Evaluation of eye movements and visual performance in patients with cataract

Eye movement is an essential component of visual perception. Eye movement disorders have been observed in many eye disease, and are thought to affect various visual performance in daily life. However, eye movement behaviors of the elderly with cataract are poorly understood, and the impact of catara...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2020-06, Vol.10 (1), p.9875-9875, Article 9875
Hauptverfasser: Wan, Yu, Yang, Jiarui, Ren, Xiaotong, Yu, Zitong, Zhang, Rong, Li, Xuemin
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Yang, Jiarui
Ren, Xiaotong
Yu, Zitong
Zhang, Rong
Li, Xuemin
description Eye movement is an essential component of visual perception. Eye movement disorders have been observed in many eye disease, and are thought to affect various visual performance in daily life. However, eye movement behaviors of the elderly with cataract are poorly understood, and the impact of cataract surgery on eye movements has not been investigated. In this study, we observed the eye movement behaviors in thirty patients with bilateral age-related cataract while performing three performance-based tasks (visual search, face recognition and reading). Eye movements were automatically recorded by an eye tracker during task performance. We found an overall improved visual performance postoperatively, presented as elevated percentage of correctly identified objects and faces, reduced search time and increased reading speed. Eye movement parameters were found significantly altered after cataract surgery. Fixation count, total fixation duration and total visit duration were markedly increased in the visual search task and face recognition task. The proportion of regressive saccades was obviously decreased in the reading task. These eye movement parameters were found to be correlated with the measures of visual performance. Our findings suggested a potential association between the eye movement disturbance and impaired visual performance, and provided a new insight on the potential usefulness of eye movement as an objective and valid tool to understand visual impairments caused by cataract, as well as evaluate practical outcomes of cataract surgery.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41598-020-66817-w
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Eye movement disorders have been observed in many eye disease, and are thought to affect various visual performance in daily life. However, eye movement behaviors of the elderly with cataract are poorly understood, and the impact of cataract surgery on eye movements has not been investigated. In this study, we observed the eye movement behaviors in thirty patients with bilateral age-related cataract while performing three performance-based tasks (visual search, face recognition and reading). Eye movements were automatically recorded by an eye tracker during task performance. We found an overall improved visual performance postoperatively, presented as elevated percentage of correctly identified objects and faces, reduced search time and increased reading speed. Eye movement parameters were found significantly altered after cataract surgery. Fixation count, total fixation duration and total visit duration were markedly increased in the visual search task and face recognition task. The proportion of regressive saccades was obviously decreased in the reading task. These eye movement parameters were found to be correlated with the measures of visual performance. Our findings suggested a potential association between the eye movement disturbance and impaired visual performance, and provided a new insight on the potential usefulness of eye movement as an objective and valid tool to understand visual impairments caused by cataract, as well as evaluate practical outcomes of cataract surgery.</abstract><cop>London</cop><pub>Nature Publishing Group UK</pub><pmid>32555224</pmid><doi>10.1038/s41598-020-66817-w</doi><tpages>1</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects 692/1807/1482
692/699/3161/3168
692/699/3161/3171
Age
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Case-Control Studies
Cataract - pathology
Cataract Extraction
Cataracts
Eye diseases
Eye movements
Eye Movements - physiology
Eye surgery
Facial Recognition
Female
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Motion detection
Movement disorders
multidisciplinary
Pattern recognition
Photic Stimulation
Reading
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Surgery
Task Performance and Analysis
Visual Acuity
Visual perception
Visual Perception - physiology
title Evaluation of eye movements and visual performance in patients with cataract
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