State of the Art Technology

Technology and Testing

Fundus Photography

The “fundus” describes the retinal tissue at the back of the eye responsible for the majority of your vision. Fundus photography allows our doctors to quickly capture a high-resolution image of this tissue to help us to detect disease or monitor for subtle changes over time. Viewing the retina is very helpful for diagnosing a wide range of eye diseases, but can also help us find systemic disease! Most people are surprised to hear that the inside of the eye is the only place in the body we can view blood vessels directly, so we can sometimes find and diagnose diabetes, high blood pressure, and more in patients who don’t even know they have those conditions! The eyes can also show signs of autoimmune conditions, some cancers, infections, and more. Our portable fundus camera can be brought directly to the patient’s exam room. Our doctors recommend annual screening photos on all adults to help provide you with the best possible care.

Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT)

The OCT machine allows our doctors to obtain highly detailed and magnified 3-D images of the eye. The images can look similar to x-rays or MRIs, but this machine uses harmless infared light and takes only a few seconds to obtain. By viewing the eye in this detail, our doctors are able to detect and monitor many corneal and retinal diseases – it allows us to track subtle changes, giving us better information to guide your treatment.

Visual Field Testing

A visual field machine tests peripheral vision in-depth to see if there are any areas of vision missing. This test can be very important as most of a normal eye exam is focused on central vision. Oftentimes when peripheral vision is lost, it happens slowly over time and the brain can start to fill the information in – this means we may not even realize that we are losing vision! This test allows the doctors to see what your functional vision is, and compare that to what is happening structurally inside the eye. Eye diseases like glaucoma and retinitis pigmentosa primarily impact peripheral vision, but even certain medications (e.g. Plaquenil/hydroxychloroquine) or systemic conditions (e.g. stroke) can cause issues with peripheral vision and should be monitored with visual field tests.

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eye technology