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A) The main purposes of this study are (i) to develop a related virtual reality (VR) environment in order to judge the nighttime driving ability under mesopic and under glare conditions (ophthalmologically healthy subjects and patients with incipient to intermediate cataract, i.e. opacities of the human lens, will participate in this study), (ii) to validate the above-mentioned VR environment with respect to a related on-road driving scenario under mesopic and glare conditions, (iii) to validate clinical photopic and mesopic contrast vision tests and glare tests with respect to the prediction of nighttime driving ability, (iv) to assess the test retest reliability of clinical photopic and mesopic contrast vision tests
B) Background:
An intact mesopic vision and a glare sensitivity within a normal range are essential pre-requisites for safe driving at nighttime (DOG & BVA, 2011). Anderson & Holiday (1995) have shown that (simulated) opacities of the refractive media (with only minor effects on daytime visual acuity) induce a pronounced impairment of contrast sensitivity under nighttime conditions. Especially under glare conditions by the headlights of traffic on the opposite lane or by stationary street illumination, an impairment of the mesopic vision may cause traffic hazards. The prevalence of impairments of the central visual acuity, the mesopic vision and the glare sensitivity is significantly higher for subjects being involved in nighttime traffic accidents (Lachenmayr, 1998). Furthermore, these impairments occur more frequently in aged drivers and are, among others, related to an increase of age-related media opacities (Aulhorn & Harms, 1970, Babizhayev, 2003). Due to the demographic change, the relevance of nighttime driving ability is increasing in the next years since more and more aged employees will participate at the motorized traffic at night.
The German Fahrerlaubnisverordnung (FEV i.e. driving license regulation) specifies pass/fail criteria with regard to mesopic vision and glare sensitivity. The luminance level during nighttime driving is usually between 0.01 and 1 cd/m^2, and therefore can be attributed to the level of mesopic vision. However, over the last years, the attempt was made to introduce photopic contrast sensitivity test to diagnose nighttime driving ability (i.e. testing of contrast vision under daytime conditions without time consuming adaptation procedures). Current research aims at investigating the relationship between contrast tests under various luminance conditions (Wilhelm et al, 2013). It is questionable, whether photopic tests are at all reliable predictors with regard to nighttime driving (Gramberg-Danielsen et al., 1984, Hertenstein et al., Graefe´s Archive of Ophthalmology, 2016).
Full description
Subjects and Methods Adult patients with a distant binocular visual acuity of ≥ 0.8 (≥ 16/20; habitual correction) and healthy control subjects will be included in this explorative study after informed consent.
The study will be subdivided in the following (three) parts:
Part 1: Validation of the Aalen driving simulator set-up (ten patients with incipient to moderate cataract, i.e. opacities of the human lens of varying localization and of various degree of expression in at least one eye and ten age- and gender-correlated ophthalmologically healthy control subjects will be enrolled) Part 1.1.: Comprehensive ophthalmological/optical examination (Aalen University of Applied Sciences) including a detailed ophthalmological and medical history.
Part 1.2.: Baseline driving simulator test under mesopic conditions with/without glare under simulated static/simulated driving conditions (Aalen University of Applied Sciences) Part 1.3.: Baseline on road test under mesopic conditions with/without glare, under on road static/on road driving conditions (Aalen University of Applied Sciences) (If possible, the sequence of Part 1.2. and Part 1.3. will be randomly assigned.)
Part 2: Advanced driving simulator test (twenty patients with incipient to moderate cataract, i.e. opacities of the human lens of varying localization and of various degree of expression in at least one eye and twenty age- and gender-correlated ophthalmologically healthy control subjects will be enrolled. Subjects being enrolled in Part 1, will be asked to participate also at Part 2 and Part 3.) Part 2.1.: Comprehensive ophthalmological/optical examination of all (newly) enrolled patients and subjects who have not already been examined in Part. 1.1. (Aalen University of Applied Sciences).
Part 2.2.: Advanced driving simulator test under photopic and under mesopic simulated driving with and without glare (Würzburg Institute for Traffic Sciences = WIVW) in order to investigate the influence of glare on the driving behavior
Part 3: Representative driving simulator test (The [altogether fourty] subjects, enrolled in Part 2, will be enrolled in this part of the study.) Driving simulator test under photopic and mesopic conditions in oder to investigate glare on representative driving situations. Driving performance will be evaluated highly-standardized and partially automated on different parameters of operational and tactical driving behavior (S.A.F.E., Würzburg Institute for Traffic Sciences = WIVW).
Pass/fail rates are specified as described in the related manuals of the instruments. With regard to visual acuity measurements and assessment of mesopic contrast vision without/with glare, results are rated according to DIN 58220 - Part 3/ISO 10938: If less than three out of five subsequent presentations of an eight-position LANDOLT C (with two oblique and three horizontal/vertical gap locations in random sequence) are correctly identified, the session is rated as failed. Overlooking/missing reactions to obstacles (pedestrian [display dummy with dark clothing]/wild boar at the right roadside) are rated as failed.
For mesopic contrast vision testing, single LANDOLT optotpyes (visual acuity level 0.1 = 2/20) with the contrast levels (1:2, 1:5 and 1:23, respectively, according to AULHORN/HARMS) are presented via the Optovist Instrument (Vistec, Inc., Manching/Germany) or via the head up display (HUD) of the simulator vehicle/on road vehicle.
Photopic and mesopic contrast vision tests (without glare) are repeated once in order to assess the test retest variability of the related test procedure.
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ophthalmological exclusion criteria: all ophthalmological diseases or abnormalities, with the exception of those, listed in the above-mentioned inclusion criteria
54 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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