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Spatial Pattern of Glaucomatous Visual Field Loss Obtained with Regionally Condensed Stimulus Arrangements

Authors :
Eleni Papageorgiou
Pamela A. Sample
B. Selig
Ulrich Schiefer
J. Paetzold
E. Krapp
J.P. Pascual
Source :
Investigative Opthalmology & Visual Science. 51:5685
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO), 2010.

Abstract

To assess the spatial distribution of glaucomatous visual field defects (VFDs) obtained with regionally condensed stimulus arrangements.Sixty-three eyes of 63 glaucoma subjects were examined with threshold-estimating automated static perimetry (full threshold 4-2-1 dB strategy with at least three reversals) on an automatic campimeter or a full-field perimeter. Stimuli were added by the examiner to regionally enhance spatial resolution in regions that were suspicious for a glaucomatous VFD. These regions were characterized by contiguous local VFDs, attributable to the retinal nerve fiber bundle course according to the impression of the examiner. The added stimulus locations were subsets of a predefined, dense perimetric grid. All VFD locations with P0.05 (total deviation plots) were assessed by superimposing the visual field records of all participants.Glaucomatous VFD loss occurred more frequently in the upper than in the lower hemifield, with a typical retinal nerve fiber-related pattern and a preference of the nasal step region. More than 50% of the eyes with predominantly mild to moderate glaucomatous field loss showed defective locations in the immediate superior paracentral region within an eccentricity of 3°.Conventional thresholding white-on-white perimetry with regionally enhanced spatial resolution reveals that glaucomatous visual field loss affects the immediate paracentral area, especially the upper hemifield, in many eyes with only mild to moderate glaucomatous visual field loss. Detailed knowledge about the spatial pattern and the local frequency distribution of glaucomatous VFDs is an essential prerequisite for creating regionally condensed stimulus arrangements for adequate detection and follow-up of functional glaucomatous damage.

Details

ISSN :
15525783
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Investigative Opthalmology & Visual Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b0248b13d74eea51fa64b463e4dee29
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1167/iovs.09-5067