Background: We have developed a binocular perimetry technique for the quantitative assessment of retinal photoreceptor displacement and metamorphopsia.
Objective: To study the direction and amplitude of retinal photoreceptor displacement in eyes with idiopathic macular holes using our binocular perimetry technique.
Subjects: Five healthy control subjects and 10 patients with unilateral stage 3 to 4 macular holes in one eye and a healthy fellow eye.
Method: Kinetic perimetry using red and green filter glasses, black binocular fixation targets, red and green selective monocular stimuli (Goldmann III-4-e), and fundus image superimposition of perimetry data.
Results: We found no discrepancy between the 2 visual fields in any healthy subjects. In patients with a unilateral macular hole, the central scotoma invariably extended beyond the rim of the hole. In 8 patients, each point on the rim of the scotoma had a perceptually corresponding location in the visual field of the fellow eye that was closer to the center of the visual field. In the 2 patients with the longest duration of symptoms (>2 years), no such discrepancy was found.
Conclusions: Differential perimetry enables the objective study of retinal photoreceptor displacement and metamorphopsia. We found objective evidence for radial centrifugal photoreceptor displacement in most patients with idiopathic macular holes.