One of the leading causes of blindness worldwide could be detected by how our eyes respond to watching TV, according to a new study.
The study led by researchers at the City University London found that diseases such as glaucoma could be identified by looking at maps of people's eye movements while they watched a film.
The research could help speed up diagnosis, enabling clinicians to identify the disease earlier and allowing treatment to begin before the onset of permanent damage.
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Affecting around 65 million people worldwide, glaucoma describes a group of eye conditions that result in progressive damage to the optic nerve which connects the retina to the brain, causing people to gradually lose vision.
What makes glaucoma dangerous, however, is that this sort of vision loss can be subtle at first. People often do not know they have loss of peripheral vision.
Unfortunately, as glaucoma worsens, these compensatory perceptive mechanisms unravel leading to noticeable sight loss, visual impairment and in some cases blindness. The condition is irreversible.
The team compared a group of 32 elderly people with healthy vision to 44 patients with a clinical diagnosis of glaucoma.
Both groups underwent standard vision examinations and disease severity was also measured for the group with clinical diagnoses.
Participants were then shown three unmodified TV and film clips on a computer while an eye-tracking device recorded all eye movement, and particularly the direction in which people were looking.
These data were then used to produce detailed maps which enabled the diagnosis of glaucoma.
"These are early results but we've found we can identify patients with glaucoma by monitoring how people watch TV," David Crabb, Professor of Statistics and Vision Research, said.
"Once the damage is done it cannot be reversed, so early diagnosis is vital for identifying a disease which will continue to get more prevalent as our population ages," Crabb said.
"One of Fight for Sight's six long-term goals is to enable conditions such as glaucoma to be detected earlier," Dr Dolores M Conroy, Director of Research at Fight for Sight said.
"Early diagnosis and treatment can stop people losing their sight, so we're very pleased that this proof-of-principle eye movement study opens the door to developing a new clinical test for glaucoma," said Conroy.
The study was published in the journal Frontiers in Ageing Neuroscience.