Aniseikonia: A rare cause of diplopia (Including after - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Aniseikonia: A rare cause of diplopia (Including after

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Aniseikonia: A rare cause of diplopia (Including after successful cataract surgery) Logan Mitchell1, Lionel Kowal1,2 Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aniseikonia: A rare cause of diplopia (Including after


1
Aniseikonia A rare cause of diplopia
(Including after successful cataract surgery)
  • Logan Mitchell1, Lionel Kowal1,2
  • Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Melbourne
  • Private Eye Clinic, Melbourne

2
Barriers to Sensory Fusion
  • Aniseikonia
  • Torsion
  • Metamorphopsia
  • Often under-recognised
  • All diagnosable on careful history-taking

A
A
3
Aniseikonia
  • Assessment
  • History
  • 20? test
  • New Aniseikonia Test (Awaya)

4
Retinal Causes
  • Any disruption to foveal photoreceptor
    distribution
  • ERM
  • DME
  • ARMD
  • Post-RD

5
Optical Cause - Anisometropia
  • Axial
  • Unequal axial lengths, (refractive powers equal)
  • Refractive
  • Unequal refractive powers (axial lengths equal)

RELATIVE SPECTACLE MAGNIFICATION
Distance of corrective lens from anterior surface
of eye (mm)
6
Aniseikonia Causing Diplopia
  • 11 cases
  • Mean age 60 yrs (26-84)
  • Mean aniseikonia 7.1 (2-13)
  • Measurement with New Aniseikonia Test (Awaya)
  • Underlying well-controlled strabismus 6

7
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8
Aniseikonia Causing Diplopia Retinal Causes
Epiretinal membrane 5
Dry age-related macular degeneration 1
Diabetic macular oedema 1
Previous macula-off retinal detachment 1
  • (ERM peel in 1 patient was NOT successful in
    fixing aniseikonia)

9
Aniseikonia Causing Diplopia Optical Causes
  • Axial anisometropia 1
  • Case to be discussed
  • Refractive anisometropia 2
  • Iatrogenic in one case
  • Myopic surprise (3.25 D anisometropia)

10
A case of aniseikonia due to sensible cataract
surgery
  • 56 yo male for R phaco/IOL
  • Pre-op refractions (SE)
  • R -8 D L -2.5 D
  • Post-op refractions (SE)
  • R 0.25 D (6/8) L -2.5 D (6/6)
  • AND DIPLOPIC
  • PCT XT 8 ?, LHT 8 ?

11
Caught Knapping?
  • Axial lengths R 29.48 mm L 26.75 mm
  • Knapp's law not considered
  • 13 R macropsia (NAT)
  • Galilean telescope system (minimising right eye
    image) has successfully resolved symptoms

12
Implications for Ophthalmologists
  • For all NEED TO ASK / LOOK FOR IT
  • For retinal surgeons
  • A (?not uncommon) symptom of macular pathology
  • Usually NOT resolved by retinal surgery
  • For cataract / refractive surgeons
  • Beware axial anisometropia (eg. gt1 mm difference)
  • Consider CL trial
  • Emmetropise dominant eye, maintain anisometropia
  • For strabismologists
  • A barrier to fusion

13
Thank you
14
Aniseikonia
  • Causes
  • Retinal
  • Optical

A
A
15
Eikonometry
  • New Aniseikonia Test (Awaya)

16
Retinal Cause ERM
Sex Age Aetiology Strabismus Mag Management Outcome
1 M 70 ERM ? axial length 1 ? LHT 2 Tried prism, Galilean telescope Unsuccessful
2 F 50 ERM 1 ? LHT 10 CL use, then ERM peel Both unsuccessful
3 M 59 ERM Intermittent XT 30 ? X(T) 12 Strabismus surgery Successful Considering ERM peel
4 F 66 ERM Divergence insufficiency 14 ? E 9 Gallilean system with prism Successful
5 M 64 ERM TED 8 ? LHT 10 Isokeinic prescription Successful
17
Optical Cause
Sex Age Aetiology Strabismus Mag. Management Outcome
9 F 26 Inherent refractive anisometropia (2D) Intermittent XT 12 ? X(T) 3 CL, BI prism in readers Improved symptoms
10 M 56 Iatrogenic Axial anisometropia Known exophoria 8 ? XT 8 ? LHT 13 Galilean system Successful
11 M 59 Iatrogenic Refractive anisometropia (3.25D) 1 ? LHT - 5 Isokeinic prescription Successful
18
  • Tolerance
  • lt3 OK
  • 3-5 decreased stereopsis
  • gt5 retinal rivalry

19
No. Sex Age Aetiology Strabismus Mag Management Outcome
7 M 84 Macula-off retinal detachment 2 ? XT 5 ? RHT - 4 Isokeinic prescription N/A
8 F 65 ARMD Convergence insufficiency 1 ? LHT 14 ? XT' 4 Isokeinic prescription N/A
9 F 60 DME, previous laser 0.5 ? RHT 20 Glasses with prism N/A
Mean horizontal deviation (?) Range of horizontal deviation (?) Mean vertical deviation (?) Range of vertical deviation (?)
Known phoria 13 8 - 30 2.8 0 - 8
No known phoria 0.4 2 1.7 0.5 - 5
20
Managing aniseikonia
  • Position refractive correction appropriately
  • Isokeinic lenses
  • Due to retinal causes
  • Difficult
  • Retinal surgery does not seem of predictable
    benefit

21
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22
Axial Anisometropia
  • Knapp's Rule
  • Does not always apply photoreceptor spacing

23
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24
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25
Knapp's Rule
  • Relative Spectacle Magnification (RSM)
  • RSM equivalent power of reference eye
  • equivalent power of given lens-eye
    system
  • where back vertex of lens sits at anterior focal
    point of eye, and ametropia is axial
  • equivalent power of eye is equal to
  • equivalent power of lens-eye system is equal to
  • equivalent power of reference eye
  • THUS RSM unity
  • KNAPP'S RULE

26
Relative Spectacle Magnification
  • RSM equivalent power of reference eye
  • equivalent power of given
    lens-eye system
  • For axial ametropia
  • delta RSM calculations
  • figures from article

27
Avoid Iatrogenic Aniseikonia
  • Be wary of axial anisometropia
  • gt1 mm difference in axial lengths
  • Predict
  • Can simulate with CL
  • Counsel
  • Avoid
  • Emmetropise dominant eye, keep anisometropia
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