Quality of vision in refractive and cataract surgery, indirect measurers: Review article

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Abstract

Visual acuity is the measurement of an individual's ability to recognize details of an object in a space. Visual function measurements in clinical ophthalmology are limited by factors such as maximum contrast and so it might not adequately reflect the real vision conditions at that moment as well as the subjective aspects of the world perception by the patient. The objective of a successful vision-restoring surgery lies not only in gaining visual acuity lines, but also in vision quality. Therefore, refractive and cataract surgeries have the responsibility of achieving quality results. It is difficult to define quality of vision by a single parameter, and the main functional-vision tests are: contrast sensitivity, disability glare, intraocular stray light and aberrometry. In the current review the different components of the visual function are explained and the several available methods to assess the vision quality are described.

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Parede, T. R. R., Torricelli, A. A. M., Mukai, A., Netto, M. V., & Bechara, S. J. (2013). Quality of vision in refractive and cataract surgery, indirect measurers: Review article. Arquivos Brasileiros de Oftalmologia. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0004-27492013000600016

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