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Teller Acuity Cards
are used to test visual acuity
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in young children
and those with disabilities
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who cannot be tested
with standard letter
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or symbol acuity tests.
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The stimulus
on a Teller Acuity Card
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is a high contrast black
and white pattern
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of stripes called a grating.
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The gratings range
from very coarse to very fine,
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in order to test visual acuity
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from very low vision to normal.
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Most rectangular cards
have a single grating
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printed off to one side
of the center.
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Printing the grating
to one side of the card
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allows it to be presented either
on the left
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or the right.
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An additional card
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has a grating nearly covering
one-half of the card.
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This card
is called the low vision card.
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The final card is a blank, gray card
without a grating.
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Grating values are specified
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by the width
of their black and white bars.
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A single black and white pair
of bars is called a cycle.
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Grating sizes are specified
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by the number of black
and white cycles per centimeter.
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The metric cycles per centimeter
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is converted to visual acuity based
on the distance
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of the Teller Acuity Card grating
from the patient,
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and is specified as cycles
per degree.
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The cycles per degree measure
is the appropriate specification
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for grating acuity.
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If necessary,
grating acuity can be converted
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into conventional Snellen notation,
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which may be more appropriate
for certain reporting.
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Each Teller Acuity Card
has labels on the back
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showing the grating size
in cycles per centimeter,
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and the conversions to acuity based
on three test distances.
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The labels on the back
of the card are placed
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so the examiner has no information
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about the right-left position
of the grating
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from viewing the back of the card.
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The primary principle
of a Teller Acuity Card
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is that if a patient sees a grating
on the grey background,
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she will look at the grating.
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If the grating bars cannot be resolved
or seen by a patient,
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the grating should match
the grey background perfectly,
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mimicking the blank card.
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The examiner's task
in testing Teller Acuity Cards
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is to determine the finest grating
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that the patient sees or detects.
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This gives the patient's
visual acuity.
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This requires testing a series
of gratings,
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starting from relatively wide
and easily seen
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to progressively finer gratings,
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until the patient
no longer responds consistently.
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The recommended clinical method
of testing is
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for the examiner
to present a single grating
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a sufficient number of times
to judge whether the patient
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sees that grating.
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As there are only two locations
where the grating can appear,
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an examiner has a 50% chance
of guessing the correct location
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without even watching the patient.
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[no audible dialog]
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This means that gratings
may need to be shown multiple times
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if the patient's responses
are not definitive.
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Typically, the patient's responses
will be definitive
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when the grating is coarse
and above their acuity level.
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However, a finer grating
that is more difficult
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for the patient to see
may lead to more subtle responses
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and require more presentations.
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It is up to the examiner
to determine
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how many presentations
she needs to be confident
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of the patient's visual acuity.
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[no audible dialog]
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There is a small hole in the center
of the Teller Acuity Card
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through which the examiner
or tester can view the patient
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as they look at the gray card
and the grating.
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The examiner can also view
the patient's responses
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to the gratings
by looking over the top of the card.
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[no audible dialog]
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The examiner
is able to change the card position
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to judge where the grating
is located, right or left,
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based on the patient's
visual behaviors,
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such as looking
towards the right or left,
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or pointing or other behaviors.
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The card is shown to the patient
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by an examiner holding it
along the edges.
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They should not be touching
the front surface of the card.
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If the examiner uses fingers
to hold the card,
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rather than the palm of the hand,
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fingertips should not touch
the front,
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except possibly within one inch
of the edge of the card.
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The examiner shows the card
in one position
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and makes a judgment as
to where the grating is
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based on the patient's behavior.
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In this case, the examiner
judges the grating to be on her left,
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the patient's right.
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The examiner
then rotates the card 180 degrees.
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Now, if the infant's behavior
indicates seeing the grating,
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the examiner should judge
the grating is on the infant's left.
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The examiner
should not always rotate the card
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180 degrees between presentations,
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as some patients
may anticipate the gratings position.
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Instead, the examiner
should show the grating frequently
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in the same location.
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The examiner is being shown
holding the cards
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in a horizontal orientation,
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which is the standard
and most common way
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of presenting Teller Acuity Cards.
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However, the cards may be held
in a vertical orientation,
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with the grating either on the upper
or lower part of the card.
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This can be a useful method
for testing patients
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with nystagmus or strabismus.
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During testing,
patients may wish to touch the grating
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or may invertently touch it
when trying to point to the grating.
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This should be avoided
by giving the child a soft toy to hold
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and point toward the grating.
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To keep the patient's attention,
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the examiner can interact with
and reinforce the patient
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for finding the grating location.
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[no audible dialog]
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Presenting a grating that has been
seen previously by the patient
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can reestablish interest
in the testing
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and also reassure the examiner
that the infant
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is still attending
to the gratings.
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[no audible dialog]
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What behaviors
does the examiner use
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to judge whether the patient
sees a grating?
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The examiner must be aware of any
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and all patient cues and behaviors
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that indicate the location
of the grating.
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Typically, in young infants,
a strong fixation response
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to one side of the card,
presumably at the grating,
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and then to the other side
when the card is rotated 180 degrees,
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indicates the infant detects
that grating.
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Finer gratings may not be
as strongly fixated,
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yet will still elicit a consistent gaze
from the young infant.
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Older infants and toddlers
may give brief glances to each side,
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which are accepted as detection,
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because the glance
is direct and clear,
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and repeated
on subsequent presentations.
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Some mature toddlers
and young children
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may point to one side,
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especially if prompted by the examiner,
such as,
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"Where did the stripes go?"
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This section illustrates
the complete sequence
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of testing a child's visual acuity
with Teller Acuity Cards.
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Young patients are usually seated
on their parent's lap,
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and the parent or holder
should be cautioned
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not to give the child any guidance
during testing.
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Based on the patient's age,
determine the start card for testing.
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Consult the Teller Acuity Card
Reference and Instruction Manual.
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If the patient
is visually impaired,
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a coarser grating than
that based on age
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may be needed for the start card.
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Distance of the card
from the patient's face
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also depends upon age.
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Consult the Teller Acuity Card
Reference and Instruction Manual.
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The examiner
measures the test distance
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from the patient's eyes
to the position the card is held.
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For the 55-centimeter distance,
the length of the card
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is an exact measure.
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For the 38-centimeter distance,
used with young infants
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and patients with limited vision,
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a measuring tape can be used.
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Or, a convenient measure
is the distance
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between the examiner's elbow
and fingers,
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with fingers either close or open,
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depending
on the examiner's arm length.
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This needs to be measured
before testing.
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For 84-centimeter distance,
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used with older children,
a measuring tape is needed.
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Alternatively,
a measuring tape can be placed
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on a table surface, adjacent
to the patient and the examiner,
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with marks for each distance.
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The examiner should check
the test distance periodically
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during the testing,
as some patients will lean forward
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to get closer to the gratings,
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especially when they
become finer and more difficult to see.
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Set up the cards in two stacks
with the grading face down
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on a soft, clean surface.
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The card labels are up.
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One stack is for gratings
the patient has not seen,
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or will not be tested on,
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and the other stack is
for cards the patient has seen
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or are larger
than need to be presented.
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Stacking the cards
with the grating face down
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keeps the examiner unaware
of the position
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of the grading before testing.
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It also minimizes damage
to the grating face of the card.
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Papers can be inserted
between each card
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in order to minimize marks
or blemishes.
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The not-seen stack
has the start card top-most,
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with progressively fine gratings
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in series below the top card.
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The seen stack
has the gratings that are coarser
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than the start card,
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in a series of progressively
wider stripes below the top card.
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The examiner picks up the top card
from the not-seen stack,
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and tests the infant
with this grating.
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If she judges the infant
detects the grating,
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she places it on the seen stack.
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At some point, the series
of judgments will become difficult,
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and the examiner may be unsure
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whether the patient detects
that grating.
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The examiner does not look
at the front of the card
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for this grating location.
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The examiner places the card
the infant does not detect
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on top of the not-seen stack.
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The examiner then retests
the previously seen grating.
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And if she judges the infant
detects it,
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she places the card on top
of the seen stack again.
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[no audible dialog]
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If the examiner still cannot determine
that the patient
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detects the grating,
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this indicates that a below-threshold
grating has been found,
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and testing is completed.
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The next-coarser grating,
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the finest the patient
responds positively to,
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is recorded
as the patient's acuity.
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Sometimes, retesting results
in different decisions
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on the patient's detection,
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and the examiner must go back
and forth between several cards
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to determine the patient's acuity.
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After testing a patient,
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the cards can be placed
in a single stack, ready for storage.
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We recommend randomly
reordering the right-left locations
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of the gratings to avoid
biasing the grating locations
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to one side.
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As indicated,
the finest or smallest grating size
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that the patient is judged to see
by the examiner
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defines their visual acuity.
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The recording form shown
in the handbook
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can be used to record information
about the patient,
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such as name,
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date of birth,
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test date,
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and age.
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It is also used
to record the important results
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of the acuity test,
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including the acuity card
at threshold in cycles per centimeter,
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test distance, and acuity conversion.
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The examiner can take the value
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from the "Teller Acuity Card Handbook,
Appendix D,"
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showing conversions
from cycles per centimeter
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to cycles per degree, Table 1,
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and from cycles per centimeter
to Snellen equivalents.
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The patient's acuity can be shown
on an age-norm graph
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from the "Teller Acuity Card
Handbook."
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The patient's age is noted
at the bottom of the graph.
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The test distance is circled,
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and the grating
in cycles per centimeter
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in the column
under the test distance is also circled.
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A line is drawn from this value
across to the patient's age.
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This shows
where the patient's acuity
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falls relative to the normal range
for that age.
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All values are then recorded
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in the results section
of the recording form.