The cornea is the transparent connective tissue window at the front of the eye. The physiological role of the cornea is to conduct external light into the eye, focus it, together with the lens, onto the retina, and to provide rigidity to the entire eyeball. Therefore, good vision requires maintenance of the transparency and proper refractive shape of the cornea. The surface structures irregularities can be associated with wavefront aberrations and scattering errors. Light scattering in the human cornea causes a reduction of visual quality. In fact, the cornea must be transparent and maintain a smooth and stable curvature since it contributes to the major part of the focusing power of the eye. In most cases, a simple examination of visual acuity cannot demonstrate the reduction of visual quality secondary light scattering. In fact, clinical techniques for examining the human cornea in vivo have greatly expanded over the last few decades. The measurement of corneal back scattering qualifies the degree of corneal transparency. The measurement of corneal forward-scattering quantifies the amount of visual impairment that is produced by the alteration of transparency. The aim of this study was to review scattering in the human cornea and methods of measuring it.
Effect of corneal light scatter on vision: a review of the literature / Spadea, Leopoldo; Maraone, Giorgia; Verboschi, Francesca; Vingolo, Enzo Maria; Tognetto, Daniele. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY. - ISSN 2222-3959. - STAMPA. - 9:3(2016), pp. 459-464. [10.18240/ijo.2016.03.24]
Effect of corneal light scatter on vision: a review of the literature
SPADEA, LEOPOLDO
Primo
Writing – Review & Editing
;MARAONE, GIORGIASecondo
;VERBOSCHI, FRANCESCA;VINGOLO, Enzo MariaPenultimo
;
2016
Abstract
The cornea is the transparent connective tissue window at the front of the eye. The physiological role of the cornea is to conduct external light into the eye, focus it, together with the lens, onto the retina, and to provide rigidity to the entire eyeball. Therefore, good vision requires maintenance of the transparency and proper refractive shape of the cornea. The surface structures irregularities can be associated with wavefront aberrations and scattering errors. Light scattering in the human cornea causes a reduction of visual quality. In fact, the cornea must be transparent and maintain a smooth and stable curvature since it contributes to the major part of the focusing power of the eye. In most cases, a simple examination of visual acuity cannot demonstrate the reduction of visual quality secondary light scattering. In fact, clinical techniques for examining the human cornea in vivo have greatly expanded over the last few decades. The measurement of corneal back scattering qualifies the degree of corneal transparency. The measurement of corneal forward-scattering quantifies the amount of visual impairment that is produced by the alteration of transparency. The aim of this study was to review scattering in the human cornea and methods of measuring it.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
Spadea_Effect of corneal light_2016.pdf
accesso aperto
Note: http://www.ijo.cn/gjyken/ch/reader/view_abstract.aspx?file_no=20160324&flag=1
Tipologia:
Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
470.27 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
470.27 kB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.