Comparative evaluation of oculokinetic perimetry and conventional perimetry in glaucoma

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Abstract

Oculokinetic perimetry is a new method of visual field assessment in which the patient moves the eye around a central static target to look sequentially at an array of numbers. When fixation on a number is accompanied by disappearance of the central target, that number is deleted from a recording chart. Inversion of the recording chart gives a plot of the central visual field. In this study we have shown that in 64 eyes of 37 patients, with unequivocal field loss attending a glaucoma' clinic, the test is efficient and reliable when compared with conventional static (Dicon 3000) and kinetic (Tubingen Oculus) field tests. The results were identical in 88% of eyes tested and approximately comparable in another 6%. Quantitative equivalent targets for the different methods are described. Oculokinetic perimetry was carried out by a previously untrained person, and it is suggested that this new method merits further study as a screening device for glaucoma in the community.

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Alvarez, E., Damato, B. E., Jay, J. L., & Mcclure, E. (1988). Comparative evaluation of oculokinetic perimetry and conventional perimetry in glaucoma. British Journal of Ophthalmology, 72(4), 258–262. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.72.4.258

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