Fig.
9. Diagrams of the Images of Purkinje
No.
1. - Images of a candle: a, on the cornea; b, on the front of the lens-
c, on the back of the lens.
No.
2. - Images of lights shining through rectangular openings in a screen
while the eye is at rest (R) and during accommodation (A): a, on the
cornea; b, on the front of the lens; c, on the back of the lens (after
Helmholtz).
Note
that in No. 2, A, the central images are smaller and have approached
each other, a change which, if it actually took place would indicate
an increase of curvature in the front of the lens during accommodation.
The
idea that the change of focus might be brought about by a change in
the form of the lens appears to have been first advanced, according
to Landolt,(3) by the Jesuit, Scheiner (1619). Later it was put forward
by Descartes (1637). But the first definite evidence in support of the
theory was presented by Dr. Thomas Young in a paper read before the
Royal Society in 1800.(4) "He adduced reasons," says Donders,
"which, properly understood, should be taken as positive proofs."(5)
At the time, however, they attracted little attention.
About
half a century later it occurred to Maximilian Langenbeck3 to seek light
on the problem by the aid of what are known as the images of Purkinje.(6)
If a small bright light, usually a candle, is held in front of and a
little to one side of the eye, three images are seen: one bright and
upright; another large, but less bright, and also upright; and a third
small, bright and inverted. The first comes from the cornea, the transparent
covering of the iris and pupil, and the other two from the lens, the
upright one from the front and the inverted one from the back. The corneal
reflection was known to the ancients, although its origin was not discovered
till later; but the two reflections from the lens were first observed
in 1823 by Purkinje; whence the trio of images is now associated with
his name. Langenbeck examined these images with the naked eye, and reached
the conclusion that during accommodation the middle one became smaller
than when the eye was at rest. And since an image reflected from a convex
surface is diminished in proportion to the convexity of that surface,
he concluded that the front of the lens became more convex when the
eye adjusted itself for near vision. Donders repeated the experiments
of Langenbeck, but was unable to make any satisfactory observations.
He predicted, however, that if the images were examined with a magnifier
they would "show with certainty" whether the form of the lens
changed during accommodation. Cramer,(7) acting on this suggestion,
examined the images as magnified from ten to twenty times, and thus
convinced himself that the one reflected from the front of the lens
became considerably smaller during accommodation.
Subsequently
Helmholtz, working independently, made a similar observation, but by
a somewhat different method. Like Donders, he found the image obtained
by the ordinary methods on the front of the lens very unsatisfactory,
and in his "Handbook of Physiological Optics" he describes
it as being "usually so blurred that the form of the flame cannot
be definitely distinguished."(9)(8) So he placed two lights, or
one doubled by reflection from a mirror, behind a screen in which were
two small rectangular openings, the whole being so arranged that the
lights shining through the openings of the screen formed two: images
on each of the reflecting surfaces. During accommodations, it seemed
to him that the two images on the front of the lens became smaller and
approached each other, while on the return of the eye to a state of
rest they grew larger again and separated This change, he said, could
be seen "easily and distinctly."(10) The observations of Helmholtz
regarding the behavior of the lens in accommodation, published about
the middle of the last century, were soon accepted as facts, and have
ever since been stated as such in every text-book dealing with the subject.

Fig.
10. Diagram by Which Helmholtz Illustrated His Theory of Accommodation
R
is supposed t be the resting state of the lens, in which it is adjusted
for distant vision. In A the suspensory ligament is supposed to have
been relaxed through the contraction of the ciliary muscle, permitting
the lens to bulge forward by virtue of its own elasticity.
"We
may say," writes Landolt, "that the discovery of the part
played by the crystalline lens in the act of accommodation is one of
the finest achievements of medical physiology, and the theory of its
working is certainly one of the most firmly established; for not only
have "savans" furnished lucid and mathematical proofs of its
correctness, but all other theories which have been advanced as explaining
accommodation have been easily and entirely overthrown.... The fact
that the eye is accommodated for near vision by an increase in the curvature
of its crystalline lens, is, then, incontestably proved."(11)
"The
question was decided," says Tscherning, "by the observation
of the changes of the images of Purkinje during accommodation, which
prove that accommodation is effected by an increase of curvature of
the anterior surface of the crystalline lens."(12)
The
greatest thinkers," says Cohn, "have mastered a host of difficulties
in discovering this arrangement, and it is only in very recent times
that its processes have been clearly and perfectly set forth in the
works of Sanson, Helmholtz, Brucke, Hensen and Volckers."(13)
Fig.
11. Thomas Young (1773-1829)
English
physician and man of science who was the first to present a serious
argument in support of the view that accommodation is brought about
by the agency of the lens.
Huxley
refers to the observations of Helmholtz as the "facts of adjustment
with which all explanations of that process must accord,"(14) and
Donders calls his theory the "true principle of accommodation."(15)
Arlt,
who had advanced the elongation theory and believed that no other was
possible, at first opposed the conclusions of Cramer and Helmholtz,(16)
but later accepted them.(17)
Yet
in examining the evidence for the theory we can only wonder at the scientific
credulity which could base such an important department of medical practice
as the treatment of the eye upon such a mass of contradictions. Helmholtz,
while apparently convinced of the correctness of his observations indicating
a change of form in the lens during accommodation, felt himself unable
to speak with certainty of the means by which the supposed change was
effected,(18) and strangely enough the question is still being debated.
Finding, as he states, "absolutely nothing but the ciliary muscle
to which accommodation could be attributed,"(19) Helmholtz concluded
that the changes which he thought he had observed in the curvature of
the lens must be effected by the action of this muscle; but he was unable
to offer any satisfactory theory of the way it operated to produce these
results, and he explicitly stated that the one he suggested possessed
only the character of probability Some of his disciples, "more
loyal than the king," as Tscherning has pointed out, "have
proclaimed as certain what he himself with much reserve explained as
probable,"(20) but there has been no such unanimity of acceptance
in this case as in that of the observations regarding the behavior of
the images reflected from the lens. No one except the present writer,
so far as I am aware, has ventured to question that the ciliary muscle
is the agent of accommodation; but as to the mode of its operation there
is generally felt to be much need for more light. Since the lens is
not a factor in accommodation, it is not strange that no one was able
to find out how it changed its curvature. It "is" strange,
however, that these difficulties have not in any way disturbed the universal
belief that the lens does change.
When
the lens has been removed for cataract the patient usually appears to
lose his power of accommodation, and not only has to wear a glass to
replace the lost part, but has to put on a stronger glass for reading.
A minority of these cases, however, after they become accustomed to
the new condition, become able to see at the near-point without any
change in their glasses. The existence of these two classes of cases
has been a great stumbling block to ophthalmology. The first and more
numerous appeared to support the theory of the agency of the lens in
accommodation; but the second was hard to explain away, and constituted
at one time, as Dr. Thomas Young observed, the "grand objection"
to this idea. A number of these cases of apparent change of focus in
the lensless eye having been reported to the Royal Society by competent
observers, Dr. Young, before bringing forward his theory of accommodation,
took the trouble to examine some of them, and considered himself justified
in concluding that an error of observation had been made. While convinced,
however, that in such eyes the "actual focal distance is totally
unchangeable," he characterized his own evidence in support of
this view as only "tolerably satisfactory." At a later period
Donders made some investigations from which he concluded that "in
aphakia(21) not the slightest trace of accommodative power remains."(22)
Helmholtz expressed similar views, and von Graefe, although he observed
a "slight residuum" of accommodative power in lensless eyes,
did not consider it sufficient to discredit the theory of Cramer and
Helmholtz. It might be due, he said, to the accommodative action of
the iris, and possibly also to a lengthening of the visual axis through
the action of the external muscles.(23)

Herman-
Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (1821-1894)
whose
observations regarding the behavior of images reflected from the front
of the lens are supposed to have demonstrated that the curvature of
this body changes during accommodation.
For
nearly three-quarters of a century the opinions of these masters have
echoed through ophthalmological literature. Yet it is to-day a perfectly
well-known and undisputed fact that many persons, after the removal
of the lens for cataract, are able to see perfectly at different distances
without any change in their glasses. Every ophthalmologist of any experience
has seen cases of this kind, and many of them have been reported in
the literature.
In
1872, Professor Forster of Breslau, reported(24) a series of twenty-two
cases of apparent accommodation in eyes from which the lens had been
removed for cataract. The subjects ranged in age from eleven to seventyfour
years, and the younger ones had more accommodative power than the elder.
A year later Woinow of Moscow(25) reported eleven cases, the subjects
being from twelve to sixty years of age. In 1869 and 1870, respectively,
Loring reported(26) to the New York Ophthalmological Society and the
American Ophthalmological Society the case of a young woman of eighteen
who, without any change in her glasses, read the twenty line on the
Snellen test card at twenty feet and also read diamond type at from
five inches to twenty. On October 8, 1894, a patient of Dr. A. E. Davis
who appeared to accommodate perfectly without a lens consented to go
before the New York Ophthalmological Society. "The members,"
Dr. Davis reports,(27) "were divided in their opinion as to how
the patient was able to accommodate for the nearpoint with his distance
glasses on"; but the fact that he could see at this point without
any change in his glasses was not to be disputed.
The
patient was a chef, forty-two years old, and on January 27, 1894, Dr.
Davis had removed a black cataract from his right eye, supplying him
at the same time with the usual outfit of glasses, one to replace the
lens, for distant vision, and a stronger one for reading. In October
he returned, not because his eye was not doing well, but because he
was afraid he might be "straining" it. He had discarded his
reading glasses after a few weeks, and had since been using only his
distance glasses. Dr. Davis doubted the truth of his statements, never
having seen such a case before, but found them, upon investigation,
to be quite correct. With his lensless eye and a convex glass of eleven
and a half diopters, the patient read the ten line on the test card
at twenty feet, and with the same glass, and without any change in its
position, he read fine print at from fourteen to eighteen inches Dr.
Davis then presented the case to the Ophthalmological Society but, as
has been stated, he obtained no light from that source. Four months
later, February 4, 1895, the patient still read 20/10 at the distance
and his range at the near-point had increased so that he read diamond
type at from eight to twenty-two and a half inches. Dr. Davis subjected
him to numerous tests, and though unable to find any explanation for
his strange performances, he made some interesting observations. The
results of the tests by which Donders satisfied himself that the lensless
eye possessed no accommodative power were quite different from those
reported by the Dutch authority, and Dr. Davis therefore concluded that
these tests were "wholly inadequate to decide the question at issue."
During accommodation the ophthalmometer(28) showed that the corneal
curvature was changed and that the cornea moved forward a little. Under
scopolamine, a drug sometimes used instead of atropine to paralyze the
ciliary muscle (1/10 per cent solution every five minutes for thirty-five
minutes, followed by a wait of half an hour), these changes took place
as before; they also took place when the lids were held up. With the
possible influence of lid pressure and of the ciliary muscle eliminated,
therefore, Dr. Davis felt himself bound to conclude that the changes
"must have been produced by the action of the external muscles."
Under scopolamine, also, the man's accommodation was only slightly affected,
the range at the nearpoint being reduced only two and a half inches.
The
ophthalmometer further showed the patient to have absolutely no astigmatism.
It had showed the same thing about three months after the operation,
but three and a half weeks after it he had four and a half diopters.
Seeking
further light upon the subject Dr. Davis now subjected to similar tests
a case which had previously been reported by Webster in the "Archives
of Pediatrics."(29) The patient had been brought to -Dr. Webster
at the age of ten with double congenital cataract. The left lens had
been absorbed as the result of successive needlings, leaving only an
opaque membrane, the lens capsule, while the right, which had not been
interfered with, was sufficiently transparent around the edge to admit
of useful vision. Dr. Webster made an opening in the membrane filling
the pupil of the left eye, after which the vision of this eye, with
a glass to replace the lens, was about equal to the vision of the right
eye without a glass. For this reason Dr. Webster did not think it necessary
to give the patient distance glasses, and supplied him with reading
glasses only - plane glass for the-right eye and convex 16D for the
left. On March 14, 1893, he returned and stated that he had been wearing
his reading glasses all the time. With this glass it was found that
he could read the twenty line of the test card at twenty feet, and read
diamond type easily at fourteen inches. Subsequently the right lens
was removed, after which no accommodation was observed in this eye.
Two years later, March 16, 1895, he was seen by Dr. Davis, who found
that the left eye now had an accommodative range of from ten to eighteen
inches. In this case no change was observed in the cornea. The results
of the Donders tests were similar to those of the earlier case, and
under scopolamine the eye accommodated as before, but not quite so easily.
No accommodation was observed in the right eye.
These
and similar cases have been the cause of great embarrassment to those
who feel called upon to reconcile them with the accepted theories. With
the retinoscope the lensless eye can be seen to accommodate; but the
theory of Helmholtz has dominated the ophthalmological mind so strongly
that even the evidence of objective tests was not believed. The apparent
act of accommodation was said not to be real, and many theories, very
curious and unscientific, have been advanced to account for it. Davis
is of the opinion that "the slight change in the curvature of the
cornea, and its slight advancement observed in some cases, may, in those
cases, account for some of the accommodative power present, but it is
such a small factor that it may be eliminated entirely, since in some
of the most marked cases of accommodation in aphakial eyes no such changes
have been observed."
The
voluntary production of astigmatism is another stumbling block to the
supporters of the accepted theories, as it involves a change in the
shape of the cornea, and such a change is not compatible with the idea
of an ''inextensible''(30) eyeball. It seems to have given them less
trouble, however, than the accommodation of the lensless eye, because
fewer of these cases have been observed and still fewer have been allowed
to get into the literature. Some interesting facts regarding one have
fortunately been given by Davis, who investigated it in connection with
the corneal changes noted in the lensless eye. The case was that of
a house surgeon at the Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital, Dr. C. H. Johnson.
Ordinarily this gentleman had half a diopter of astigmatism in each
eye; but he could, at will, increase this to two diopters in the right
eye and one and a half in the left. He did this many times, in the presence
of a number of members of the hospital staff, and also did it when the
upper lids were held up, showing that the pressure of the lids had nothing
to do with the phenomenon. Later he went to Louisville, and here Dr.
J. M. Ray, at the suggestion of Dr. Davis, tested his ability to produce
astigmatism under the influence of scopolamine (four instillations,
1/5 per cent solution). While the eyes were under the influence of the
drug the astigmatism still seemed to increase, according to the evidence
of the ophthalmometer, to one and a half diopters in the right eye and
one in the left. From these facts, the influence of the lids and of
the ciliary muscle having been eliminated, Dr. Davis concluded that
the change in the cornea was "brought about mainly by the external
muscles." What explanation others offer for such phenomena I do
not know.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CITATIONS
1. Johannes Kepler (1571-1630). German theologian. astronomer and physicist.
Many facts of physiological optics were either discovered, or first
clearly stated, by him.
2.
Donders: On the Anomalies of Accommodation and Refraction of the Eye.
English translation by Moore, 1864, p. 10. Frans Cornelis Donders (1818-1889)
was professor of physiology and ophthalmology at the University of Utrecht,
and is ranked as one of the greatest ophthalmologists of all time.
3.
Edmund Landolt (1846-) Swiss ophthalmologist who settled in Paris in
1874, founding an eye clinic which has attracted many students.
4.
On the Mechanism of the Eye, Phil. Tr. Roy. Soc., London, 1801.
5.
On the Anomalies of Accommodation and Refraction of the Eye, pp. 10-11.
6.
Maximilian Adolf Langenbeck (1518-1877). Professor of anatomy, surgery
and ophthalmology at Gottingen, from 1846 to 1851. Later settled in
Hanover.
7.
Johannes Evangelista von Purkinje (1787-1869). Professor of physiology
at Breslau and Prague, and the discoverer of many important physiological
facts.
8.
Antonie C. Cramer (1822-1855). Dutch ophthalmologist.
9.
Handbuch der physiologischen Optik, edited by Nagel, 1909-11, vol. i,
p. 121.
10.
Ibid. vol. i, p. 122.
11.
The Refraction and Accommodation of the Eye and their Anomalies, authorized
translation by Culver, 1886, p. 151.
12.
Physiologic Optics, authorized translation by Weiland, 1904, p. 163.
Marius Hans Erik Tscherning (1854 - ) is a Danish ophthalmologist who
for twenty-five years was co-director and director of the ophthalmological
laboratory of the Sorbonne. Later he became professor of ophthalmology
in the University of Copenhagen.
13.
The Hygiene of the Eye in Schools, English translation edited by Turnbull,
1886, p. 23. Hermann Cohn (1838-1906) was professor of ophthalmology
in the University of Breslau, and is known chiefly for his contributions
to ocular hygiene.
14.
Lessons in Elementary Physiology, sixth edition, 1872, p. 231.
15.
On the Anomalies of Accommodation and Refraction of the Eye, p. 13.
16.
Krankheiten des Auges, 1853-56, vol. iii, D. 219, et seq.
17.
Ueber die Ursachen und die Entstehung der Kurzsichtigkeit, 1876. Vorwort.
18.
Handbuch der physiologischen Optik, vol. i, pp. 124 and 145.
19.
Ibid, vol. i. P. 144.
20.
Physiologic Optics, p. 166.
21.
Absence of the lens.
22.
On the Anomalies of Accommodation and Refraction of the Eye, p. 320.
23.
Archiv. f. Ophth., 1855, vol. ii, part 1, p. 187 et seq. Albrecht von
Graefe (1828-1870) was professor of ophthalmology in the University
of Berlin, and is ranked with Donders and Arlt as one of the greatest
ophthalmologists of the nineteenth century.
24.
Klin. Montasbl. f. Augenh., Erlangen, 1872, vol. x, p. 39, et seq.
25.
Archiv. f. Ophth., 1873, vol. xix, part 3, p. 107.
26.
Flint: Physiology of Man, 1875, vol. v, pp. 110-111.
27.
Davis: Accommodation in the Lensless Eye, Reports of the Manhattan Eye
and Ear Hospital, Jan., 1895. The article gives a review of the whole
subject.
28.
An instrument for measuring the curvature of the cornea.
29.
Nov., 1893, p. 932.
30.
Inasmuch as the eye is inextensible, it cannot adapt itself for the
perception of objects situated at different distances by increasing
the length of its axis, but only by increasing the refractive power
of its lens. - De Schweinitz: Diseases of the Eye, eighth edition, 1916,
pp. 35-36.