Refractive Error, Axial Length, and Relative Peripheral Refractive Error before and after the Onset of Myopia
SUNY College of Optometry · The Ohio State University · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Subjects were 605 children 6 to 14 years of age who became myopic (at least -0.75 D in each meridian) and 374 emmetropic (between -0.25 D and +1.00 D in each meridian at all visits) children participating between 1995 and 2003 in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study. Axial length was measured annually by A-scan ultrasonography. Relative peripheral refractive error (the difference between the spherical equivalent cycloplegic autorefraction 30 degrees in the nasal visual field and in primary gaze) was measured using either of two autorefractors (R-1; Canon, Lake Success, NY [no longer manufactured] or WR 5100-K; Grand Seiko, Hiroshima, Japan). Refractive error was measured with the same autorefractor with the subjects under cycloplegia. Each variable in children who became myopic was compared to age-, gender-, and ethnicity-matched model estimates of emmetrope values for each annual visit from 5 years before through 5 years after the onset of myopia.
In the sample as a whole, children who became myopic had less hyperopia and longer axial lengths than did emmetropes before and after the onset of myopia (4 years before through 5 years after for refractive error and 3 years before through 5 years after for axial length; P
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 9.42
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
10- DODonald O. MuttiCorresponding
SUNY College of Optometry, The Ohio State University
- JRJohn R. Hayes
The Ohio State University, SUNY College of Optometry
- GLG. Lynn Mitchell
The Ohio State University, SUNY College of Optometry
- LJLisa Jones
The Ohio State University, SUNY College of Optometry
- MLMelvin L. Moeschberger
The Ohio State University
Topics & keywords
- Emmetropia
- Refractive error
- Autorefractor
- Cycloplegia
- Meridian (astronomy)
- Medicine
- Optometry
- Ophthalmology