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Evaluation of New Head-mounted Visual Aids Among Patients With Low Vision

Sun Yat-sen University logo

Sun Yat-sen University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Glaucoma
Retinitis Pigmentosa
Age-related Macular Degeneration
Diabetic Retinopathy

Treatments

Device: New head-mounted visual aids

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06076720
2021KYPJ123

Details and patient eligibility

About

Glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration (AMD), retinitis pigmentosa, RP, diabetic retinopathy (DR) are the most common blinding eye diseases in the world. Vision and visual field are often severely impaired, quality of life is reduced, and personal and family burdens are heavy. This kind of low vision people, can use visual AIDS and other instruments for visual rehabilitation training, maximize the function of residual vision, improve the quality of life. Beyes, HOLA, Acesight and OXSIGHT are among the latest eyeglasses devices that are expected to improve the quality of life for people with low vision. This research group intends to recruit advanced patients with primary glaucoma, AMD, RP, DR and other common blinding eye diseases who visited Zhongshan Ophthalmology Center of Sun Yat-sen University from June 2021 to December 2022 to study the changes of visual function and quality of life after wearing this new type of head-worn visual aids, and analyze relevant factors combined with clinical data. To evaluate the effect and influencing factors of the new head-mounted visual AIDS on patients, and provide theoretical basis for subsequent clinical research.

Full description

  1. Low vision Low visual acuity refers to a patient who has functional impairment of vision even after treatment or standard refractive correction. The visual acuity of the good middle eye in both eyes is less than 0.3, or the field radius is ≤20°, but still has the ability to use the remaining vision to perform a certain visual activity. In China, low vision caused by eye diseases (such as glaucoma, AMD, RP, DR) can lead to behavioral loss of patients, and standardized rehabilitation treatment of low vision can help 90% of visual impairment patients improve the utilization rate of residual vision, becoming an important way to compensate for the loss of visual function of this group.

  2. Visual rehabilitation of low vision The latest definition of visual rehabilitation is a kind of multidisciplinary comprehensive rehabilitation therapy. By ophthalmologists, depending on the light, low vision devices, low vision rehabilitation counselors professional therapists, social workers and psychologists of the multidisciplinary team, using physical, audio, electronic, optical instruments, and life skills training, help patients with low vision to use its residual vision and development skills available to offset the impact of visual impairment in patients, To improve their self-living ability and quality of life. There are three treatment levels: discovery, guidance and referral; Individual rehabilitation; Multidisciplinary visual rehabilitation.

    The first step of visual rehabilitation is often accurate optometry in order to obtain the best corrected vision, which is also an important basis for the success of visual rehabilitation. On the basis of refractive correction, it can obviously improve the daily living ability and quality of life of the patients with low vision by providing them with appropriate visual aids and corresponding training of using visual aids. Visual aids are generally divided into near-use and far-use visual aids, in which near-vision and reading ability are the focus of functional vision assessment and rehabilitation. Traditional used visual aids have hand-held magnifier, vertical magnifier, glasses and electronic visual aids. Compared with optical visual aids, electronic visual aids have the advantages of clear imaging, adjustable magnification and contrast.

  3. Research status of smart wearable devices Traditional visual AIDS achieve the effect of object image amplification through the principle of optics, but have fixed magnification rate, reduced field of vision, small depth of field, short working distance, can not adjust the contrast and other shortcomings. In recent years, video wearable devices have been gradually applied in the field of visual rehabilitation, with the advantages of adjustable magnification, adjustable contrast and high clarity, overcoming the limitations of traditional optical devices, including eSight 3, NuEyes, IrisVision, etc.

Currently, there are few studies on wearable electronic visual aids. Walter Wittich et al. conducted an intervention trial on 51 patients with low vision and confirmed that wearable electronic visual aids can improve patients' visual acuity, spatial object recognition ability, and reading and activity ability. In the study of middle-advanced glaucoma, Yogesh Patodia et al. found that wearable electronic visual aids can also improve their long-range and near-range vision.

Smart glasses such as Beyes, HOLA, Acesight and OXSIGHT are the latest wearable electronic visual aids to hit the market, featuring advantages of lighter weight, comfortable wearing, better imaging quality and multi-mode assisted visual recognition. However, the effect and influencing factors of this kind of smart glasses on advanced patients with glaucoma, AMD, RP, DR and other common blinding eye diseases are still unclear, which requires further exploration by researchers.

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

10 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. age ≥10 years, able to complete all tests and inspections

  2. a definite diagnosis of low vision or blindness:

    • Criteria for low vision: the best corrected visual acuity of the better eye ≤0.3, and ≥0.05 or the visual field of the better eye no greater than 20° in radius around central fixation

      • Criteria for blindness: the best corrected visual acuity of the better eye <0.05 or the visual field of the better eye no greater than 10° in radius around central fixation
  3. Visual acuity, intraocular pressure, and other eye conditions have been stable for more than 6 months.

Exclusion criteria

  1. unable to cooperate with related inspections
  2. a history of eye surgery or eye laser within six months
  3. serious systemic diseases, such as neurological diseases, cardiovascular diseases, psychological diseases, malignant tumors, etc.
  4. pregnant or lactating women
  5. those who refuse to sign the informed consent or voluntarily withdraw from the study due to discomfort or other reasons.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

50 participants in 1 patient group

New head-mounted visual aids
Experimental group
Description:
Wearing different head-mounted visual aids
Treatment:
Device: New head-mounted visual aids

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Haishun Huang; Yehong Zhuo

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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