principles of tonometry Flashcards

1
Q

what is IOP?

A

intra ocular pressure is largely determined by balance between aqueous production and drainage

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2
Q

what does positive IOP do?

A

positive IOP maintains the shape of the eye

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3
Q

what is the mean IOP?

A

mean IOP=15.7mmHg

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4
Q

what is the standard deviation of IOP?

A

standard deviation of IOP=2.5mmHg
2SD=5mmHg
21mmHG is by 16+2SD(5)

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5
Q

what does IOP rise with?

A

–rises with age
rise of 1-2mmHg between 20 -70 years of age
–raise with systolic BP
–Gender in older women
-race higher in black population, less in caucasion population
-Myopia have high IOP

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6
Q

How is IOP determined?

A

IOP is genetically determined

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7
Q

How does IOP range during the day?

A
  • Normal range 3-5mmHg
  • glaucotamous average range 13mmHg
  • greater than 10mmHg is considered pathological
  • some with high IOP in morning with afternoon dip and some have afternoon peaks
  • repeat at different times of day to get average
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8
Q

how does fluid intake effect IOP?

A

water increases IOP by 3mmHg with max effect 20 mins

alcahol decreases IOP by 3mmHg with max effect 5 minutes

Coffee increases IOP by 5mmHg with max effect 20 mins

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9
Q

How does provoctive test for glaucoma?

A

drink 1 litre of water and measure IOP after 15 mins and lying down in dark for 1 hour. a rise in IOP of 8mmHg suggests a risk of glaucoma due to decrease in aqueous outflow

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10
Q

why do we worry about raise IOP?

A

raise IOP is one major risk factor of glaucoma

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11
Q

what does glaucoma cause

A

glaucoma causes optic nerve fibre atrophy
optic neauropathy
visual field defects
possible blindness

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12
Q

why do we worry about reduced IOP?

A

reduced IOP slows down progression of optic neuropathy and early detection is beneficial

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13
Q

how do you measure IOP?

A

manometry

pressure sensor inserted into the eye but not popular with px

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14
Q

what is indentation tonometry ?

A

force required to flatten (applanate) a constant area of the cornea, for the Imbert-Fick law.
amount of indentation is proportional to pressure inside the eye.

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15
Q

how does schiotz tonometer work?

A

rigidity of the globe must be taken into account
-Pt=F/a + b.S
a and b are constants and S is scale of reading
conversion tables supplied within instruments and translate scale reading into estimate IOP

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16
Q

give disadvantage of using schiotz tonometer?

A

less accurate than applantation of IOP

17
Q

Explain about dynamic and rebound tonometry?

A

-a magnetised probe is launched toward the cornea
-magnetised probe consists of steel wire shaft covered with round plastic tip at the end.
probe hits the cornea and bounces back

18
Q

what is a tonopen?

A

tonopen another instrument to measure IOP, has transducer senses indentation produced by probe

  • digital readout
  • portable accurate and easy to use
19
Q

Explain the imberts ficks law?

A

for a spherical container which has and infinitely thin, perfectly elastic and dry surfaces, equilibrium is achieved for an object placed in contact when
pressure = force/area
Pt=F/A.

20
Q

what if the eyes/cornea does not full fill the required criteria

A

;cornea is not thin
;cornea not perfectly active
;corneal surfaces moistened by the tear film

21
Q

what does Pt=F/A-k+t

A

imbert ficks law
when the diameter of circle area of applantation is between 3mm and 4mm then k and t are approx equal so they cancel each other out
Pt=F/A

22
Q

what is the applanatation tonometry method A?

A

apply a known force and measure areas applanated

23
Q

What is the applanatation tonometry method B?

A

increase force until known area is applanated

24
Q

what is the goldmann applanation tonometer ?

A
  • circle area of applanation is 7.35mm squared
    diameter = 3.06mm
  • as diameter is between 3mm- 4 mm we can assume that surface tension of fluid and rigidity of the cornea cancel out
    -gives huge advantage 1g force=10mmHg IOP and no conversion tables are needed
25
Q

How does goldmann applanation tonometer work?

A

=use disposable probe
= position patient
=anaesthetise the cornea
=apply fluorescein using the fluorescein paper strip
=set 1.0gm or 1.5gm force
=insert cobalt blue filter
=bring probe in contact with cornea by moving the slit lamp forward each side and above to keep probe centred on cornea

26
Q

what are the non contact methods of tonometry?

A

=same as applanation tonometry but puff of air is used instead as applanation force.
=puff of air gradually increases force , can measure time to achieve applantation or force used when applanation achieved.

27
Q

what are the advantages of non contact tonometry?

A

no contact with cornea
no anesthetics required
can be performed by non optometric staff

28
Q

name one non contact method ?

A

reichert non-contact tonometer

  • has a IR emitter
  • IR detector
  • air puff nozzle
29
Q

what does the non contact tonometer do?

A

time take to flatten the cornea (iIR signals piked up by detector increases) measured
calibrated against goldmann to give output in mmHg

30
Q

name another non contact tonometer?

A

keeler pulsair

31
Q

how does keeler pulsair work?

A

handheld

similar to principle to reichert but uses transducer to sense air pressure at moment of applanation

32
Q

what is IOP influenced by?

A

Corneal thickness
corneal curvature
—–steep corneas over estimate true IOP
——Flat cornea under estimate true IOP

33
Q

what is the average CCT ?

A

Average corneal thickness is 0.54mm

but can range 0.44mm to 0.64mm

34
Q

what measures corneal thickness in practice?

A

pachymetry

35
Q

what is use of corneal anaesthesia?

A

necessary for contact tonometry
sting on instillation
anaesthesia within 1 min last around 25 mins
mustn’t rub eyes damage cornea
cause allergic reaction hence must check with the px.

36
Q

what are the ocular anaesthetics?

A

tetracaine hydrochloride (amethocaine) 0.50%
oxybuprocaine hydrochloride (benoxinate) 0.40
proxymetacaine hydrochloride 0.50%
available in minims