WO2011148349A1 - Ophthalmic illumination device - Google Patents

Ophthalmic illumination device Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2011148349A1
WO2011148349A1 PCT/IB2011/052330 IB2011052330W WO2011148349A1 WO 2011148349 A1 WO2011148349 A1 WO 2011148349A1 IB 2011052330 W IB2011052330 W IB 2011052330W WO 2011148349 A1 WO2011148349 A1 WO 2011148349A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
light
ophthalmic device
guide
light source
ophthalmic
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/IB2011/052330
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Gianfranco Passuello
Original Assignee
Gianfranco Passuello
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Gianfranco Passuello filed Critical Gianfranco Passuello
Priority to ES11744068T priority Critical patent/ES2531340T3/en
Priority to US13/699,609 priority patent/US8613516B2/en
Priority to EP11744068.5A priority patent/EP2575592B1/en
Priority to CN201180027523.XA priority patent/CN102939043B/en
Priority to AU2011259795A priority patent/AU2011259795B2/en
Priority to JP2013511782A priority patent/JP5816684B2/en
Publication of WO2011148349A1 publication Critical patent/WO2011148349A1/en

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B3/00Apparatus for testing the eyes; Instruments for examining the eyes
    • A61B3/0008Apparatus for testing the eyes; Instruments for examining the eyes provided with illuminating means
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61BDIAGNOSIS; SURGERY; IDENTIFICATION
    • A61B3/00Apparatus for testing the eyes; Instruments for examining the eyes
    • A61B3/10Objective types, i.e. instruments for examining the eyes independent of the patients' perceptions or reactions

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to an ophthalmic illumination device and in particular to an illumination device which allows to make evaluations and diagnoses of the tear film of the patient's eye.
  • the tear film is a liquid structure produced by the lacrimal apparatus of a human being that coats the eyelid conjunctiva and the cornea. Starting from the corneal epithelium, the tear film is made up of three subsequent layers having different functions.
  • mucous layer The innermost layer, called mucous layer, is produced by accessory muciparous glands and coats the epithelial cells of eyelid conjunctiva and cornea.
  • the function of the mucus is to make hydrophilic the surface of the cornea, by establishing bonds with the micro villuses of the surface cells of the cornea.
  • the intermediate layer forms the largest part of the tear film.
  • the aqueous layer is mainly produced by the secretions of the primary and accessory lacrimal glands and is made up of electrolytes and some organic acids, amino acids and proteins having antibacterial and enzymatic functions.
  • the aqueous layer has the main functions of reducing friction deriving from eye and eyelid movements, wiping peeled-off epithelial cells, stemming metabolic waste and removing air impurities.
  • the outermost layer is made up of oils produced by Meibomian glands.
  • the function of the lipid layer is to provide the eyelid edge with a hydrophobic barrier in order to prevent tears from spilling out and to maintain the eye surface wet during sleeping hours, thus also adjusting the evaporation rate of the aqueous layer of the tear itself.
  • the dry-eye syndrome is a generally serious disease because it may generate damages to the outer structures of the eye.
  • the tear film tends to separate into "fragments", thus exposing the front corneal epithelium and the eyelid conjunctiva to dehydration.
  • the evaluation methods may be either of an invasive or non-invasive type.
  • Quantitative tests allow to evaluate the amount of basal and/or reflex secretion, whereas qualitative tests allow to evaluate the functionality and the stability of the tear film.
  • B.U.T. "Break Up Time" of the tear film
  • This test which is of an invasive type, is carried out by instilling fluorescein into the patient's eye and observing the continuity of the tear film through a slit lamp and a specialized cobalt blue filter.
  • N.I. B.U.T. Non Invasive Break Up Time
  • ophthalmic illumination devices comprising a hemi-spherical bowl in whose concavity a reticule of white lines is drawn on a black background.
  • the image of the reticule which is projected onto the patient's eye through a shafts of light generated by a light source associated with the hemi-spherical bowl, is reflected by the tear film and can be observed by naked eye or through a slit lamp.
  • the continuity of the tear film is indicated by the regularity of the reticule projected onto the patient's eye, whereas alterations of the reticule indicate the break up of the tear film.
  • a device of this type is disclosed, for example, in patent GB 2123977 in the name of Smith and Nephew Associated Companies PLC.
  • a portable ophthalmic device is that of the English company Keeler Ltd. , known under the trademark TEARSCOPE PLUS.
  • This instrument comprises a handgrip and an illuminating body constrained thereto.
  • the illuminating body comprises a through-opening on whose side wall a reticule of black lines arranged so as to form a grid or concentric circles is obtained by applying a transparent film.
  • Inside the illuminating body a helical- shaped neon lamp is housed coaxially to the through-opening.
  • the side wall of the through-opening is made of an opalescent material, whereby, when the neon lamp is on, the emitted light is able to project the reticule onto the patient's eye, thus allowing an ophthalmologist, an optician or an optometrist to observe it through the through-opening of the device.
  • This portable device may be combined with a slit lamp, thus making it possible to generate interferences fringes on the tear film allowing to make more accurate diagnoses as well as to evaluate the thickness of the lipid layer.
  • a portable ophthalmic device similar to the previous one is disclosed in Japanese patent JP 0809881 in the name of Nippon Contact Lens KK.
  • the lamp used as a light source is not helically wound around the through-opening, but it has an annular shape and is arranged within the illuminating body coaxially to the through- opening and at one end thereof.
  • a problem of the ophthalmic devices described above is that the shafts of light projected by them comprise dark portions caused by the discontinuities of the light sources employed.
  • the dark portions correspond to the gaps between adjacent coils of the lamp.
  • An object of the present invention is also to improve the illumination efficiency while reducing the electric energy consumption.
  • An idea of solution underlying the present invention is to combine the light source housed in the illuminating body with a light-guide suitable to convey the light beams emitted by the light source towards the patient's eye. Thanks to this solution it is possible to generate extremely homogeneous light beams, while minimizing the occurrence of dark portions.
  • the illumination efficiency of the ophthalmic device according to the invention is thus higher than the illumination efficiency of known devices, thereby resulting in a lower electric energy consumption for a same intensity of emitted light.
  • the light-guide may advantageously be provided with treated surfaces, e.g. silk- finished, sand-blasted or light-etched, which remarkably contribute to make homogeneous and to diffuse the light shaft emitted by the ophthalmic device.
  • treated surfaces e.g. silk- finished, sand-blasted or light-etched
  • the light source of the ophthalmic device according to the invention may be positioned on a plane inside the illuminating body, allowing to optimize the internal spaces and thus the overall size of the ophthalmic device.
  • the light source housed inside the illuminating body comprises a plurality of LEDs.
  • LEDs are very advantageous because they are extremely small relative to neon lamps and thus allow to reduce the overall size of the ophthalmic illumination device relative to the size of ophthalmic illumination devices known in the art.
  • LEDs are extremely cheap and long-lasting, allowing to manufacture the ophthalmic device of the invention at a very low cost.
  • LEDs allows to avoid the flickering problems typical of neon lamps, as well as to ensure a higher chromatic performance and allow a very simple adjustment of the luminous intensity.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 are perspective front and rear views, respectively, showing an ophthalmic device according to the present invention
  • FIGS. 3, 4 and 5 are a top view, a front view and a side view, respectively, of the ophthalmic device of figures 1 and 2;
  • figure 6 is a perspective rear view showing the ophthalmic device of figure 2 with the battery compartment in an open configuration
  • figure 7 is a perspective rear view showing the ophthalmic device of figure 2 without the rear half-shell;
  • FIG. 8 is a perspective front view showing the ophthalmic device of figure 1 without the front half-shell.
  • figure 9 is a perspective front view similar to that of figure 8 and wherein the ophthalmic device is shown without light-guide and opalescent member.
  • the ophthalmic illumination device 1 comprises a handgrip 2 and an illuminating body 3 connected to the handgrip 2 at one end thereof in a longitudinal direction L and suitable to emit a light shaft towards the eye of a patient.
  • the handgrip 2 has in particular a parallelepiped shape, while the illuminating body 3 has a frusto-conical shape.
  • the presence of the handgrip 2 is not mandatory for the invention and that the illuminating body 3 might be directly handled by a user or be a part of a fixed diagnostic ophthalmic apparatus, e.g. a slit lamp.
  • the illuminating body 3 comprises a through-opening 4 whose axis A is perpendicular to the longitudinal direction L defined by the handgrip 2 and whose side wall, e.g. having a cylindrical or frusto-conical shape, is formed of a member 5 made of an opalescent material.
  • a light source 6 is housed, which is shown in detail in figures 8 and 9, and which projects a light shaft through the opalescent member 5 in an operating condition of the ophthalmic device 1.
  • the light shaft projected by the ophthalmic device 1 allows to carry out non-invasive evaluations and diagnoses of the tear film of the patient's eye.
  • a reticule of lines so arranged as to form a grid or concentric circles (which, as it is known, allows to carry out more accurate evaluations of the tear film, and in particular of its break up time, in a non-invasive way) may be drawn, or obtained by applying a film, on the opalescent member 5.
  • the handgrip 2 and the illuminating body 3 form a single body inside which, in addition to the light source 6, other components are housed, e.g. a compartment 7 for batteries supplying the light source 6 and a electronic control system 8 suitable to allow the adjustment of the luminous intensity of the light source 6.
  • the single body formed by the handgrip 2 and the illuminating body 3 comprises two half-shells, in particular a front half-shell 9 and a rear half-shell 10.
  • the front half-shell 9 is intended to face the patient's eye during the normal use of the ophthalmic device 1, so that the rear half-shell 10 will face the opposite side, i.e. towards the user.
  • the opalescent member 5 may be made as a component independent from the half-shells 9 and 10 and in an assembled configuration it is so arranged that the axis A of the through-opening is substantially perpendicular to the two half-shells 9, 10.
  • the battery compartment 7 is accessible from the rear half- shell 10 through a removable door 11.
  • the ophthalmic device 1 may also comprise a connector 12 for the connection of a power supply (not shown).
  • the connector 12 faces a side of the front half-shell 9.
  • the electronic control system 8 may comprise e.g. a rotatable knob 13 protruding from a circular seat formed in the rear half-shell 10.
  • a rotatable knob 13 protruding from a circular seat formed in the rear half-shell 10.
  • buttons, sliders and similar adjustment means may be well known to those skilled in the art.
  • the light source 6 is associated with a light-guide 14.
  • the light-guide 14 is positioned between the light source 6 and the opalescent member 5, thus allowing to radially convey the light beams emitted by the light source 6 towards the axis A of the through-opening 4. In this way it is possible to minimize the number and the size of the dark portions characterizing the light source, thus obtaining a substantially uniform illumination of the opalescent member 5 and thereby a more intense and extremely homogeneous light shaft from the illuminating body 3.
  • the light source 6 is positioned on a plane, e.g. parallel to the base of the rear half-shell 10, and the light-guide 14 has a frusto-conical shape whose larger base faces the light source 6.
  • the light-guide 14 further comprises an axial bore allowing its assembling coaxially to the opalescent member 5.
  • the light-guide 14 and the opalescent member 5 may form a single body, which allows to optimize the manufacturing and the assembly process of the ophthalmic device 1.
  • the light beams emitted by the light source 6 hit the larger base of the light-guide 14, pass through it and are deflected by the frusto-conical surface of the light-guide 14, thus being radially conveyed towards the axis A of the through-opening 4 passing through the opalescent member 5 and forming a light shaft.
  • the light source 6 is positioned at the end of the opalescent member 5 that is opposite to the end intended to face the patient's eye, so that the emitted light beams pass radially through the opalescent member 5 in all its length, thus maximizing the intensity of the light shaft emitted by the illuminating body 3.
  • the placement of the light source 6 on a plane and the frusto-conical shape of the light guide 14 described above allow to optimize the positioning of the internal components of the ophthalmic device 1 with the aim of reducing its overall size.
  • the light source 6 might be positioned coaxially to the through- opening 4 providing, as in the above-described embodiment, to arrange therebetween a light-guide suitable to radially convey the light beams towards the axis A of the through-opening 4.
  • the light-guide 14 may comprise one or more surface-treated faces, e.g. made by silk finishing, sand-blasting, light-etching and the like.
  • all the faces of the light-guide 14 are surface-treated, thus allowing to maximize the effect of homo genizat ion and diffusion of the light.
  • the light source 6 comprises a plurality of LEDs 61 , 62, 63, ... positioned on a same plane circumferentially around the through-opening 4 of the ophthalmic device 1.
  • the LEDs 61 , 62, 63 are of the cold-light type, in particular white light, which as it is known allows to carry out tests on the tear film while preventing the light shaft from causing its evaporation, thereby altering the evaluation and diagnosis of possible diseases.
  • LEDs are very advantageous because they are extremely smaller than the neon lamps used in the ophthalmic illumination devices known in the art and thus allow to reduce the overall size of the light source 6 of the ophthalmic device 1 according to the invention.
  • the LEDs 61 , 62, 63 may be mounted on a same printed circuit board 15 positioned parallel to the base of the rear half-shell 10.
  • the printed circuit board 15 may be mounted on one of the half-shells 9, 10 of the ophthalmic device 1, e.g. the rear half-shell 10.
  • the rear half-shell 10 comprises a plurality of posts 16 that, in addition to allow the mounting of the printed circuit board, work also as centering members.
  • the posts 16 may also be advantageously used as supporting and/or centering members of the light-guide 14.
  • the ophthalmic device 1 might be supplied directly from the mains without the need for batteries, which allows to further reduce the size of the handgrip 2.
  • the control system 8 might comprise a user interface of an interactive type, e.g. provided with an LCD display arranged in the handgrip 2, suitable to allow, via a dedicated software, the setting of the illumination parameters of the ophthalmic device 1 and to check its operating condition.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
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  • Ophthalmology & Optometry (AREA)
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Abstract

An ophthalmic illumination device (1) comprises an illuminating body (3) in turn comprising a through-opening (4) whose side wall is formed by a member (5) made of an opalescent material. A light source (6) is housed inside the illuminating body (3) and a light-guide (14) adapted to radially convey the light beams emitted by the light source (6) towards an axis (A) of the through-opening (4) is positioned between the light source (6) and the opalescent member (5). Thanks to this solution it is possible to generate extremely homogeneous shafts of light, while minimizing the occurrence of dark portions.

Description

OPHTHALMIC ILLUMINATION DEVICE
The present invention relates to an ophthalmic illumination device and in particular to an illumination device which allows to make evaluations and diagnoses of the tear film of the patient's eye.
The tear film is a liquid structure produced by the lacrimal apparatus of a human being that coats the eyelid conjunctiva and the cornea. Starting from the corneal epithelium, the tear film is made up of three subsequent layers having different functions.
The innermost layer, called mucous layer, is produced by accessory muciparous glands and coats the epithelial cells of eyelid conjunctiva and cornea. The function of the mucus is to make hydrophilic the surface of the cornea, by establishing bonds with the micro villuses of the surface cells of the cornea.
The intermediate layer, called aqueous layer, forms the largest part of the tear film. The aqueous layer is mainly produced by the secretions of the primary and accessory lacrimal glands and is made up of electrolytes and some organic acids, amino acids and proteins having antibacterial and enzymatic functions. The aqueous layer has the main functions of reducing friction deriving from eye and eyelid movements, wiping peeled-off epithelial cells, stemming metabolic waste and removing air impurities.
The outermost layer, called lipid layer, is made up of oils produced by Meibomian glands. The function of the lipid layer is to provide the eyelid edge with a hydrophobic barrier in order to prevent tears from spilling out and to maintain the eye surface wet during sleeping hours, thus also adjusting the evaporation rate of the aqueous layer of the tear itself.
As it is known, quantitative reductions and/or qualitative alterations of the tear film are felt by a patient as eye dryness. The dry-eye syndrome is a generally serious disease because it may generate damages to the outer structures of the eye. In particular, the tear film tends to separate into "fragments", thus exposing the front corneal epithelium and the eyelid conjunctiva to dehydration.
Ageing and improper and excessively long use of contact lenses are among the main causes of eye dryness.
The evaluation of the tear film and the diagnosis of possible diseases such as the dry-eye syndrome are therefore extremely important for the health of a patient and are presently more and more employed by ophthalmologist, as well as by opticians and optometrists specialized in the application of contact lenses.
Several methods and associated instruments allowing to evaluate and diagnose the tear film from both a qualitative and a quantitative point of view are known. The evaluation methods may be either of an invasive or non-invasive type.
Quantitative tests allow to evaluate the amount of basal and/or reflex secretion, whereas qualitative tests allow to evaluate the functionality and the stability of the tear film.
Among qualitative tests, the evaluation of the "Break Up Time" (B.U.T.) of the tear film, which is a stability index of the precorneal tear film, is particularly important. This test, which is of an invasive type, is carried out by instilling fluorescein into the patient's eye and observing the continuity of the tear film through a slit lamp and a specialized cobalt blue filter.
A qualitative test named N.I. B.U.T. (Non Invasive Break Up Time), which allows to evaluate the break up time of the tear film without instilling fluorescein or other substances into the patient's eye, i.e. in a non- invasive way, is known as well.
In order to carry out this type of test it is necessary to project onto the patient's eye a light beam that creates a wide corneal reflection. To this aim, specialized ophthalmic illumination devices are used, e.g. comprising a hemi-spherical bowl in whose concavity a reticule of white lines is drawn on a black background. The image of the reticule, which is projected onto the patient's eye through a shafts of light generated by a light source associated with the hemi-spherical bowl, is reflected by the tear film and can be observed by naked eye or through a slit lamp. The continuity of the tear film is indicated by the regularity of the reticule projected onto the patient's eye, whereas alterations of the reticule indicate the break up of the tear film.
A device of this type is disclosed, for example, in patent GB 2123977 in the name of Smith and Nephew Associated Companies PLC.
Among the ophthalmic devices allowing to carry out the N.I. B.U.T. test, portable instruments are known as well, that can be used in an extremely simple and quick way for preliminary diagnoses without necessarily requiring the use of slit lamps and other equipment that are typically available to an ophthalmologist, an optician or an optometrist.
An example of a portable ophthalmic device is that of the English company Keeler Ltd. , known under the trademark TEARSCOPE PLUS. This instrument comprises a handgrip and an illuminating body constrained thereto. The illuminating body comprises a through-opening on whose side wall a reticule of black lines arranged so as to form a grid or concentric circles is obtained by applying a transparent film. Inside the illuminating body a helical- shaped neon lamp is housed coaxially to the through-opening. The side wall of the through-opening is made of an opalescent material, whereby, when the neon lamp is on, the emitted light is able to project the reticule onto the patient's eye, thus allowing an ophthalmologist, an optician or an optometrist to observe it through the through-opening of the device.
This portable device may be combined with a slit lamp, thus making it possible to generate interferences fringes on the tear film allowing to make more accurate diagnoses as well as to evaluate the thickness of the lipid layer.
A portable ophthalmic device similar to the previous one is disclosed in Japanese patent JP 0809881 in the name of Nippon Contact Lens KK. In this case the lamp used as a light source is not helically wound around the through-opening, but it has an annular shape and is arranged within the illuminating body coaxially to the through- opening and at one end thereof.
A problem of the ophthalmic devices described above is that the shafts of light projected by them comprise dark portions caused by the discontinuities of the light sources employed. In the case of the TEARSCOPE PLUS, for instance, the dark portions correspond to the gaps between adjacent coils of the lamp. As a consequence, the patient's eye is not completely illuminated, thus leading to evaluations and diagnoses that are potentially poorly accurate.
Moreover, not all the light emitted by the light sources of the ophthalmic illumination devices is actually projected to the outside of the respective illuminating bodies, this resulting in a poor illumination efficiency and causing waste of electric energy.
Thus there is the need to improve known ophthalmic illumination instruments with particular reference to the continuity and the homogeneousness of the light shaft projected onto the patient's eye, which is an object of the present invention.
An object of the present invention is also to improve the illumination efficiency while reducing the electric energy consumption.
An idea of solution underlying the present invention is to combine the light source housed in the illuminating body with a light-guide suitable to convey the light beams emitted by the light source towards the patient's eye. Thanks to this solution it is possible to generate extremely homogeneous light beams, while minimizing the occurrence of dark portions. The illumination efficiency of the ophthalmic device according to the invention is thus higher than the illumination efficiency of known devices, thereby resulting in a lower electric energy consumption for a same intensity of emitted light.
The light-guide may advantageously be provided with treated surfaces, e.g. silk- finished, sand-blasted or light-etched, which remarkably contribute to make homogeneous and to diffuse the light shaft emitted by the ophthalmic device.
The light source of the ophthalmic device according to the invention may be positioned on a plane inside the illuminating body, allowing to optimize the internal spaces and thus the overall size of the ophthalmic device.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the light source housed inside the illuminating body comprises a plurality of LEDs. The use of LEDs is very advantageous because they are extremely small relative to neon lamps and thus allow to reduce the overall size of the ophthalmic illumination device relative to the size of ophthalmic illumination devices known in the art.
Moreover, LEDs are extremely cheap and long-lasting, allowing to manufacture the ophthalmic device of the invention at a very low cost.
Further, the use of LEDs allows to avoid the flickering problems typical of neon lamps, as well as to ensure a higher chromatic performance and allow a very simple adjustment of the luminous intensity.
Further advantages and features of the ophthalmic device according to the present invention will become clear to those skilled in the art from the following detailed and non-limiting description of an embodiment thereof with reference to the attached drawings, wherein:
figures 1 and 2 are perspective front and rear views, respectively, showing an ophthalmic device according to the present invention;
figures 3, 4 and 5 are a top view, a front view and a side view, respectively, of the ophthalmic device of figures 1 and 2;
figure 6 is a perspective rear view showing the ophthalmic device of figure 2 with the battery compartment in an open configuration;
figure 7 is a perspective rear view showing the ophthalmic device of figure 2 without the rear half-shell;
- figure 8 is a perspective front view showing the ophthalmic device of figure 1 without the front half-shell; and
figure 9 is a perspective front view similar to that of figure 8 and wherein the ophthalmic device is shown without light-guide and opalescent member.
Referring to the figures, the ophthalmic illumination device 1 according to the invention comprises a handgrip 2 and an illuminating body 3 connected to the handgrip 2 at one end thereof in a longitudinal direction L and suitable to emit a light shaft towards the eye of a patient. In the shown embodiment, the handgrip 2 has in particular a parallelepiped shape, while the illuminating body 3 has a frusto-conical shape.
It should be understood that the presence of the handgrip 2 is not mandatory for the invention and that the illuminating body 3 might be directly handled by a user or be a part of a fixed diagnostic ophthalmic apparatus, e.g. a slit lamp.
The illuminating body 3 comprises a through-opening 4 whose axis A is perpendicular to the longitudinal direction L defined by the handgrip 2 and whose side wall, e.g. having a cylindrical or frusto-conical shape, is formed of a member 5 made of an opalescent material.
Inside the illuminating body 3, a light source 6 is housed, which is shown in detail in figures 8 and 9, and which projects a light shaft through the opalescent member 5 in an operating condition of the ophthalmic device 1. As it is known, the light shaft projected by the ophthalmic device 1 allows to carry out non-invasive evaluations and diagnoses of the tear film of the patient's eye.
A reticule of lines so arranged as to form a grid or concentric circles (which, as it is known, allows to carry out more accurate evaluations of the tear film, and in particular of its break up time, in a non-invasive way) may be drawn, or obtained by applying a film, on the opalescent member 5.
From a manufacturing point of view, the handgrip 2 and the illuminating body 3 form a single body inside which, in addition to the light source 6, other components are housed, e.g. a compartment 7 for batteries supplying the light source 6 and a electronic control system 8 suitable to allow the adjustment of the luminous intensity of the light source 6.
Due to manufacturing and assembly needs, the single body formed by the handgrip 2 and the illuminating body 3 comprises two half-shells, in particular a front half-shell 9 and a rear half-shell 10. The front half-shell 9 is intended to face the patient's eye during the normal use of the ophthalmic device 1, so that the rear half-shell 10 will face the opposite side, i.e. towards the user.
Due to manufacturing needs again, the opalescent member 5 may be made as a component independent from the half-shells 9 and 10 and in an assembled configuration it is so arranged that the axis A of the through-opening is substantially perpendicular to the two half-shells 9, 10.
As shown in figure 2, the battery compartment 7 is accessible from the rear half- shell 10 through a removable door 11. The ophthalmic device 1 may also comprise a connector 12 for the connection of a power supply (not shown). In the shown embodiment, the connector 12 faces a side of the front half-shell 9.
In order to allow the adjustment of the luminous intensity of the light source 6, the electronic control system 8 may comprise e.g. a rotatable knob 13 protruding from a circular seat formed in the rear half-shell 10. Alternatively, there may be buttons, sliders and similar adjustment means that are well known to those skilled in the art.
Referring to figure 8, the light source 6 is associated with a light-guide 14. In particular, the light-guide 14 is positioned between the light source 6 and the opalescent member 5, thus allowing to radially convey the light beams emitted by the light source 6 towards the axis A of the through-opening 4. In this way it is possible to minimize the number and the size of the dark portions characterizing the light source, thus obtaining a substantially uniform illumination of the opalescent member 5 and thereby a more intense and extremely homogeneous light shaft from the illuminating body 3.
In the shown embodiment the light source 6 is positioned on a plane, e.g. parallel to the base of the rear half-shell 10, and the light-guide 14 has a frusto-conical shape whose larger base faces the light source 6. The light-guide 14 further comprises an axial bore allowing its assembling coaxially to the opalescent member 5.
Advantageously, the light-guide 14 and the opalescent member 5 may form a single body, which allows to optimize the manufacturing and the assembly process of the ophthalmic device 1.
In an operating condition of the ophthalmic device 1 , the light beams emitted by the light source 6 hit the larger base of the light-guide 14, pass through it and are deflected by the frusto-conical surface of the light-guide 14, thus being radially conveyed towards the axis A of the through-opening 4 passing through the opalescent member 5 and forming a light shaft.
It should be noted that the light source 6 is positioned at the end of the opalescent member 5 that is opposite to the end intended to face the patient's eye, so that the emitted light beams pass radially through the opalescent member 5 in all its length, thus maximizing the intensity of the light shaft emitted by the illuminating body 3.
The placement of the light source 6 on a plane and the frusto-conical shape of the light guide 14 described above allow to optimize the positioning of the internal components of the ophthalmic device 1 with the aim of reducing its overall size.
However, this configuration of the device is not mandatory for the working of the invention. For example, the light source 6 might be positioned coaxially to the through- opening 4 providing, as in the above-described embodiment, to arrange therebetween a light-guide suitable to radially convey the light beams towards the axis A of the through-opening 4.
With the aim of improving the homogeneousness of the light beams emitted by the light source 6 of the ophthalmic device 1, the light-guide 14 may comprise one or more surface-treated faces, e.g. made by silk finishing, sand-blasting, light-etching and the like.
Preferably, all the faces of the light-guide 14 are surface-treated, thus allowing to maximize the effect of homo genizat ion and diffusion of the light. In addition or alternatively, it is possible to coat with reflecting films or paints, e.g. silver films or paints, one or more of the sloping surfaces of the light-guide suitable to deflect the light beams emitted by the light source 6, e.g. the frusto-conical surface of the light-guide 14 described above, thus contributing to maximize the effect of homogenization and diffusion of the light shaft emitted by the illuminating body 3.
Referring now in particular to figures 8 and 9, in the shown embodiment the light source 6 comprises a plurality of LEDs 61 , 62, 63, ... positioned on a same plane circumferentially around the through-opening 4 of the ophthalmic device 1. The LEDs 61 , 62, 63 are of the cold-light type, in particular white light, which as it is known allows to carry out tests on the tear film while preventing the light shaft from causing its evaporation, thereby altering the evaluation and diagnosis of possible diseases.
The use of LEDs is very advantageous because they are extremely smaller than the neon lamps used in the ophthalmic illumination devices known in the art and thus allow to reduce the overall size of the light source 6 of the ophthalmic device 1 according to the invention.
Advantageously, the LEDs 61 , 62, 63 may be mounted on a same printed circuit board 15 positioned parallel to the base of the rear half-shell 10.
As shown in figure 9, the printed circuit board 15 may be mounted on one of the half-shells 9, 10 of the ophthalmic device 1, e.g. the rear half-shell 10. To this purpose, the rear half-shell 10 comprises a plurality of posts 16 that, in addition to allow the mounting of the printed circuit board, work also as centering members. As shown in figure 8, the posts 16 may also be advantageously used as supporting and/or centering members of the light-guide 14.
The embodiments of the invention herein described and shown are mere examples susceptible of numerous variants. For example, the ophthalmic device 1 might be supplied directly from the mains without the need for batteries, which allows to further reduce the size of the handgrip 2. Moreover, the control system 8 might comprise a user interface of an interactive type, e.g. provided with an LCD display arranged in the handgrip 2, suitable to allow, via a dedicated software, the setting of the illumination parameters of the ophthalmic device 1 and to check its operating condition.

Claims

1. An ophthalmic illumination device (1) comprising an illuminating body (3), said illuminating body (3) in turn comprising a through-opening (4) whose side wall comprises a member (5) made of an opalescent material, wherein a light source (6) is housed inside the illuminating body (3) and wherein a light-guide (14), adapted to radially convey the light beams emitted by said light source (6) towards an axis (A) of the through-opening (4), is positioned between said light source (6) and said opalescent member (5).
2. An ophthalmic device (1) according to claim 1, wherein the light source (6) is positioned on a plane and the light-guide (14) comprises an axial bore adapted to allow the assembling of the light-guide (14) coaxially to the opalescent member (5).
3. An ophthalmic device (1) according to claim 2, wherein the light source (6) is positioned on a plane at the end of the opalescent member (5) opposite to the end intended to face the patient's eye.
4. An ophthalmic device (1) according to claim 2 or 3, wherein the light-guide (14) has a frusto-conical shape.
5. An ophthalmic device (1) according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the light-guide (14) comprises one or more surface-treated faces.
6. An ophthalmic device (1) according to claim 5, wherein all the faces of the light-guide (14) are surface-treated.
7. An ophthalmic device (1) according to any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the light-guide (14) comprises sloping surfaces adapted to deflect the light beams emitted by the light source (6) and wherein said sloping surfaces are coated with reflecting films or paints.
8. An ophthalmic device (1) according to any one of claims 1 to 7, wherein the light source (6) comprises a plurality of LEDs (61, 62, 63).
9. An ophthalmic device (1) according to claim 8, wherein said LEDs (61, 62, 63) are positioned on a same plane circumferentially around the through-opening (4).
10. An ophthalmic device (1) according to claim 9, wherein the LEDs (61, 62,
63) are mounted on a same printed circuit board (15).
11. An ophthalmic device (1) according to any one of claims 1 to 10, further comprising a handgrip (2) and wherein said handgrip (2) and the illuminating body (3) form a single body comprising a front half-shell (9) and a rear half-shell (10).
12. An ophthalmic device (1) according to claims 10 and 11, wherein the printed circuit board (15) is constrained to said rear half-shell (10) through a plurality of posts (16), said posts (16) being also centering members of the printed circuit board (15) and supporting and/or centering members of the light-guide (14).
13. An ophthalmic device (1) according to any one of claims 1 to 12, wherein the light-guide (14) and the opalescent member (5) form a single body.
14. An ophthalmic diagnostic apparatus comprising an ophthalmic illumination device (1) according to any one of claims 1 to 13.
PCT/IB2011/052330 2010-05-27 2011-05-27 Ophthalmic illumination device WO2011148349A1 (en)

Priority Applications (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
ES11744068T ES2531340T3 (en) 2010-05-27 2011-05-27 Ophthalmic lighting device
US13/699,609 US8613516B2 (en) 2010-05-27 2011-05-27 Ophthalmic illumination device
EP11744068.5A EP2575592B1 (en) 2010-05-27 2011-05-27 Ophthalmic illumination device
CN201180027523.XA CN102939043B (en) 2010-05-27 2011-05-27 Ophthalmic illumination device
AU2011259795A AU2011259795B2 (en) 2010-05-27 2011-05-27 Ophthalmic illumination device
JP2013511782A JP5816684B2 (en) 2010-05-27 2011-05-27 Ophthalmic lighting device

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

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IT000008U ITTN20100008U1 (en) 2010-05-27 2010-05-27 LACRIMOSCOPE WITH LEDS TECHNOLOGY
ITTN2010U000008 2010-05-27

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JP (1) JP5816684B2 (en)
CN (1) CN102939043B (en)
AU (1) AU2011259795B2 (en)
ES (1) ES2531340T3 (en)
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US20130077051A1 (en) 2013-03-28
ITTN20100008U1 (en) 2011-11-28
JP2013526958A (en) 2013-06-27
CN102939043A (en) 2013-02-20
US8613516B2 (en) 2013-12-24
ES2531340T3 (en) 2015-03-12
EP2575592A1 (en) 2013-04-10
EP2575592B1 (en) 2014-12-03
CN102939043B (en) 2015-07-01
AU2011259795B2 (en) 2015-01-22
AU2011259795A1 (en) 2013-01-10
AU2011259795A2 (en) 2013-02-07

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