It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
It’s July 1982 and I’m seeing my first patient in Dad’s office – it’s still his practice at this point. "What the hell is that?" he asks. "It’s a phoropter, Dad." "Not in my office," he responds. This was my initiation into trial frame refraction.
Seventeen years and several thousand refractions later, I’m finally convinced. Putting a dust cover on the phoropter in 1982 was the right move. I’m proud to say I use the thing three times a year and can’t remember why I use it that much.
Now, we have a new perimeter, retinal camera, up-to-date computer, top-of-the-line patternless edger, Eye-Trac recorder and an autorefractor. Dad is even using a pupillometer – not to mention the push button phone. But the phoropter is gathering dust. You know what? Dad was right. After all, he’s been doing this for 60 years. Sixty years! (It’s worth repeating.)
My question: I believe that the prescription the Doc took for the
intraocular lenses was done, not by a traditional phoropter (that
device with the two hundred lenses where you are asked, "which is
better 1 or 2) but instead was done with a computer controlled device
that you look into and measurements are taken by the computer. I'm
guessing that the measurements involve the curvature of the cornea.
I'm convinced that whatever this device is called, it's accuracy is
far superior to the conventional phoropter because my vision has never
been sharper (and I've worn glasses my whole life).