Vision
Refractive Error
search
Refractive Error
, Refraction, Emmetropia, Hyperopia, Farsighted, Astigmatism
Definitions
Refraction
Measured in Diopters
Bending of light rays
Junction of two transparent media
Media must have different densities to bend light
Convex lens (e.g. human eye) converges light rays
Concave lens moves focal point closer to lens
Distant objects have a closer focal point than near objects
Concave lens (e.g. glasses correction for
Myopia
) diverges light
Concave lens moves focal point further from lens
Human eye refracts light at two locations
Cornea
(66% of eye's focusing power)
Fixed focusing power
Crystalline lens (33% of eye's focusing power)
Accommodation changes lens shape to focus objects
Refractive power of lens
Reciprocal of focal length measured in meters
Examples
One diopter lens has focal point of 1 meter
Two diopter lens has focal point of 0.5 meters
Emmetropia (normal
Vision
)
Eye focusing power perfectly matched to globe length
Image focused precisely on
Retina
Normal
Vision
confers focal length of infinity
Myopia
(
Nearsighted
ness)
See
Myopia
Near objects are seen best
Light is focused in front of the
Retina
Hyperopia (Farsightedness)
Far objects are seen best
Light is focused behind the
Retina
Normal in infants (+0.50 to +2.50 Diopters)
Vision
normalizes by age 5 to 8 years old
Light rays focus behind
Cornea
Cornea
too flat or lens too weak for globe
Near objects not seen clearly
Correction: Convex lenses (convergent, plus power)
Causes
May be congenital with early onset
Presbyopia
occurs with normal aging (age >45 years)
Astigmatism
Non-spherical
Cornea
l surface
Represents a cylindrical Refractive Error
Contrast with
Myopia
and Hyperopia which are spherical Refractive Errors
Parts of surface (
Meridia
ns) are steeper than others
Objects appear blurry at any distance
Corrected with cylindrical lens oriented to appropriate axis
Typically used in combination with spherical lens to correct
Myopia
or Hyperopia
Assessment
See
Visual Acuity
Management
Refractive Error Correction
Corrective lens prescriptions
Example
OD: -1.5 + 0.25 x180
OS: -2.0 + 0.50 x180
Interpretation
Side (OD, OS)
Spherical Lens
Minus (convex) or Plus (concave)
Diopter
Cylindrical Lens correction
Diopter
Axis in Degrees
Additional bifocal prescription
Denoted with, for example, "Add +1.25 OU"
Non-Surgical Options
Eye Glasses
Contact Lens
es
Refractive Surgery
Laser In-Situ Keratomileusis
(
LASIK
)
Intrastromal corneal ring
(ICR or
Intacs
)
Phakic Intraocular Lens
es
Type your search phrase here