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Test your basic knowledge |
Certified Paraoptometric Exam
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
certifications
,
health-sciences
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The measure of the finest detail the eye may detect.
What does a lensometer measure?
Visual acuity
Telephone
q_h
2. A group of diseases that can damage the eye's optic nerve and result in the vision loss and blindness. It occurs when the normal fluid pressure inside the eyes slowly rises.
Eye Dilators
Miotics
Cataract
Glaucoma
3. What is the primary function of the inferior rectus muscle?
Turn the eye downward
Topography
Cataract
Photoablation
4. Which type of lens will have the same power in all areas of the lens?
Spherical
Artificial Tears and Lubricants
Conventional daily wear lenses
Choroid
5. Proparacaine - Tetracaine - Cocaine
Vitreous
Ophthalmoscopy
Ciliary Muscle
Eye Anaesthetics
6. What does a tonometer measure?
damage to the eye
Visual acuity
'B' Measurement
Pressure in the eye
7. The instrument that contains lenses and can be used to determine a spectacle correction.
UV light indoors and outdoors
0.25 D
Phoropter
Photoablation
8. Two instruments are used to test patient blood pressure.
Glaucoma Surgery
Ciliary Muscle
Sphygmomanometer and stethoscope
'B' Measurement
9. Drop
Aqueous Humour
gtt
Diabetic Retinopathy
What does a lensometer measure?
10. A topical anesthetic.
Glaucoma
p.r.n.
Proparacaine
Diabetic retinopathy
11. The two main types of filing systems.
Vertex distance
Numerical and Alphabetical
Five
Tomography
12. What are plus lenses used to correct?
Keratoconus
Hyperopia and Presbyopia
Aqueous humor
0.25 D
13. Associated with aging and results in damaging sharp and central vision.
Macular Degeneration
p.o.
Tonometry
Corneal Edema
14. Laser-based - non contact - noon invasive imaging technique.
Bridge
Telephone
Hyperopia and Presbyopia
Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT)
15. Inward
Anti-reflective coatings
Vertex distance
Inferior rectu
Internal/medial rectus
16. This is the pathway between the ye and the brain along which the signals produced by the retina travel to the brain.
Optic Nerve
Ophthalmoscopy
Bridge
Fundus Photography
17. Is a clouding of the eye's lens and is the leading cause of blindness.
Cataract
Trivex
'B' Measurement
Fundus
18. Increases visual acuity because it reduces internal lens reflections.
Optic Nerve
Anti-reflective coatings
inferior oblique
Glass
19. What's it called when the cornea thins and bulges forward?
What does a lensometer measure?
Lens
Keratoconus
'B' Measurement
20. What are cycloplegic drugs used for?
To dilate the eyes
Fundus Photography
Superior Rectu
external/lateral rectus
21. By mouth
p.o.
Mydriatics
Internal/medial rectus
Conjunctiva
22. The lifeline into and out of the practice.
Monovision
Lens
Cataract
Telephone
23. An ophthalmic stain - available in liquid form and is the most commonly used ophthlmic dye.
Tomography
Conventional daily wear lenses
Sodium Fluorescein
HIPPA
24. The chart most often used to measure acuity at distance.
Snellen Chart
Subjective Refraction
Retina
Turn the eye downward
25. Controls the focusing power of the eye by changing the shape of the lens.
Choroid
Subjective Refraction
Ciliary Muscle
Retinoscopy
26. A mid-index lens material that is thinner than glass or CR-39 - free from distortion and aberration and able to be used as a safety lens.
Trivex
Hyperopia and Presbyopia
Fundus
Miotics
27. Refers to imaging by section or sectioning - through the use of any kind of penetrating wave.
Visual acuity
PHI
Sub conjunctival hemorrhage
Tomography
28. Constrictors
Monovision
Vertex distance
Telephone
Miotics
29. The Examination of the inside of the eye.
Keratometry
Ophthalmoscopy
Triage
Fundus
30. Its purpose: Improve the portability and continuity of health insurance overage - improve access to long-term care services and coverage - to simplify administrative care.
HIPPA
Five
Sub conjunctival hemorrhage
Lacrimal gland
31. The interior portion of the eyeball that may be seen on ophthalmoscopy.
Fundus
q_h
Bridge
Lacrimal gland
32. The system for sorting and assigning priorities for medical treatment based on the urgency of the systems.
Triage
Monovision
Turn the eye downward
HIPPA
33. A broken blood vessel between the sclera and conjunctiva.
Sub conjunctival hemorrhage
Internal/medial rectus
Retina
Glaucoma
34. What provides the major refractive power of the eye?
Visual acuity
Cornea
Eye Dilators
Binocular Vision
35. Outward
Vitreous
external/lateral rectus
Optic Disc
Topography
36. What are used to treat dry eyes?
Ciliary Muscle
Artificial Tears and Lubricants
Aqueous humor
Aspheric lenses
37. Downward and diagonally
Eye Anaesthetics
superior oblique
Bridge
Telephone
38. A test that allows a doctor to see inside the back of the eye and other structures using a magnifying instrument and a light source.
Superior Rectu
Ophthalmoscopy
'B' Measurement
Immediately have them come in to the office
39. Dilators
p.o.
Mydriatics
Triage
Glass
40. A method of determining the state of refraction of the eye by illumination the retina with a mirror and observing the direction of movement of the retinal illumination and adjacent shadow when the mirror is turned.
Trivex
Retinoscopy
Ciliary Muscle
Keratometry
41. The creation of a photograph of the interior surface of the eye.
Cycloplegia
Fundus Photography
Visual acuity
0.25 D
42. Upward and inward
p.o.
Superior Rectu
Immediately have them come in to the office
Retina
43. Corrects one eye for distance and the other eye for near and can be used to correct presbyopia.
Monovision
Conjunctivitis
Pressure in the eye
What does a lensometer measure?
44. The nerve center of the eye where light is converted into an electrical signal that travels along the optic nerve to the brain.
Retina
qhs
Sphygmomanometer and stethoscope
Conjunctivitis
45. Measurement of the form and curvature of the cornea.
Keratometry
Tonometry
What does a lensometer measure?
Eye Dilators
46. The gel that fills the eye and allows it to maintain its shape. Also serves as a clear pathway for light when it travels from the lens to the retina.
Cornea
Vitreous
Tomography
Glaucoma Surgery
47. A layer located behind the retina and absorbs unused radiation.
Proparacaine
Sodium Fluorescein
Choroid
Macula
48. Downward and inward
Inferior rectu
Conjunctiva
Macula
Anti-reflective coatings
49. A complication of diabetes - progressive damage to the blood vessels of the retina.
Diabetic Retinopathy
Corneal Edema
Eye Dilators
Mydriatics
50. The smallest unit of lens measure.
Mydriatics
Interpupillary distance (PD)
0.25 D
What does a lensometer measure?