Patients who develop macular diseases have several clinical complications,such as central vision loss, the central scotoma of the visual field, the decrease of reading speed and fixation stability. At present, there is still no satisfactory effect in the prevention and treatment of advanced macular disease. A new rehabitation strategy named microperimetric biofeedback training has been shown to be effective in improving patients' visual appearance, but there is no consensus regarding the optimal methodology and standard of practice. Therefore, we designed a prospective clinical study to verify the effectiveness of MBFT and to determine an optimal plan.
The present study aimed to investigate the effects of training frequency and number of training sessions on the visual outcomes of patients with various macular diseases. A total of 15 training sessions were conducted on two distinct frequencies, namely once a day and once every other day. Baseline measurements included fixation stability, reading speed, and best corrected visual acuity (BCVA) were obtained and followed up after the 5, 10, and 15 training sessions. By comparing the changes in these visual function parameters across different stages of training, the study aimed to identify and analyze the underlying patterns and rules governing the training process. Ultimately, the results of this study could serve as a valuable reference for standardizing the use of MBFT in clinical practice.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
29
Microperimetry biofeedback training is a noninvasive stragegy to develop a new trained retinal locus or strength the spontaneous preferred retinal locus to get better visual performances.The rationale of MBFT consists in reeducating visual system to a new visual condition, promoting retina-brain transmission, and further enhancing synaptic plasticity and neural capacity by acoustic biofeedback or structured light stimulus biofeedback.
MAIA microperimetry
Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
fixation stability
An index for evaluating macular disease, defined as the accuracy of a patient's gaze at a target over a period of time.
Time frame: 5 minutes
Best corrected visual acuity
The most important indicator of visual function, refers to the function of distinguishing objects in the state of refractive correction.
Time frame: 2 minutes
Reading speed
One of the indicators for evaluating reading ability, which refers to the number of words within a certain period of time when reading
Time frame: 3 minutes
Questionnaires
Questionnaires were used to determine the influence of eye symptoms and visual impairment on daily life attributed to the limitation of patients' social function and activities.
Time frame: 10 minutes
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