The scotogenic contact lens: a novel device for treating binocular diplopia.
Robert Matthieu P, Bonci Fabrizio, Pandit Anand, Ferguson Veronica, Nachev Parashkev
AI Summary
This study developed a novel contact lens creating a central scotoma to treat binocular diplopia. It effectively eliminated diplopia with better peripheral vision and acceptability than patching, offering a new, non-invasive treatment.
Abstract
Binocular diplopia is a debilitating visual symptom requiring immediate intervention for symptomatic control, whether or not definitive treatment is eventually possible. Where prismatic correction is infeasible, the current standard is occlusion, either by a patch or an opaque contact lens. In eliminating one problem-diplopia-occlusive techniques invariably create another: reduced peripheral vision. Crucially, this is often unnecessary, for the reduced spatial resolution in the periphery limits its contribution to the perception of diplopia. Here, we therefore introduce a novel soft contact lens device that instead creates a monocular central scotoma inversely mirroring the physiological variation in spatial acuity across the monocular visual field, thereby suppressing the diplopia with minimal impact on the periphery. We compared the device against standard eye patching in 12 normal subjects with prism-induced binocular diplopia and 12 patients with binocular diplopia of diverse causes. Indexed by self-reported scores and binocular perimetry, the scotogenic contact lens was comparably effective in eliminating the diplopia while significantly superior in acceptability and its impact on the peripheral visual field. This simple, inexpensive, non-invasive device may thus be an effective new tool in the treatment of a familiar but still troublesome clinical problem.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts4
The scotogenic contact lens was comparably effective in eliminating binocular diplopia compared to standard eye patching in 12 normal subjects with prism-induced binocular diplopia and 12 patients with binocular diplopia of diverse causes.
The scotogenic contact lens was significantly superior in acceptability and its impact on the peripheral visual field compared to standard eye patching, as indexed by self-reported scores and binocular perimetry, in 12 normal subjects with prism-induced binocular diplopia and 12 patients with binocular diplopia of diverse causes.
The scotogenic contact lens is a novel soft contact lens device designed to create a monocular central scotoma, inversely mirroring the physiological variation in spatial acuity across the monocular visual field, thereby suppressing binocular diplopia with minimal impact on peripheral vision.
The scotogenic contact lens is a simple, inexpensive, non-invasive device that may be an effective new tool in the treatment of binocular diplopia.
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