J R Soc Med 2002;95:498-500
doi:10.1258/jrsm.95.10.498
© 2002 Royal Society of Medicine
Pupil perimetry in the diagnosis of functional visual field loss
M S Rajan MRCOphth FRCS
F D Bremner PhD FRCOphth
P Riordan-Eva FRCOphth FRCS
King's College Hospital and National Hospital for Neurology and
Neurosurgery, London, UK
Correspondence to: Mr Madhavan S Rajan, Department of Academic Ophthalmology,
Rayne Institute, St Thomas' Hospital, London SE1 7EH, UK E-mail:
rajanophth{at}aol.com
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SUMMARY
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The diagnosis of functional visual lossreduced visual
performance in
the absence of an organic causeis usually
made by exclusion. We
conducted a pilot study to evaluate pupil
perimetry in three patients (aged
14, 43 and 50) with visual
field loss presumed to be functional on clinical
grounds and
having no cause identified by visual electrophysiology or magnetic
resonance
imaging. A modified automated perimeter was used to examine
visual
and pupil responses to a light stimulus (size 1.7°)
presented at five
locations in the visual field (fixation and
in each of the four
quadrants).
In each patient, the pupil responses were normal in those test quadrants
which showed apparent visual field loss.
Pupil perimetry provides objective evidence for a diagnosis of functional
visual field loss in selected patients and may circumvent the need for other
investigations.
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INTRODUCTION
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Functional visual loss refers to reduced visual performance
in the absence
of an organic cause. The diagnosis is usually
made by exclusion, and this can
be time-consuming and expensive.
Ideally, the diagnosis should be made by
demonstration of normal
visual function. When the visual acuity is apparently
reduced,
normal acuity can often be confirmed by clinical methods, such
as
testing of acuity under binocular conditions with the normal
eye fogged, or
more objectively by the pattern onset visual
evoked potential (VEP). In the
case of functional visual field
loss with good visual acuity, a different
approach is needed
to objectively measure function in the visual periphery.
Pupil
perimetry is a new technique that combines the techniques of
automated
static perimetry and video
pupillography
1. By
recording
the pupil responses to light stimuli presented at different
visual
field loci, it offers an objective method of visual field
assessment. In this
pilot study, pupil perimetry was performed
in three patients with presumed
functional visual field loss.
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METHODS
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Three patients aged 14, 43 and 50 years with normal visual acuities
and
presumed functional visual field loss underwent pupil perimetry.
The visual
field defects in the first two of these patients,
when tested with automated
visual perimetry (Humphrey Field
Analyser, 30-2 programme), were bitemporal
inferior quadrantanopia
(
Figure
1) and temporal hemianopia in the right eye
(
Figure 2),
respectively. The
third patient showed generalized field
loss in the left eye and a nasal
hemianopia in the right eye
(
Figure
3). The visual perimetry in these patients satisfied
the
reliability criteria and were repeatable. In all cases the
pattern of field
loss implied lesions predominantly of the anterior
visual pathways, and should
therefore be associated with attenuation
of the pupil light reflex. An organic
basis for the visual field
loss was excluded by visual electrophysiology
(electroretinograms,
pattern electroretinograms and visual evoked potentials
were
all normal) and normal brain/optic nerve MRI imaging.

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Figure 1. Case 1: Conventional computerized automated visual perimetry showing
bitemporal inferior quadrantanopia (RE=right eye, LE=left eye)
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Figure 3. Case 3: Computerized automated visual perimetry showing generalized
field loss in the left eye and nasal hemianopia in the right eye
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Pupil responses were evaluated by means of the Octopus 1-2-3 automated
perimeter fitted with an infrared video camera for real-time monitoring of
pupil size2. Five
stimulus locations were testedfixation and at 17° eccentricity
along the 45/135° meridians in the supero-temporal, inferotemporal,
superonasal and inferonasal quadrants. The stimulus parameters for intensity,
size and duration were 4000 asb, 1.7° (Goldmann V), and 500 ms,
respectively, with a background illumination of 31.4 apostilb. The amplitudes
of the pupil responses (expressed as percentage constriction of the pupil
area) were measured for all five test locations in both eyes. The results were
compared with pupil responses recorded from age-matched healthy controls
(n=23) (Figure 4).

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Figure 4. The five retinal quadrants tested in pupil perimetry and their normal
values (percentage constriction of pupil area ±2 standard
deviations)
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RESULTS
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Mean amplitudes of pupil responses at each stimulus location
are shown in
Table 1. In all three patients,
pupil perimetry
was normal in the quadrants of visual field identified as
abnormal
by conventional perimetry. In case 3 the diagnosis of functional
visual
loss led to reinvestigation of diabetes insipidus and to an
amended
diagnosis of psychogenic polydipsia.
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Table 1. Pupil responses in patients with presumed functional visual field loss
showing normal pupil responses in the quadrants of visual field loss detected
by conventional visual field testing
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DISCUSSION
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The pupil light reflex is mediated by retinal ganglion cells
which project
directly to the pretectum. Lesions of the optic
nerve, chiasm and tract
therefore all produce loss of both visual
perception and pupil light responses
in corresponding areas
of the visual
field
3. In the three
patients described here,
pupil perimetry confirmed normal function in
allegedly blind
areas of the visual field, thereby providing objective
evidence
of the functional nature of their visual field loss. There are
reports
that retrogeniculate lesions can also affect the pupil light
reflex
4.
This is an
indirect influence presumably mediated by corticotectal
pathways, but because
the anatomy is not yet understood we would
not recommend the use of pupil
perimetry to distinguish functional
from organic field loss in these
cases.
Pupil perimetry was originally developed to replace conventional perimetry
in the assessment of patients with genuine visual field defects. However, its
sensitivity is limited by the need for a larger size, intensity and duration
of stimulus than used in conventional threshold perimetry, and greater
variability in the
measurements5.
Furthermore, its use is limited by the need to exclude all patients with
midbrain lesions, parasympathetic neuropathy, and orbital or ocular conditions
that could affect the pupil measurements. The most useful applications of the
technique are in patients unable to perform conventional perimetry, or in whom
the visual loss is thought to be functional. A larger series of patients would
be required to establish the sensitivity and specificity of this
technique.
We conclude that, in patients with presumed functional visual field loss
where the pattern is not consistent with retro-chiasmal disease, pupil
perimetry can provide objective evidence for normal visual fields, thus
circumventing the need for time-consuming and expensive investigations.
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REFERENCES
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