In addition to developing instruments and devices that equip optometrists and ophthalmologists with better diagnostic capabilities, we also strive to help educate practitioners by offering clinical trainings designed to provide information on the various conditions an optomap exam can detect.
Jerome Sherman, OD, FAAO and Distinguished Teaching Professor at The State University of New York, recently discussed widefield autofluorescence imaging (af) in a webinar for Optos. He describes af as a novel, noninvasive imaging procedure that has opened “a new world of diagnosis.” Throughout the webinar, Dr. Sherman discusses some of the basics of af, as well as what types of conditions can be revealed through af that can’t be detected with standard fundus photography and standard ophthalmoscopy. The webinar also includes photographic examples and some scenarios, such as the following:
Hyperautofluorescence and Hypoautofluorescence
Disc Drusen revealed with af
Retinal Toxicity invisible to ophthalmoscopy
Early Retinitis Pigmentosa with Bull’s Eye Maculopathy (invisible to Ophthalmoscopy & Fundus Photography)
Please visit our website to view the entire webinar with Dr. Sherman. There, you …