Subjective refraction


Subjective Refraction is an attempt to determine, by trial and error using the patient’s cooperation, the combination of lenses that will provide the best corrected visual acuity. It is a clinical examination used by orthoptists, optometrists and ophthalmologists to determine a patient's need for refractive correction, in the form of glasses or contact lenses.
The aim is to improve current unaided vision or vision with current glasses. Glasses must also be comfortable visually. The sharpest final refraction is not always the final script the patient wears comfortably.

Equipment & Requirements

The following equipment is used to complete a Subjective Refraction:

Test Requirements

Before commencing a Subjective Refraction, ensure that:

Setting up the patient

  1. Comfortably fit the trial frames onto the patient, by adjusting the nose piece, Inter-Pupillary Distance and vertex distance to ensure that they are properly centered.

    Preliminaries

  2. The examination begins by testing the patient's BCVA in both eyes separately, without correction. Conventionally, the right eye is tested first. An occluder is placed over the eye that is not being tested.
  3. A pinhole occluder is then placed before the patient's eye, and their vision is then tested again to determine if the patient's poor visual acuity is a result of optical irregularities, or pathological issues. If the patient is able to read more lines on the Snellen chart with the use of the pinhole, this indicates the presence of refractive error. This is based on the principle that the pinhole blocks out any peripheral rays of light, so that only the principal ray falls on the fovea, decreasing the size of blur circles.
  4. In the presence of refractive error in most patients, visual acuity will improve with the use of the pinhole. The examiner aims to achieve this level of visual acuity, or better, by the end of the Subjective Refraction.

    Steps

The entire process of Subjective Refraction involves the patient fixating at the Snellen Chart, whilst the clinician presents a variety of lenses and alters the power of the lenses in the trial frames according to the patient's subjective responses regarding improvements to their vision.
1) INITIAL BEST SPHERE CORRECTION
2) SEARCH FOR Astigmatism
3) REFINE CYLINDER AXIS
4) REFINE CYLINDER POWER
5) ADJUST FOR BEST SPHERE CORRECTION

Duochrome Test

The red-green duochrome test is performed monocularly, and is used to refine the spherical component of the refraction. It is based on the principles of chromatic aberration; red is refracted less than green. Therefore, a myope sees red clearer as red focuses closer to retina than green. The examiner asks the patient: "Do the black letters stand out more on the red or green background? Or do they appear equal?"

Neutrality is achieved when the patient subjectively reports that the letters on both backgrounds appear equally as prominent.

Recording

1) It is important to record the initial level of visual acuity, including the pinhole:
KEY:
2) The final prescription is recorded as follows:
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3) The Duochrome result is recorded as follows:
KEY:
Overall, the reliability of subjective refraction is high. However, it comes with advantages and disadvantages.

Advantages