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Dr. Dimple Prakash Head Post Graduate Training Programme

Refraction and Retinoscopy

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Presentation made by Dr. Dimple Prakash from Dr. Agarwal's Eye hospital in Kalpavriksha 2012 in Chennai

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Page 1: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Dr. Dimple PrakashHead Post Graduate Training Programme

Page 2: Refraction and Retinoscopy

SHADOW PLAY - RETINOSCOPY

Page 3: Refraction and Retinoscopy

MyopiaHyperopia

Astigmatism

Page 4: Refraction and Retinoscopy

in case of Welsch Allen retinoscope when the lens is pushed down the

mirror acts like a plane mirror and the rays are divergent.

Plane Mirror Retinoscopy

Page 5: Refraction and Retinoscopy

When the lens is pushed up the mirror acts like a concave mirror so the rays are

convergent.Practical importance : in plane mirror

retinoscopy a with movement will need + lenses but in concave mirror retinoscopy

a with movement will need – lenses.

Concave Mirror Retinoscopy

Page 6: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Illumination Stage Reflex Stage

Projection Stage

Page 7: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Illumination

Page 8: Refraction and Retinoscopy

• Rays are from S1

• Image is at far point of subject

• Shadow at pupil of subject

• Projected to the examiner

Page 9: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Normal Eye

+1.50

66 cm

Page 10: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Hyperopia (Small Eyes)

+58 D

Page 11: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Myopia (Large Eyes)

+62 D

Page 12: Refraction and Retinoscopy

StreakStreakRetinoscopyRetinoscopy

Page 13: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Break :

Width : Narrowest when allingned with true axis

Intensity : Brightest when along with true axis

Skew : When axis is not assigned reflex breaking into two

Page 14: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Low Errors High Errors

Speed High Low

Brilliance Bright Dull

Width Wide Narrow

Neutralization point : complete illumination of entire pupillary area.

Swirl

Page 15: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Checking axis : Swirl 2.00DC @ 80

Add 45 degrees = 125

Minus 45 degrees = 35

Keep the streak at 125 and 35

Note the width : should be equal

Side that is less : change axis

slowly towards wider side.

WAKE UP

Page 16: Refraction and Retinoscopy

GROSS NET

Power of lens that is held in front of the examined eye at which neutralization occurs

Following subtraction of distance and cycloplegic drops

Page 17: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Distance Subtraction Cycloplegic

1 mt = 1 D

2/3 mt = 1.50 D

Atropine = -1.00 D

Homatropine = -0.50 D

Cyclopentolate = -0.75 D

Example Distance (lm) Atropine+6.00 DS +5.00 DS +4.00 DS

Page 18: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Few Algebraic rules for signs of Cylinders

- - = + - 6.00 - 4.00 = - 2.00

- + = + - 6.00 + 4.00 = - 10.00

Page 19: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Practice Situations

Net + 6.00

+ 4.00

Lower Value = Sphere = +4.00

Difference = Cylinder = +2.00

+ 4.00 - +6.00 = - Sign of cylinder

Axis at lower value = 180°

+ 4.00 DS / -2.00 DC @ 180° Axis

Page 20: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Net - 6.00 DS

- 4.00 DS

90° Axis

180° Axis

* Lower value here is – 6.00 DSThe rest is the same

- - = +- 6.00 DS / +2.00 DC x 90° Axis

Page 21: Refraction and Retinoscopy

- 8.00 DS

- 10.00 DS

- 10.00 / +2.00 DC x 180° Axis

Sample Transpositions- 2.00 DS / -4.00 DC x 180° Axis

1. Allegebric sum of the sphere and cylinder- 6.00 DS

2. Change the sign of the cylinder- 6.00 DS / +4.00 DC

3. Change the axis if above 90° = minus 90 if below 90° = add 90

- 6.00 DS / +4.00 DC @ 90 ° Axis

WAKE UP

Page 22: Refraction and Retinoscopy

RefinementRefinementofof

RefractionRefraction

Page 23: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Methods Easiest : fogging. Over refraction,

over retinoscopy

Duchrome testing

Jackson cross cylinder

Astigmatic dial

Astigmatic fan and block

Page 24: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Jackson Cross Cylinder Components: sphere

Cylinder

Power: ½ that of cylinder

Axis of Cylinder : 2 are perpendicular to each other

Handle: 45 degrees always.

Page 25: Refraction and Retinoscopy

How it works?

Axis first: handle in direction of the cylinder in the frame already. Eg) 2.00DC at 180 then keep handle at 180

Va chart 2 lines above least visible. eg)6/12 if BCVA is 6/6.

Flip + 0.50 or – in front of patient.

At best vision point, rotate the DC by 10 degrees towards the red mark in case of – and towards white mark in +.

Page 26: Refraction and Retinoscopy

E.g.) DC in trial frame= +2.00DC @ 180

BCVA CLEAR when +0.50 DC is in front

Rotate 10 degrees towards white mark

+2.00 DC@ 170.

Page 27: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Power of DC. This is easy.

Keeping the correct axis. Flip the JC by + or – and then add or subtract the correct power.

E.g.) DC in trial frame = +2.00,Va better at +0.50 DC then final value= +2.50 DC.

If equal Va at 2 flips: correct power.

How it works?WAKE UP

Page 28: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Summary

Most plus or least minus sphere: BCVA

Va chart 2 lines above least visible. eg)6/12 if BCVA is 6/6.

No cylinder, still flip at 90,180,45,135.

Axis first : Why?

Lower powers 0.25 for 20/30 Va .Flip + 0.50 or 1.00 for lower visions : Why?

Page 29: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Duchrome

Chromatic aberration

Page 30: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Duchrome Normal : both equal Start with Red slightly better Focus on the letters

Page 31: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Hyperope of +5.00 sees green better, increase to +5.25 D so sees red better.

• Increasing the converging power so that “STRONGEST + LENSES “ are given. (asthenopia)

P ON F

T EA K

Page 32: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Myope: - 5.00D sees red better leave him alone

-5.00 D sees green then – 4.75 D get the rays in front.

• “WEAKEST (– )LENSES”

P ON F

T EA K

Page 33: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Astigmatic dial technique

Page 34: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Fogging

Indications : Young: Recurrent Asthenopia: H/O Squeezing / frowning: Difficulty in near work

(E.g.) Needle work, Microscope

Reference Chart :If we start pt +20.00 DS upto +16 D: Decrease in lens in strengths of +2.00 DS

(E.g.) +20.00 D = Next lens + 18.00 DS

+16 D TO +12/10 D: Decrease in strengths of 1.00 DS (E.g.) +10.00 +9.00 DS, +8.00 etc

Upto (+6.00 DS. From then upto +4.00 DS : +0.50 DS decrease+5.50, +5.00, +4.50 etc

Page 35: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Giving Glasses

Page 36: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Giving Glasses

Hyperopia

Age

Fogging

Refinement methods

1) Less than 3 years = Full retinoscopic correctionEg; +4.00 DS = Give + 4.00 DS

2) 3 to 8 yearsPresence of tropia

Presence of phoria

Esotropia = Full gross value subjective to AC/A ratio

Phoria = Full net optimal, under correction

Eg. Net Value

+4.00 D in phoria = +3.50 / +3.75 which is accepted

3) Adults follow : rule of strongest +

Page 37: Refraction and Retinoscopy

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 YRS

HM 6.50

6.00

5.50

5.00

4.50

4.00

3.50

3.00

2.50

2.00

1.50

1.00

HyperopiaCorrection

with Age

Page 38: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Giving Glasses : MYOPIA

Thumb rules Normal patients

1) From -1.00 to -6.00 DS : Full correction

2) Above -6.00 DS : Under correct to meet subjectiveness

Esotropia

High presence of -6.00 DS and above are under correctedmeet acceptance followed by optimal to full correction

ExotropiaOver correct in intermittent EXOTROPIAS

Page 39: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Giving Glasses : Astigmatism

Normal patients

: In a child less than 3 years = 1.25 DC, Regular

: Older than 3 years = all astigmatism to be corrected

• Child : follow-up 6 months• Adult yearly• Frequent change : over correct (0.25 D)

WAKE UP

Page 40: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Giving glasses: child Ideal frame: large, sturdy, well

balanced Ideal lenses: plastic, polycarbonates Ideal refraction: Less than 3 years: solely on

retinoscopy All strabismus : retinoscopy Beyond 3 years: myopes do not need

Page 41: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Cycloplegic studies Rosenbaum and associates: atropine

estimation of hyperopia 0.34 D more as compared to homatropine

Hurol et al: no difference between 2 and 3 days of cycloplegia

Stolovich: 8 instillations vs 4 instillations.

Page 42: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Bifocals

Page 43: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Bifocals Working distance

0.2 m wide or smallest test type

Blurred/ not readable = near point

No doubling

Keep 1/3rd reserve

Page 44: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Tips on bifocals

Keep 1/3rd reserve

Undercorrect

Full correction 23 mm of near point max (3.5D)

Prisms for convergence thereafter

Page 45: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Practical Tips

Do Don't

Read Previous prescription

Bifocal to progressive

Adjust sphere firstE.g.) +1.25 DS / -0.75 DC

Change to +1.75 to +1.50

Don’t make drastic glass changes from past “Suspicion”

progressive to Bifocals

Do not try to change to higher astigmatism+1.25 DS / -1.25 DC

Page 46: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Practical Tips

Do Don't

4. Try to correct the axis rather than the number

Eg) -0.75 DC @ 90° Axchange to -0.75 DC @ 100° Ax rather than -1.00 DC @ 90° Ax

Final Example-1.25 DS / -0.75 @ 80° Ax

(a) -1.50 DS / -1.75 DS with -0.75 DC @ 80° Ax

(b) -1.25 DS / -0.75 DC @ 90° Ax (c) -1.25 DS / -1.00 DC @ 80° Ax

-1.50 DS / -1.50 DC @ 80° Ax

Page 47: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Make the right choice

Low powers : smile and bye bye

High plus: think!Chromatic aberrationsprismatic aberrations

High index lenses: 1.6 and 1.74

Thinner, flatter, lighter +4.00 D = high index

Page 48: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Gets higher : plastic lenticular lenses Aspheric lenses : curves that flatten

away from the center. Prismatic effects

Myopes: higher powers -4.00 above 1.6 high index

-7.00 D above : 1.7 high index.

Page 49: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Power refraction you are now armed

Retinoscopy

Interpretation of numbers

Giving glasses

Refinement of numbers

What not to do

Page 50: Refraction and Retinoscopy

Dr. DIMPLE PRAKASHSenior Consultant

Pediatric and SquintHead Post Graduate Training Programme