to more difficult test, try to do “old,” easier one, on same visit – especially if being occluded
Functional /”Hysterical” loss of vision • Children with genuine low VA are cautious in new situation of clinic, while these children enter normally • Relatively untroubled by apparently severe symptoms • Running their lives normally most of time
Functional /”Hysterical” loss of vision • Read VA chart very slowly from the top, not just from near threshold • Tricks • Cancelling + / - lenses – put up plus first • Testing VA at different distances • Use Bagolini glasses • If claiming unilateral loss use prisms to give diplopia • Watch pupil reactions for near – may dilate for text • Dynamic retinoscopy • Compare “tested” vs natural accommodation • Need good VA to get good stereoacuity – say TNO is a colour test • Check fundi and media carefully & refer for ophthalmologist opinion or scans if cannot improve VA
Functional /”Hysterical” loss of vision • Do not accuse of malingering / lying • Take it seriously • It “happens” to children and is common • Reassure child that their eyes are normal and it will get better with time • Speak to parents alone • Reassure, but ask parents to think about whether any cause they can think of • Bullying, dyslexia, anxiety, abuse • Offer a range of severity of causes • Be mindful of formal reporting procedures for child abuse