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Imagine Eyes - Adaptive optics, adapted to eye care

Imagine Eyes provides advanced ophthalmic devices for cellular-level retinal imaging, refractive diagnosis, and vision research.  Our products combine unequalled performance with wide-ranging functionalities to offer clinicians and researchers the technology they need to help preserve and improve vision. Click on the products below to learn more. To reach a salesperson, call us on +33 (0)1 64 86 15 66 or click here to contact us by e-mail.

rtx1™ Adaptive Optics Retinal Camera *   crx1™ Adaptive Optics Visual Simulator *
rtx1

The rtx1 Adaptive Optics Retinal Camera* is the first compact device that enables ophthalmologists to visualize the retina at the cellular-scale in vivo.
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  crx1

The crx1 Adaptive Optics Visual Simulator* allows customers to simulate the effects of optical or surgical corrections on human vision in a completely non-invasive and reversible manner. Learn more.

     
AOKit™ - eye   irx3™ Wavefront Aberrometer **
aokit

The AOKit - eye is the ideal package for basic and industrial researchers that want to create their own adaptive-optics retinal imaging or vision simulation systems Learn more.

   irx3

The irx3 Wavefront Aberrometer provides high-precision analysis of refractive errors and accommodation over an extremely large dynamic range. Learn more.


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Age-related changes in static accommodation and accommodative miosis

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A paper published in Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics by Doctors H. Radhakrishnan and W.N. Charman on their work on exploring the validity of the Hess–Gullstrand and Duane–Fincham models of presbyopia development.  Click to read the paper.

An attempt was made to explore the validity of the Hess–Gullstrand and Duane–Fincham models of presbyopia development, on the assumption that accommodative miosis could be used as an indicator of ciliary muscle effort. Monocular accommodation response and pupil size were measured as a function of accommodation demand over the range 0–4 D, in 48 normal subjects with ages between 17 and 56 years. The slope of the response/stimulus curve was found to decrease only slowly with age up to about 35 years and then to decline more rapidly. Accommodative miosis per dioptre of accommodation response did not change systematically with age up to about 35 years, this being apparently more in accord with the Hess–Gullstrand model. However, accommodative miosis varied very widely between younger subjects of similar age and accommodative amplitude (from zero to around 1 mm per dioptre of accommodation response for subjects in their twenties). It is concluded that miosis does not necessarily accompany accommodation and that its magnitude is not related in any simple general way to ciliary muscle contraction. Hence it cannot be used to support or refute particular theories of presbyopia.

Click to read the paper.