Abstract

ABSTRACT Clinical relevance The findings of this study can be used in the selection of the preferred retinal locus to establish better rehabilitation services such as eccentric viewing training for patients with age‐related macular degeneration. Background The aim of this study was to determine the characteristics of the preferred retinal locus in native Persian‐speaking patients with age‐related macular degeneration. Methods In this non‐interventional case series, all patients with a diagnosis of age‐related macular degeneration referred to the Retina Clinic of the Rassoul Akram Hospital, Tehran, Iran, were evaluated. The fixation characteristics were evaluated monocularly using the MP1 microperimeter (Nidek Technologies, Padua, Italy). Optical coherence tomography was used to determine the location of the central fovea. The images were overlaid and the preferred retinal locus‐fovea distance was measured using Image J software. Results Fifty‐one eyes of 35 patients with a mean age of 73.8 ± 7.7-years were evaluated in this study. Inferior‐field, left‐field, central‐field, right‐field, and superior‐field preferred retinal locus were detected in 49 per cent, 33.3 per cent, 7.8 per cent, 5.9 per cent, and 3.9 per cent of the subjects, respectively. Fixation was stable in 70.6 per cent, relatively unstable in 15.7 per cent, and unstable in 13.7 per cent of the participants. Significant differences were not found in the mean values of logMAR visual acuity between different fields of the preferred retinal locus after Bonferroni correction (p = 0.031). Analysis of co‐variance showed no significant difference in mean sensitivity values between different locations of the preferred retinal locus (p = 0.07). The mean preferred retinal locus‐fovea distance was not significantly different between different fields of the preferred retinal locus (p = 0.063). Conclusions Native Persian‐speaking patients with central scotoma secondary to age‐related macular degeneration place their self‐selected preferred retinal locus most frequently in the inferior and left visual field, which would result in scotoma displacement to the superior and right visual field. Fixation stability was statistically similar in different locations of preferred retinal locus, but it improved with decreasing the preferred retinal locus‐fovea distance.

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