Literature DB >> 7831037

Automated perimetry and malingerers. Can the Humphrey be outwitted?

J F Stewart1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Through detailed strategies and sophisticated analysis, the Humphrey automated visual field analyzer attempts to indicate if visual field loss is artefactual. Can these measures be outwitted by malingerers?
METHODS: The author investigated the ease with which motivated individuals (such as are malingerers) could simulate visual field defects consistent with organic neurologic disease on the Humphrey visual field analyzer. Visual field test results were analyzed for characteristic features and compared with visual field tests from patients with documented pituitary tumors.
RESULTS: Volunteers, given only broad suggestions as to the visual field they were to simulate, produced consistent, convincing, neurologic-type field defects, according to textbook descriptions of such fields. These plotted fields were only distinguishable from genuine pituitary tumor Humphrey field tests, in that they more convincingly fitted the classic descriptions of visual fields seen with chiasmal compression.
CONCLUSIONS: The author concludes that single routine Humphrey visual field tests do not show malingerers. An incidental finding of this study was the extent to which Humphrey visual fields from patients with genuine neurologic disease contain field defects with characteristics different from those of the (kinetic) visual field test appearances described in the textbooks.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 7831037     DOI: 10.1016/s0161-6420(95)31059-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ophthalmology        ISSN: 0161-6420            Impact factor:   12.079


  8 in total

Review 1.  Non-organic visual loss.

Authors:  S Beatty
Journal:  Postgrad Med J       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 2.401

2.  Long term changes in the visual fields of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy using vigabatrin.

Authors:  P Hardus; W M Verduin; G Postma; J S Stilma; T T Berendschot; C W van Veelen
Journal:  Br J Ophthalmol       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 4.638

3.  Artefactual uniocular altitudinal visual field defect.

Authors:  V Kumar; U S Ramanathan; B Mushtaq; P Shah
Journal:  Br J Ophthalmol       Date:  2002-12       Impact factor: 4.638

4.  Diagnosis and management of functional visual deficits.

Authors:  Jacqueline A Leavitt
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Neurol       Date:  2006-01       Impact factor: 3.598

5.  [Testing and approach when non-organic visual loss is suspected].

Authors:  Anna Sophie Mursch-Edlmayr; D Mojon; M Bolz
Journal:  Ophthalmologe       Date:  2018-01       Impact factor: 1.059

6.  Functional Visual Loss.

Authors:  Kenneth S. Shindler; Steven L. Galetta; Nicholas J. Volpe
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Neurol       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 3.598

Review 7.  Functional vision disorders in adults: a paradigm and nomenclature shift for ophthalmology.

Authors:  Subahari Raviskanthan; Sydney Wendt; Peter M Ugoh; Peter W Mortensen; Heather E Moss; Andrew G Lee
Journal:  Surv Ophthalmol       Date:  2021-03-15       Impact factor: 6.197

8.  Artifactual Visual Field Defects Identified on Technically "Reliable" Visual Field Studies in a Neuro-Ophthalmology Practice.

Authors:  Pablo Galarza; Elhanan Parnasa; Noah Guttmann; Joshua M Kruger
Journal:  Eye Brain       Date:  2021-04-14
  8 in total

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