Smartphone device detects early-stage cataracts
By By David L. Chandler | 02 Jul 2011
Cataracts are the leading cause of preventable blindness worldwide. But the standard test to detect the cloudy patches in the eye's lens requires a $5,000 piece of equipment called a slit lamp, and a trained physician to interpret its results - two things that are often not available in rural and less-affluent parts of the world. But a team of MIT researchers has now developed a simple device that can clip onto an ordinary smartphone (or smart device such as an iPod) and provide a diagnosis of cataracts within a few minutes.
Ramesh Raskar, the NEC Career Development Associate Professor of Computer and Communications and director of the MIT Media Lab's Camera Culture group, says, ''I like to think of this as a radar for the human eye.'' Just as a weather radar beam sweeps across the sky to detect clouds, the new system - dubbed Catra - sweeps a beam of light across the eye to detect the cloudy patches called cataracts.
While the standard test for cataracts in an ophthalmologist's office assigns a score on a scale of 1 to 4 - from no cataracts to completely blocked vision - the new, inexpensive test actually provides much more information. Media Lab graduate student Vitor Pamplona, a member of the team developing Catra, explains that it ''scans the lens of the eye and creates a map showing position, size, shape and density of cataracts.''
At the moment, that's more information than doctors need, Raskar acknowledges, since they're essentially faced with a binary decision: whether or not to surgically remove the lens. But he notes a possible similarity to the evolution of devices to measure the eye's refractive errors - the information needed for a prescription for corrective lenses. Decades ago, a new test was developed that could map local variations in the eye's refraction, giving far more information than the three numbers needed for a simple prescription. Initially, there was no therapeutic value in the added information, but with the advent of Lasik laser eye surgery, the detailed refraction map of the lens later became important.
At some point in the future new cataract therapies may similarly treat specific areas of cloudiness, rather than removing the whole lens. But in the meantime, Catra could provide great value as a simple and low-cost way of making the initial diagnosis that cataracts are present, especially in parts of the developing world where such services are now rare and often require travel to distant cities.
In addition, the new device may be able to detect cataracts at an earlier stage than existing tests, because it can pick up changes in parts of the lens that have not yet become opaque. The current test depends on light reflected back by the lens, to be seen by the doctor performing the test, while Catra relies on light passing through the lens as reported by the patient, who just has to indicate whether a point of light remains steady, dims or disappears.