1. Refraction during incipient presbyopia: The Aston Longitudinal Assessment of Presbyopia (ALAP) study.
- Author
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Laughton DS, Sheppard AL, and Davies LN
- Subjects
- Adult, Disease Progression, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Time Factors, Presbyopia physiopathology, Refraction, Ocular physiology, Vision Tests methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate non-cycloplegic changes in refractive error prior to the onset of presbyopia., Methods: The Aston Longitudinal Assessment of Presbyopia (ALAP) study is a prospective 2.5 year longitudinal study, measuring objective refractive error using a binocular open-field WAM-5500 autorefractor at 6-month intervals in participants aged between 33 and 45 years., Results: From the 58 participants recruited, 51 participants (88%) completed the final visit. At baseline, 21 participants were myopic (MSE -3.25±2.28 DS; baseline age 38.6±3.1 years) and 30 were emmetropic (MSE -0.17±0.32 DS; baseline age 39.0±2.9 years). After 2.5 years, 10% of the myopic group experienced a hypermetropic shift (≥0.50 D), 5% a myopic shift (≥0.50 D) and 85% had no significant change in refraction (<0.50 D). From the emmetropic group, 10% experienced a hypermetropic shift (≥0.50 D), 3% a myopic shift (≥0.50 D) and 87% had no significant change in refraction (<0.50 D). In terms of astigmatism vectors, other than J
45 (p<0.001), all measures remained invariant over the study period., Conclusion: The incidence of a myopic shift in refraction during incipient presbyopia does not appear to be as large as previously indicated by retrospective research. The changes in axis indicate ocular astigmatism tends towards the against-the-rule direction with age. The structural origin(s) of the reported myopic shift in refraction during incipient presbyopia warrants further investigation., (Copyright © 2017 Spanish General Council of Optometry. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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