Variability of wavefront aberration measurements in small pupil sizes using a clinical Shack-Hartmann aberrometer

Harilaos S. Ginis, Sotiris Plainis, Aristophanis Pallikaris

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background: Recently, instruments for the measurement of wavefront aberration in the living human eye have been widely available for clinical applications. Despite the extensive background experience on wavefront sensing for research purposes, the information derived from such instrumentation in a clinical setting should not be considered a priori precise. We report on the variability of such an instrument at two different pupil sizes. Methods: A clinical aberrometer (COAS Wavefront Scienses, Ltd) based on the Shack-Hartmann principle was employed in this study. Fifty consecutive measurements were perfomed on each right eye of four subjects. We compared the variance of individual Zernike expansion coefficients as determined by the aberrometer with the variance of coefficients calculated using a mathematical method for scaling the expansion coefficients to reconstruct wavefront aberration for a reduced-size pupil. Results: Wavefront aberration exhibits a marked variance of the order of 0.45 microns near the edge of the pupil whereas the central part appears to be measured more consistently. Dispersion of Zernike expansion coefficients was lower when calculated by the scaling method for a pupil diameter of 3 mm as compared to the one introduced when only the central 3 mm of the Shack - Hartmann image was evaluated. Signal-to-noise ratio was lower for higher order aberrations than for low order coefficients corresponding to the sphero-cylindrical error. For each subject a number of Zernike expansion coefficients was below noise level and should not be considered trustworthy. Conclusion: Wavefront aberration data used in clinical care should not be extracted from a single measurement, which represents only a static snapshot of a dynamically changing aberration pattern. This observation must be taken into account in order to prevent ambiguous conclusions in clinical practice and especially in refractive surgery.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number1
    Pages (from-to)1-8
    Number of pages7
    JournalBMC ophthalmology
    Volume4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 11 Feb 2004

    Keywords

    • aberrometer
    • adult
    • article
    • clinical article
    • color vision
    • controlled study
    • histogram
    • human
    • medical instrumentation
    • optometry
    • pupil
    • refraction error
    • reliability
    • signal noise ratio
    • visual system parameters
    • wavefront aberration
    • zernlike expansion coefficient
    • Adult
    • Cornea
    • Corneal Topography
    • Diagnostic Techniques
    • Ophthalmological
    • Humans
    • Keratomileusis
    • Laser In Situ
    • Myopia
    • Pupil
    • Reproducibility of Results

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Variability of wavefront aberration measurements in small pupil sizes using a clinical Shack-Hartmann aberrometer'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this