While you are comfortably seated in a chair, anesthetic drops are placed in your eyes, causing them to become numb. Your eyes are then propped open and an electrode is placed on each eye. The electrode measures the electrical activity of the retina in response to light. The information from the electrode goes to a monitor, where it can be viewed and recorded. The normal response pattern has waves called A and B. The doctor will take the readings in normal room light and then again in the dark, after allowing 20 minutes for your eyes to adjust. A light is flashed, and the electrical response to the flash is recorded.
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