OphthalmoscopyFunduscopy (Eye exam) How It Is DoneDirect ophthalmoscopyThis is the most common type of examination to look at structures
inside the eye. - Your eyes may be dilated, and you will be
seated in a darkened room and asked to stare straight ahead at some distant
spot in the room.
- Looking through the ophthalmoscope, your health
professional will move very close to your face and shine a bright light into
one of your eyes. Each eye is examined separately.
- Try to hold your
eyes steady without blinking.
This examination takes 3 to 5 minutes. See a picture of a
direct
ophthalmoscopic examination . Indirect ophthalmoscopyThis type of ophthalmoscopic examination gives a more complete
view of the retina than direct ophthalmoscopy. It is usually done by an
ophthalmologist. - Your eyes will be dilated, and you will be
asked to sit in a reclining or semi-reclining position in a darkened room.
- Your health professional will hold your eye open, shine a very
bright light into it, and examine it through a special lens.
- Your
health professional may ask you to look in different directions and may apply
pressure to your eyeball through the skin of your eyelids with a small, blunt
instrument to help bring the edges of your fundus into view.
This examination takes between 5 and 10 minutes. See a picture of
an indirect ophthalmoscopic examination .
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