SHAHANA
NETHRADHAMA
SCHOOL OF
OPTOMETRY
INDIRECT
OPHTHALMOSCOPY
Examination of both the peripheral
fundus and the posterior pole is
possible with indirect
ophthalmoscopy.
 Indirect ophthalmoscopy should be used:
• When examining a patient with symptoms of
shadows, hazy vision, flashes of light, and
floaters, which may suggest retinal tear,
detachment or other retinal abnormality.
• When following a patients with systemic
diseases that have retinal manifestations, such
as diabetes, high blood pressure,
cardiovascular disease, sickle cell disease,
infectious and autoimmune diseases.
• In patient with cataract or following cataract
extraction.
• For older patients who are at greater risk of
developing glaucoma and age related macular
degeneration.
PRINCIPLE
 Indirect ophthalmoscopy(IDO)involves
making the eye highly myopic by placing
a high power convex lens (+13D to
+30D) infront of the eye so that real,
inverted and laterally reversed image is
formed in front of lens
 The technique is called indirect because
the fundus is seen through condensing
lens.
 Two method of indirect ophthalmoscopy:
1. Monocular indirect ophthalmoscopy.
2. Binocular indirect ophthalmoscopy.
MONOCULAR IDO
 Monocular IDO is handheld technique
which produces real and erect image.
 It consist of:
 Illumination rheostat at its base
 Focusing lever for image refinement
 Filter dial with red free and yellow filters
 Forehead rest for steady proper observer
head positioning.
 Iris diaphragm lever to adjust illumination
beam diameter.
OPTICS
 An internal relay lens system re-invests,
initially inverted image to real, which
then magnified. This image is focusable
using focusing lever.
ADVANTAGES:
 Increased working distance from patient
 Increased field of view at low magnification
 Erect, real imaging similar to direct
ophthalmoscopy
DISADVANTAGE:
 Limited illumination
 Fixed magnification
 No stereopsis
INDICATION:
 Need for increased field of view, small pupil,
uncooperative children, patients tolerance of
bright light, basic fundus screening.
BINOCULAR IDO
Viewing fundus by allowing stereoscopic
examination.
CHARACTERISTICS :
 Magnification of image depends upon
the dioptric power of convex lens ,
position of the lens in relation of the
eyeball and refractive state of eyeball.
 With a stronger lens image will be
smaller but brighter and field of vision
will be more.
PREREQUISITES
i. Indirect ophthalmoscope
ii. Dark room
iii. Convex lens
iv. Pupil of the patient should be dilated.
TECHNIQUE:
 The patient’s pupil must be dilated.
 The procedure is explained to the patient and
made to lie in supine position,instructed to
keep both eye open.
 The examiner throw the light into the patient’s
eye from an arm distance with BIO or that
mounted on the spectacle frame.
 Keeping eyes on the reflex the examiner then
interposes the condensing lens(various
power ranging from +15D to +40D) in the
path beam of light close to the patient’s eye
and then slowly move the lens away from the
eye until the image of retina is clearly seen.
 The examiner moves around the head of
the patient to examiner different
quadrants of fundus.
 Examiner has to stand opposite to the
clock hour position to be examined
 By asking the patient to look in extreme
gaze and using scleral indenter,
peripheral retina upto ora serrata can be
examined.
Field of illumination
 More in myopia and less in
hypermetropia as compared to
emmetropia.
Image formation
 Emmetropia
 Myopia
 Hypermetropia
EMMETROPIA
 Emmetropic eye, rays from fundus are
parallel, brought to a focus by the
condensing lens.
 Image formed at the principal focus of
lens.
 Hence, size of image remains the same,
no matter the position of lens.
MYOPIA
 Rays are convergent
 Image formed in front of the eye
 Final image by condensing lens within
its own focal length
 Image is smaller when lens is nearer to
anterior focus of the eye and larger
when away.
HYPERMETROPIA
 Rays are divergent and appear to come
from behind the retina.
 Image by condensing lens in front of its
principle focus
 Image is larger when lens is nearer to
the anterior focus of the eye and smaller
when away
Relative position of images
 In emmetropia: at the principal focus
 In myopia: nearer to the lens than its
principal focus
 In hypermetropia: farther away from the
principal focus
Factors affecting field of
view
 Patient’s pupil size
 Power of condensing lens
 Refractive error
 Distance the condensing lens held from
the patient’s eye
ADVANTAGES
 Wide range of view
 High contrast
 Stereoscopic view
 Variety of lens options
 Excellent depth of focus
 Lesser distortion image
DISADVANTAGES
 Inverted and inversed image
 Low magnification
 Dilation required
 Difficult to master
Indirect ophthalmoscopy

Indirect ophthalmoscopy

  • 1.
  • 2.
    INDIRECT OPHTHALMOSCOPY Examination of boththe peripheral fundus and the posterior pole is possible with indirect ophthalmoscopy.
  • 3.
     Indirect ophthalmoscopyshould be used: • When examining a patient with symptoms of shadows, hazy vision, flashes of light, and floaters, which may suggest retinal tear, detachment or other retinal abnormality. • When following a patients with systemic diseases that have retinal manifestations, such as diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, sickle cell disease, infectious and autoimmune diseases. • In patient with cataract or following cataract extraction. • For older patients who are at greater risk of developing glaucoma and age related macular degeneration.
  • 4.
    PRINCIPLE  Indirect ophthalmoscopy(IDO)involves makingthe eye highly myopic by placing a high power convex lens (+13D to +30D) infront of the eye so that real, inverted and laterally reversed image is formed in front of lens  The technique is called indirect because the fundus is seen through condensing lens.
  • 5.
     Two methodof indirect ophthalmoscopy: 1. Monocular indirect ophthalmoscopy. 2. Binocular indirect ophthalmoscopy.
  • 6.
    MONOCULAR IDO  MonocularIDO is handheld technique which produces real and erect image.  It consist of:  Illumination rheostat at its base  Focusing lever for image refinement  Filter dial with red free and yellow filters  Forehead rest for steady proper observer head positioning.  Iris diaphragm lever to adjust illumination beam diameter.
  • 9.
    OPTICS  An internalrelay lens system re-invests, initially inverted image to real, which then magnified. This image is focusable using focusing lever.
  • 10.
    ADVANTAGES:  Increased workingdistance from patient  Increased field of view at low magnification  Erect, real imaging similar to direct ophthalmoscopy DISADVANTAGE:  Limited illumination  Fixed magnification  No stereopsis INDICATION:  Need for increased field of view, small pupil, uncooperative children, patients tolerance of bright light, basic fundus screening.
  • 11.
    BINOCULAR IDO Viewing fundusby allowing stereoscopic examination. CHARACTERISTICS :  Magnification of image depends upon the dioptric power of convex lens , position of the lens in relation of the eyeball and refractive state of eyeball.  With a stronger lens image will be smaller but brighter and field of vision will be more.
  • 13.
    PREREQUISITES i. Indirect ophthalmoscope ii.Dark room iii. Convex lens iv. Pupil of the patient should be dilated.
  • 14.
    TECHNIQUE:  The patient’spupil must be dilated.  The procedure is explained to the patient and made to lie in supine position,instructed to keep both eye open.  The examiner throw the light into the patient’s eye from an arm distance with BIO or that mounted on the spectacle frame.  Keeping eyes on the reflex the examiner then interposes the condensing lens(various power ranging from +15D to +40D) in the path beam of light close to the patient’s eye and then slowly move the lens away from the eye until the image of retina is clearly seen.
  • 16.
     The examinermoves around the head of the patient to examiner different quadrants of fundus.  Examiner has to stand opposite to the clock hour position to be examined  By asking the patient to look in extreme gaze and using scleral indenter, peripheral retina upto ora serrata can be examined.
  • 18.
    Field of illumination More in myopia and less in hypermetropia as compared to emmetropia.
  • 19.
    Image formation  Emmetropia Myopia  Hypermetropia
  • 20.
    EMMETROPIA  Emmetropic eye,rays from fundus are parallel, brought to a focus by the condensing lens.  Image formed at the principal focus of lens.  Hence, size of image remains the same, no matter the position of lens.
  • 21.
    MYOPIA  Rays areconvergent  Image formed in front of the eye  Final image by condensing lens within its own focal length  Image is smaller when lens is nearer to anterior focus of the eye and larger when away.
  • 22.
    HYPERMETROPIA  Rays aredivergent and appear to come from behind the retina.  Image by condensing lens in front of its principle focus  Image is larger when lens is nearer to the anterior focus of the eye and smaller when away
  • 23.
    Relative position ofimages  In emmetropia: at the principal focus  In myopia: nearer to the lens than its principal focus  In hypermetropia: farther away from the principal focus
  • 24.
    Factors affecting fieldof view  Patient’s pupil size  Power of condensing lens  Refractive error  Distance the condensing lens held from the patient’s eye
  • 25.
    ADVANTAGES  Wide rangeof view  High contrast  Stereoscopic view  Variety of lens options  Excellent depth of focus  Lesser distortion image
  • 26.
    DISADVANTAGES  Inverted andinversed image  Low magnification  Dilation required  Difficult to master