论文标题
进行自动化视网膜镜检查以进行折射率诊断
Towards Automating Retinoscopy for Refractive Error Diagnosis
论文作者
论文摘要
折射率是最常见的眼睛障碍,是可更正视觉障碍的关键原因,造成了近80%的视觉障碍。可以使用多种方法诊断折射误差,包括主观折射,视网膜镜检查和自动磨蚀器。尽管主观折射是黄金标准,但它需要患者的合作,因此不适合婴儿,幼儿和发育迟缓的成年人。视网膜镜检查是一种客观的折射方法,不需要患者的任何输入。但是,视网膜镜检查需要镜头套件和训练有素的检查员,这限制了其用于大规模筛查的使用。在这项工作中,我们通过将智能手机连接到视网膜镜上并录制视网膜镜视频,并戴着一双定制的纸框架来自动化视网膜。我们开发了一个视频处理管道,该管道将视网膜镜视频作为输入,并根据我们提出的视网膜镜检查数学模型的扩展来估算净屈光度错误。我们的系统减轻了对镜头套件的需求,可以由未经训练的检查员进行。在一项具有185只眼睛的临床试验中,我们的灵敏度为91.0%,特异性为74.0%,对折射率诊断。此外,与主观折射测量相比,我们方法的平均绝对误差为0.75 $ \ pm $ 0.67D。我们的结果表明,我们的方法有可能用作现实世界中医疗设置中的基于视网膜镜检查的折射错误筛选工具。
Refractive error is the most common eye disorder and is the key cause behind correctable visual impairment, responsible for nearly 80% of the visual impairment in the US. Refractive error can be diagnosed using multiple methods, including subjective refraction, retinoscopy, and autorefractors. Although subjective refraction is the gold standard, it requires cooperation from the patient and hence is not suitable for infants, young children, and developmentally delayed adults. Retinoscopy is an objective refraction method that does not require any input from the patient. However, retinoscopy requires a lens kit and a trained examiner, which limits its use for mass screening. In this work, we automate retinoscopy by attaching a smartphone to a retinoscope and recording retinoscopic videos with the patient wearing a custom pair of paper frames. We develop a video processing pipeline that takes retinoscopic videos as input and estimates the net refractive error based on our proposed extension of the retinoscopy mathematical model. Our system alleviates the need for a lens kit and can be performed by an untrained examiner. In a clinical trial with 185 eyes, we achieved a sensitivity of 91.0% and specificity of 74.0% on refractive error diagnosis. Moreover, the mean absolute error of our approach was 0.75$\pm$0.67D on net refractive error estimation compared to subjective refraction measurements. Our results indicate that our approach has the potential to be used as a retinoscopy-based refractive error screening tool in real-world medical settings.