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Abstract #98901 Published in IGR 22-4

Driving behaviour and visual compensation in glaucoma patients: Evaluation on a driving simulator

Adrian J; Authié C; Lebrun J; Lombardi M; Zenouda A; Gutman E; Brasnu E; Hamard P; Sahel JA; Baudouin C; Labbé A
Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology 2022; 50: 420-428


BACKGROUND: To assess the driving performance and both the visual scanning and driving compensations of glaucoma patients. METHODS: In this case-control pilot study, the driving behaviour and performance of 14 patients with glaucoma and nine healthy age- and sex-similar control subjects were compared in a fixed-base driving simulator. All subjects performed in four scenarios with one to two hazardous situations on urban streets, for a total of five hazards. Measurements taken during the tests included reaction times, longitudinal regulation, lateral control and eye and head movements. RESULTS: Glaucoma patients showed poor driving performance with longer reaction time to hazardous situations than control subjects: pedestrians crossing the road from the left (p < 0.022) or from the right (p = 0.013), and vehicles coming from the left (p = 0.002). Their mean duration of lateral excursion was longer (p = 0.045), and they showed more lane excursions in a wide left curve (p = 0.045). Glaucoma patients also showed a higher standard deviation of time-headway (p = 0.048) with preceding vehicles. Analyses of driving behavioural compensations on curved roads showed that glaucoma patients stayed closer to the centre line in large (p = 0.006) and small (p = 0.025) left curves and on small right curves (p = 0.041). Additionally, on straight roads, as compared to control subjects, glaucoma patients showed longer mean time-headway (p = 0.032) and lower mean speed (p = 0.04). Finally, the glaucoma group exhibited a larger standard deviation of horizontal gaze (p = 0.034) than the control subjects. CONCLUSIONS: In a virtual driving environment, glaucoma patients exhibited unsafe driving behaviours, despite their driving and eye-scanning compensations.

Streetlab®, Institut de la Vision, 17 rue Moreau, Paris, France.

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15 Miscellaneous



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