VISUAL FIELD TEST DEVICE
20210106218 · 2021-04-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61B3/024
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G06F3/1423
PHYSICS
A61B3/14
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G09G3/3607
PHYSICS
International classification
A61B3/024
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B3/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B3/14
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G06F3/14
PHYSICS
Abstract
A visual field device includes a light source and an eyepiece. The light source includes a backlight arranged to generate, in use, light directed towards a first liquid crystal display (LCD) screen and a second LCD screen, the first LCD screen and the second LCD screen overlapping one another and the backlight such that the light source outputs light transmitted through both the first and second LCD screens. The eyepiece is arranged between the light source and a subject position, the eyepiece being configured to receive light output by the light source and focus the received light towards the subject position. Each of the first and second LCD screens include a respective array of pixels, each pixel being controllable so as to vary its transmittance to light generated by the back-light.
Claims
1. A visual field test device comprising: a light source comprising a backlight arranged to generate, in use, light directed towards a first liquid crystal display (LCD) screen and a second LCD screen, the first LCD screen and the second LCD screen overlapping one another and the backlight such that the light source outputs light transmitted through both the first and second LCD screens; and an eyepiece arranged between the light source and a subject position, the eyepiece being configured to receive light output by the light source and focus the received light towards the subject position; wherein each of the first and second LCD screens comprises a respective array of pixels, each pixel being controllable so as to vary, in use, its transmittance to light generated by the back-light such that changing the transmittance of one or more pixels at corresponding positions in each of the first and second LCD screens relative to the surrounding pixels produces a stimulus perceptible when viewed through the eyepiece from the subject position.
2. The visual field test device of claim 1, wherein the eyepiece is configured to focus the received light towards the subject position across a range of angles having a magnitude greater than the angle subtended by the light source when viewed from a distance equal to the distance between the subject position and the light source.
3. The visual field test device of claim 1, wherein the pixels of the first LCD screen are colorless.
4. The visual field test device of claim 1, wherein the array of pixels of the second LCD screen comprises pixels each having one of a plurality of colors, the plurality of colors comprising red, green and blue.
5. The visual field test device of claim 1, wherein the first LCD screen is arranged between the back-light and the second LCD screen.
6. The visual field test device of claim 1, further comprising a focusing target positioned between the back-light and the subject position such that a patient at the subject position is able to focus his gaze on the focusing target.
7. The visual field test device of claim 1, wherein the separation between the eyepiece and the subject position is less than the separation between the eyepiece and the light source.
8. The visual field test device of claim 1, further comprising a feedback device configured to receive feedback from a patient at the subject position during a visual field test in which one or more stimuli perceptible at the subject positon are produced by the light source.
9. The visual field test device of claim 1, further comprising a camera configured to monitor the position of a pupil of the eye of a patient at the subject position.
10. The visual field test device of claim 9, further comprising an illuminating source configured to illuminate the subject position with radiation detectable by the camera such that such that the camera monitors the position of the pupil of the eye by recording the radiation reflected by the eye.
11. The visual field test device of claim 10, wherein the radiation comprises one or more infra-red wavelengths.
12. The visual field test device of claim 8, further comprising an optical component arranged to direct the radiation produced by the illuminating source towards the eye and/or direct the radiation reflected by the eye towards the camera.
13. The visual field test device of claim 8, wherein the illuminating source is configured to direct the radiation towards the eyepiece, whereby the radiation is directed towards the subject position.
14. The visual field test of claim 13, wherein the optical component comprises a partial mirror arranged between the light source and the eyepiece, the partial mirror being configured to: permit light from the light source to be transmitted therethrough towards the eyepiece, and to reflect the radiation produced by the illuminating source towards the eyepiece, whereby the radiation is directed towards the subject position, and/or reflect the radiation reflected by the eye towards the camera.
15. A method of performing a visual field test, the method comprising: controlling a backlight to generate light directed towards a first LCD screen and a second LCD screen, the first LCD screen and the second LCD screen overlapping one another and the backlight such that the light source outputs light transmitted through both the first and second LCD screens, wherein each of the first and second LCD screens comprises a respective array of pixels, each pixel being controllable so as to vary, in use, its transmittance to light from the back-light, and wherein an eyepiece is arranged between the light source and a subject position, the eyepiece being configured to receive light output by the light source and focus the received light towards the subject position; and changing the transmittance of one or more pixels at corresponding positions in each LCD screen relative to the surrounding pixels so as to produce a stimulus perceptible when viewed through the eyepiece from the subject position.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the pixels of each of the first and second LCD screens outside of a first region are controlled so as to produce a uniform background which surrounds the first region and in which the luminance of the light source as seen from the subject position is less than that of the first region.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the pixels of the first and second LCD screens are controlled such that the contrast ratio between the luminance of the first region and that of the uniform background as perceived from the subject position is at least 10,000:1.
18. The method of claim 15, further comprising controlling the first and second LCD screens to as to produce a focusing target perceptible from the subject position and suitable for focusing the vision of a patient at the subject position.
19. The method of claim 15, further comprising presenting a plurality of stimuli each at a respective position on the light source, each respective position corresponding to a position in the field of view of a patient at the subject position.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the plurality of stimuli are presented in accordance with a predetermined routine.
Description
LIST OF FIGURES
[0029] Examples of a visual field test devices and visual field tests will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036] embodiments shown and described herein,
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0040]
[0041] A projector 107 projects light onto the screen 109 at a plurality of stimulus positions p.sub.s. The projector 107 may include, for example, one or more lasers, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), incandescent bulbs or other suitable means for generating light directed towards the screen 109. The light produced by the projector 107 is reflected by the screen 109 so as to produce visual stimuli 117 that are perceptible to the eye 111 of the patient at the subject position 113.
[0042] In a visual field test performed using the conventional visual field test device 100, the projector 107 is controlled so as to produce visual stimuli 117, one at a time, at different stimulus positions p.sub.s across the screen 109 while the patient's eye 111 is focused on the focusing target 115. The stimulus positions p.sub.s could be chosen in accordance with a predetermined pattern, for example a regular array of positions on the screen 109. The patient gives an indication each time he notices a stimulus 117, for example by pressing a button or by reporting to a technician supervising the visual field test, and the patient's feedback is analyzed to identify any positions on the screen 109 at which he failed to identify stimuli 117 when presented to him. This information can be used to measure the positions and extent of any defects or aberrations in the field of view of the patient.
[0043]
[0044] The region labelled R.sub.1 of
[0045]
[0046] Between the light source 300 and the subject position 213 is an eyepiece 201. The eyepiece 201 is configured to focus light received from the light source 300 towards the subject position 213 such that the light travels towards the subject position 213 at a steeper angle with respect to the line N between the subject position and the center of the light source, which in this case corresponds to the location of the focusing target 215, than the light would if it were to travel in a straight line from the light source 300 to the subject position 213. Hence, light output at a position p.sub.0 on the light source 300 travels through the mirror 203 and the eyepiece 201 and, once output by the eyepiece 201, travels towards the subject position 213 at an angle α.sub.s. As a result, a patient positioned at the subject position 213 and looking towards the focusing target would perceive a stimulus 217 at a position p.sub.s that lies at a greater angle α.sub.s in his field of view (relative to the line N along which it is centered) than the angle α.sub.0 of the direct line from the subject position 213 to the position p.sub.0 on the light source 300 at which the light is output. (
[0047] As is shown in
[0048] Returning to
[0049]
[0050] The first LCD screen 303 may include a first polarizing filter 307, which permits the transmission of light polarized along the Y direction, and a second polarizing filter 309, which permits the transmission of light polarized along the Z direction (which is perpendicular to the Y direction). Between the first and second polarizing filters 307, 309 of the first LCD screen 303 may be a plurality of electrodes 313, which may be substantially transparent to visible light and may be arranged in a two-dimensional first array that extends in the Y and Z directions. Each electrode 313 may define respective pixel 311 in the first LCD screen 303.
[0051] Adjacent to the first array of electrodes 313 may be a liquid crystal layer 315. The liquid crystal layer 315 may be configured such that the liquid crystal layer 315 is capable of changing the direction of polarization of light transmitted through it in a manner that is dependent on the voltage applied to it. In a nematic liquid crystal, for example, in the absence of an electric field, the molecules of the liquid crystal align in a helical arrangement that can cause the polarization direction of light transmitted through the liquid crystal to rotate. When an electric field is applied, however, the molecules align with the electric field, reducing the strength of the helical ordering of the molecules and hence reducing the effect of the liquid crystal layer on the polarization direction of transmitted light. When the magnitude of the applied voltage is sufficiently large, the liquid crystal ceases to affect the polarization direction of the transmitted light. Light transmitted through a particular pixel 311 while a sufficiently large voltage is applied by the respective electrode 313 will thus be polarized along the Y direction by the first polarizing filter 307 and then, without experiencing any further polarization, encounter the second polarizing filter 309, which has a transmission direction (along the Z axis) which is perpendicular to that of the first polarizing filter 307 (along the Y axis). Since the light transmitted through the filter polarizing filter 307 is polarized perpendicular to the transmission direction of the second polarizing filter 309, no light will be transmitted through a pixel in which no voltage is applied. By varying the voltage applied by each electrode the 313, the transmittance of each respective pixel 311 can be hence be controlled. The first LCD screen may be colorless, i.e. does not absorb or scatter the light produced by the backlight 301 more strongly at some wavelengths than others. The first LCD screen 301 hence may modify the intensity of the transmitted light, and so, if subjected to white light from the light source 301, may have a greyscale appearance when viewed from the side of the second LCD screen 305.
[0052] Like the first LCD screen 303, the second LCD screen 305 may include a first polarizing filter 307, which permits the transmission of light polarized along the Y direction, and a second polarizing filter 309, which permits the transmission of light polarized along the Z direction. In the second LCD screen 305, however, the order of the first and second polarizing filters 307, 309 may be opposite to that of the polarizing filters in the first LCD screen 303 (that is to say that in the second LCD screen 305, the second polarizing filter 309 is further along the X direction that the first polarizing filter 307). The second LCD screen 305 may also include a plurality of electrodes 313 arranged in a second array (which is two-dimensional, extending throughout the second LCD screen 305 in the Y and Z directions) and a liquid crystal layer 315, which responds to a voltage as described above with reference to the liquid crystal layer 315 of the first LCD screen 303. Unlike the first LCD screen 303, the second LCD screen 305 may include a filtering layer 317. The filtering layer 317 may include an array of colored filters arranged in register (i.e. at equivalent positions in the plane of the Y and Z directions) with the second array of electrodes 313. Each colored filter may be either red, green or blue (to permit the transmission of one of red, green or blue light), and as a result the second array of pixels may include red pixels 319, green pixels 321 and blue pixels 323. By controlling groups of colored pixels 319, 321, 323 in the second LCD screen, the light source 300 can be made to produce stimuli of different colors as seen from the subject position 213.
[0053] It should be understood that, while in this example the first LCD screen 303, which is colorless, is positioned nearest the backlight 301, the first and second LCD screens 303, 305 could alternatively be arranged such that the second LCD screen 305 is nearer the backlight 301 (such that light output by the backlight 301 passes through the colored second LCD screen 305 before encountering the colorless first LCD screen 303). While in some embodiments one of the LCD screens 203, 205 is capable of coloring the light output by the light source 300, in other embodiments both the first and second LCD screens 303, 305 could be configured to be colorless.
[0054] In the embodiment of
[0055]
[0056]
[0057] An enlarged view of the region 401 is shown in
[0058] As a result of the combination of two LCD screens 303, 305, it is possible to achieve a large contrast between the region 401 of the bright spot and the background. If the transmittance of each screen in the chosen background region is about 1 per cent of the maximum transmittance of the screen, then the combined transmittance of the first and second LCD screens 303, 305 across the background region will be approximately 0.0001 of the maximum combined transmittance, and if the transmittance of a group of pixels in the region 401 of the bright spot is on the order of 1, the intensity of the bright spot will on the order of 10,000 times greater than that of the background. The light source 300 can thus achieve the high values of dynamic range required to perform visual field tests while allowing the visual field test device 200 to be made compact relative to known devices (such as that illustrated in
[0059]
[0060] At step 501 the pixels 311 of the first LCD screen 303 are set to each have a uniform, relatively low transmittance. The transmittance of each pixel 311 in the first LCD screen 303 could be set to 1 per cent, for example. At step 502, the pixels 319, 321, 323 of the second LCD screen 305 are also controlled so as to each have a low and uniform transmittance (e.g. one per cent, or some other value). As a result of steps 501 and 502, the light source 300 appears, when viewed from the subject position, presents to the patient a uniform background (which could be dark). It should be understood that steps 501 and 502 could be performed in any order or simultaneously.
[0061] At step 503, a pixel or group of pixels at corresponding positions in each of the first and second LCD screens 303, 305 may be controlled so as to increase the transmittance of those pixels relative to the uniform background produced by steps 501 and 502. The light output by the light source at the positions of these pixels appears as a bright spot at an output position p.sub.0 on the light source 300 against the comparatively dark background when viewed along the X axis from the side of the subject position 213. As was explained above with reference to
[0062] Light from the produced bright spot is received by the eyepiece 201 and directed towards the subject position 213, leading to the appearance of a stimulus 217 at a respective stimulus position p.sub.s in the field of view of a patient at the subject position 213. At step 504, the response of the patient while presented with the stimulus is recorded. This step could include, for example, recording whether the patient consciously indicates that he has seen the presented stimulus (e.g. by pressing a button or by communicating with a technician) and/or monitoring the pupil of the patient's eye 211 using the camera 209.
[0063] The visual field test may be defined by a routine that involves presenting several stimuli, e.g. of different colors and at different positions, to the patient. At step 505, if the routine has not yet been completed, the next stimulus is presented to the patient as described above and his response to it is again recorded. If the routine is complete, the test proceeds to step 506 and ends.
[0064] While particular embodiments have been illustrated and described herein, it should be understood that various other changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed subject matter. Moreover, although various aspects of the claimed subject matter have been described herein, such aspects need not be utilized in combination. It is therefore intended that the appended claims cover all such changes and modifications that are within the scope of the claimed subject matter.