How It Is Done
Visual acuity testing
Visual acuity tests are used to evaluate eyesight. Several types
of visual acuity tests may be used.
- The Snellen test
checks your ability to see at distances. It uses a wall chart that has several
rows of letters. The letters on the top row are the largest; those on the
bottom row are the smallest. See a picture of a
Snellen
chart
.
- You will stand or sit
20 ft (6 m) from the chart and
be asked to cover one eye and then read the smallest row of letters you can see
on the chart. If you are unable to cover your eye, an eye patch will be placed
over your eye.
- Each eye is tested separately and then together. You
may be given a different chart or asked to read a row backward to make sure
that you did not remember the sequence of letters from the previous
test.
- If you wear glasses or contacts, you may be asked to repeat
the test on each eye while wearing them.
- Let your doctor know if
you have trouble reading the letters on one side of the row, or if some letters
disappear while you are looking at other letters. You may have a visual field
problem, and visual field tests may be needed.
- The E chart tests the
vision of children and people who cannot read. The E chart is similar to the
Snellen chart in that there are several rows, but all of the rows contain only
the letter E in different positions. The top row is the largest and the bottom
row of Es is the smallest. You will be asked to point in the same direction as
the lines of the E. Similar charts use the letter C or pictures. These charts
are also available in a handheld card. See a picture of an
E
chart
. - The Near test uses a small
card containing a few short lines or paragraphs of printed matter to test your
near vision. The size of the print gradually gets smaller. You will be asked to
hold the card about
14 in. (36 cm) from your face
and read aloud the paragraph containing the smallest print you can comfortably
read. As with the Snellen test, each eye is tested separately and then
together, with and without corrective lenses. This test is routinely done after
age 40, because near vision tends to decline as you age (presbyopia).
If you cannot read any of the letters or print on these charts
because of poor vision, your visual acuity will be tested by other techniques,
such as counting fingers, detecting hand movements, or distinguishing the
direction or perception of light sources (such as room light or a penlight held
up close to the face).
Visual acuity tests usually take about 5 to 10 minutes. They may
be performed by a nurse, a medical assistant, an
ophthalmologist, an
optometrist, a teacher, or some other trained person.
Testing may be done at a doctor's office, school, workplace, health fair, or
elsewhere.
Refraction
Refraction is a test that measures the eye's need for a
corrective lens (refractive error). For this test, you will be asked to
describe the effects of looking at an eye chart through various corrective
lenses.
A series of trial lenses is placed in front of your eyes and
adjusted until the light rays are properly focused on your retina. Testing one
eye at a time, the health professional will ask you to compare the effects of
two lenses (first one lens, then the other). You should state which lens of
each pair gives you better vision. The health professional will continue to
test your eyes with different lenses until it is determined which lenses
correct your vision the best.
Visual field tests
Visual field tests are used to check for gaps in your range of
vision. They can help detect eye diseases or nervous system problems that limit
your ability to see objects clearly in the entire visual field or in one part
of it. Several tests are commonly done to evaluate a person's visual
field.
- The confrontation
test. Your health professional will sit or stand
2 ft (0.6 m) to
3 ft (1 m) in front of you. You
cover one eye while fixing your gaze on the health professional's nose. The
health professional slowly moves a finger or hand from the outer edge of your
visual field toward the center and from the center toward the edge through all
areas of your visual field. You will focus your eye on your doctor's nose and
signal when you first see the health professional's finger or hand. The test is
then repeated for the other eye.
- The Amsler grid
test checks for macular degeneration, a disease that causes loss of
vision in the center of your visual field. The test uses a
4 in. (10 cm) square chart with
straight lines that form boxes. The grid has a black dot at the center. The
chart is held about
14 in. (36 cm) from your face.
You will cover one eye while focusing your other eye on the black dot. The test
is then repeated on the other eye. Tell your doctor if:
- You cannot see the black
dot.
- You see a blank or dark spot (other than the center
dot).
- The lines in the grid look wavy, blurred, or curved instead
of straight. You will be asked to point to the specific abnormal area of the
grid.
- Perimetry testing uses a
machine that flashes lights randomly at various points in the visual field. You
look inside a bowl-shaped instrument called a perimeter. While you stare at the
center, lights will flash, and you press a button each time you see a flash. A
computer records the location of each flash and whether you pressed the button
when the light flashed in that location. At the end of the test, a printout
shows any areas of your visual field where you did not see the flashes of
light. In an alternative manual perimetry test, your health professional moves
a light target and notes your visual field on paper.
- The
tangent screen test uses a black screen with concentric
circles and lines leading out from a center point (like a bull's-eye). Sitting
3 ft (1 m) to
6 ft (2 m) away from the
screen, you cover one eye while fixing your gaze on a target point marked on
the screen. Test objects of various sizes at the tip of a wand are then moved
inward from the outer edge of the screen toward the center. You will signal
when you can see the object, and that point is then marked on the screen. The
points on the screen where you see the objects are connected to provide an
outline of your visual field. The test is then repeated for the other eye. An
alternative manual tangent screen test uses a white object against a black
background. If you wear glasses, you will keep them on for this test.
Color vision test
Color vision tests check your ability to distinguish colors. In
the most commonly used color vision test, you look for different colored
numbers or symbols hidden in varying backgrounds of colored dots.
First, you are shown sample patterns and told what symbols and
numbers you can expect to see. You then sit at a table and cover one eye. The
health professional holds the color test patterns about
14 in. (36 cm) away from you.
Some patterns are more difficult to pick out than others. As the health
professional holds up a pattern, you will identify the number or symbol you see
and trace it using a pointer. Some patterns may not have a number or symbol.
The test is then repeated with the other eye.