This is an interesting discussion of ways to capture TBUT.
Measurement of ocular surface protection under natural blink conditions.
Clin Ophthalmol. 2011;5:1349-57. Epub 2011 Sep 22.
Abelson R, Lane KJ, Angjeli E, Johnston P, Ousler G, Montgomery D.
Source
Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Measurement of ocular surface protection under natural blink conditions.
PURPOSE:
To evaluate a new method of measuring ocular exposure in the context of a natural blink pattern through analysis of the variables tear film breakup time (TFBUT), interblink interval (IBI), and tear film breakup area (BUA).
METHODS:
The traditional methodology (Forced-Stare [FS]) measures TFBUT and IBI separately. TFBUT is measured under forced-stare conditions by an examiner using a stopwatch, while IBI is measured as the subject watches television. The new methodology (video capture manual analysis [VCMA]) involves retrospective analysis of video data of fluorescein-stained eyes taken through a slit lamp while the subject watches television, and provides TFBUT and BUA for each IBI during the 1-minute video under natural blink conditions. The FS and VCMA methods were directly compared in the same set of dry-eye subjects. The VCMA method was evaluated for the ability to discriminate between dry-eye subjects and normal subjects. The VCMA method was further evaluated in the dry eye subjects for the ability to detect a treatment effect before, and 10 minutes after, bilateral instillation of an artificial tear solution.
RESULTS:
Ten normal subjects and 17 dry-eye subjects were studied. In the dry-eye subjects, the two methods differed with respect to mean TFBUTs (5.82 seconds, FS; 3.98 seconds, VCMA; P = 0.002). The FS variables alone (TFBUT, IBI) were not able to successfully distinguish between the dry-eye and normal subjects, whereas the additional VCMA variables, both derived and observed (BUA, BUA/IBI, breakup rate), were able to successfully distinguish between the dry-eye and normal subjects in a statistically significant fashion. TFBUT (P = 0.034) and BUA/IBI (P = 0.001) were able to distinguish the treatment effect of artificial tears in dry-eye subjects.
CONCLUSION:
The VCMA methodology provides a clinically relevant analysis of tear film stability measured in the context of a natural blink pattern.
Clin Ophthalmol. 2011;5:1349-57. Epub 2011 Sep 22.
Abelson R, Lane KJ, Angjeli E, Johnston P, Ousler G, Montgomery D.
Source
Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.