Thanks, and sorry for the confusion. The optometrist did in fact find a temporal defect in BOTH eyes (bitemporal defect) with a Humphrey FDT.
I saw a general opthalmologist yesterday who gave me a thorough eye exam and said my eyes were completely healthy. He performed some basic visual field tests and found nothing abnormal, but didn't do the Humphrey FDT because my eyes were already dilated. He wants to redo the Humphrey test next week and see if the results can be duplicated.
I'm a little confused about the Humphrey results. Is it possible to have a large bitemporal defect in the Humphrey without corresponding blindness/loss of vision? Neither the optometrist nor the opthalmologist could detect any actual blindness. Is it possible the FDT was simply performed incorrectly?
The black spot could be benign pigment near the nerve, or a choroidal nevus which is a freckle under the retina. A bitemporal defect, by definition, is a loss of the outer (temporal) field of vision in BOTH eyes, and usually points to a problem in the pituitary gland. I completely agree, you should see a neuro-ophthalmologist.