PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - David P Crabb AU - Ananth C Viswanathan AU - Andrew I McNaught AU - Darmalingum Poinoosawmy AU - Frederick W Fitzke AU - Roger A Hitchings TI - Simulating binocular visual field status in glaucoma AID - 10.1136/bjo.82.11.1236 DP - 1998 Nov 01 TA - British Journal of Ophthalmology PG - 1236--1241 VI - 82 IP - 11 4099 - http://bjo.bmj.com/content/82/11/1236.short 4100 - http://bjo.bmj.com/content/82/11/1236.full SO - Br J Ophthalmol1998 Nov 01; 82 AB - AIMS To simulate the central binocular visual field using results from merged left and right monocular Humphrey fields. To assess the agreement between the simulation and the binocular Humphrey Esterman visual field test (EVFT). METHOD 59 consecutive patients with bilateral glaucoma each recorded Humphrey 24-2 fields for both eyes and binocular EVFT on the same visit. EVFT results were used to identify patients exhibiting at least one defect (<10 dB) within the central 20° of the binocular field. This criterion is relevant to a patient’s legal fitness to drive in the UK. Individual sensitivity values from monocular fields are merged to generate a simulated central binocular field. Results are displayed as a grey scale and as symbols representing defects at the <10 dB level. Agreement between patients failing the criterion using the simulation and the EVFT was evaluated. RESULTS Substantial agreement was observed between the methods in classifying patients with at least one defect (<10 dB) within the central binocular field (kappa 0.81; SE 0.09). Patients failing this criterion using the EVFT results were identified by the binocular simulation with high levels of sensitivity (100%) and specificity (86%). CONCLUSIONS Excellent agreement exists between the simulated binocular results and EVFT in classifying glaucomatous patients with central binocular defects. A rapid estimate of a patient’s central binocular field and visual functional capacity can be ascertained without extra perimetric examination.