RESUMEN
Coloured filters are used to protect the lens, retina and other ocular tissues against the hazard of light damage and to improve the quality of vision mainly in cases of ocular media opacities. Four types of yellow, amber and orange filters have been designed as tinted glasses, shields and colour covering of spectacles. They were tested on 15 adult patients with partial cataract and on 80 children with congenital pathology (i.e. macular hypoplasia, albinism, aphakia after congenital cataract). The majority of the children had nystagmus. The filters with particular spectral characteristics provide reduction of light intensity in the light-damaging range by at least a factor of five. Optimal filters were selected by examination of visual acuity, contrast frequency sensitivity, glare sensitivity and subjective selection by the patients. The effects of filters were: 11-43% increase in corrected visual acuity, 27-34% increase in contrast sensitivity function (CSF) for all frequencies and a marked reduction in glare sensitivity. All patients reported subjective improvement including reduction of photophobia, eye-strain and eye discomfort. It is concluded that coloured filters are able to contribute substantially to rehabilitation of low-vision patients.
Asunto(s)
Color , Filtración/instrumentación , Baja Visión/rehabilitación , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Niño , Preescolar , Sensibilidad de Contraste , Deslumbramiento , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad , Satisfacción del Paciente , Agudeza VisualRESUMEN
Spectral filters were used for additional correction of vision in 67 patients: in 15 adults with initial cataracts (intensive yellow filter), 26 children with albinism (yellow-brown filter), 14 children with macular hypoplasia (orange filter), and 12 children with aphakia after removal of congenital cataracts (yellow filter). Selection of the filter density is carried out using a special method including visocontrastometry, examination of sensitivity to lateral light, and study of color perception thresholds. Use of filters resulted in improvement of the vision acuity by 43.5% in patients with initial cataracts, by 10% in those with albinism, by 20% in those with macular hypoplasia, and by 22% in those with aphakia; moreover, an improvement of the frequency-contrast characteristics was observed, as well as a reduction of photophobia, and a reduction of vision amplitude in patients with nystagmus. The possible applications of spectral correction are discussed.