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INSTRUMENT FOR DETERMINING COURSE OF DARK ADAPTATION AND FOR MEASURING MINIMUM LIGHT THRESHOLD

JACOB B. FELDMAN, M.D.
Arch Ophthalmol. 1934;12(1):81-85. doi:10.1001/archopht.1934.00830140091008.
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Aubert1 in 1862 was the first to call attention to studies of dark adaptation as evidence of the sensitivity of the retinal elements. Since then numerous observers have tried to associate ocular disease with the abnormal course of dark adaptation. Notable among these have been Kleckowski,2 Jess,3 Shindler,4 Tschenow5 and Derby and co-workers.6 Other investigators have studied the problem of dark adaptation, using either an apparatus of their own design, the Nagel adaptometer, or modifications of the latter. A review of these instruments has been given by Derby, Chandler and Sloan in their article on "A Portable Adaptometer."7

The subject becomes of greater importance in view of the fact that attention has been called to the value of dark adaptation as an aid in early diagnosis in cases of so-called "preglaucoma" (one eye normal and the other affected with glaucoma), in cases

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