16 results on '"Zhu, Jianfeng"'
Search Results
2. Projecting Potentiality : Understanding Maternal Serum Screening in Contemporary China
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Zhu, Jianfeng
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- 2013
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3. Mothering Expectant Mothers: Consumption, Production, and Two Motherhoods in Contemporary China
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Zhu, Jianfeng
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- 2010
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4. Accelerated loss of crystalline lens power initiating from emmetropia among young school children: a 2‐year longitudinal study.
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Xiong, Shuyu, He, Xiangui, Sankaridurg, Padmaja, Zhu, Jianfeng, Wang, Jingjing, Zhang, Bo, Zou, Haidong, and Xu, Xun
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CRYSTALLINE lens ,VISUAL accommodation ,SCHOOL children ,REFRACTIVE errors ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CHILDREN with intellectual disabilities - Abstract
Purpose: To determine the characteristics of crystalline lens with varying refractive errors and relationship with axial elongation in young school children. Methods: A total of 1465 children aged 6–8 years were examined annually for 2 years. Each participant underwent a series of ophthalmic examinations, including cycloplegic autorefraction, crystalline lens and axial length measurement. Crystalline lens power was determined, and factors associated with different refractive statuses were investigated. Results: Crystalline lens power decreased with time; reduction in lens power in Year 1 was greater in children with emmetropia (−0.69 ± 0.59 dioptre [D]) than in those with hyperopia (−0.49 ± 0.56 D) or myopia (−0.45 ± 0.55 D) (p < 0.001). Among the emmetropes, there were no differences in loss of crystalline lens power between those who remained emmetropic (−0.63 ± 0.59 D) and those who became myopic at Year 1 (−0.74 ± 0.61 D) and Year 2 (−0.77 ± 0.57 D, p > 0.05) visits. Among myopes at Year 1 visit, there was a greater reduction at Year 2 in those who had baseline emmetropia (−0.61 ± 0.51 D) than those who had baseline myopia (−0.26 ± 0.49 D, p < 0.001). The trend was similar among children of the same age. There was a significant correlation between changes in lens power and axial elongation in non‐myopia (β = −0.954, p < 0.001) and new myopia (β = −1.178, p < 0.001), but not in established myopia (β = −0.001, p = 0.539). Conclusions: There is accelerated loss of lens power in emmetropia and early stage of myopia. However, this loss is retarded when myopia persists and is accompanied by disappearance of the compensatory effect of lens power against axial elongation. These findings provide new insights into human refractive development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Design and methodology of the Shanghai child and adolescent large‐scale eye study (SCALE)
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He, Xiangui, Zhao, Rong, Sankaridurg, Padmaja, Zhu, Jianfeng, Naduvilath, Thomas, Ma, Yingyan, Lu, Lina, Lv, Minzhi, Smith, Earl L, Resnikoff, Serge, Naidoo, Kovin, Zou, Haidong, and Xu, Xun
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Male ,China ,genetic structures ,Adolescent ,Urban Population ,Vision Disorders ,Visual Acuity ,study design ,Vision Screening ,children ,Risk Factors ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,vision impairment ,Prevalence ,Humans ,myopia ,Prospective Studies ,high myopia ,Child ,Students ,Retrospective Studies ,Schools ,Original Articles ,Clinical Science ,eye diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Original Article ,Female ,Morbidity - Abstract
Importance Nearly half of children suffering vision impairment reside in China with myopia accounting for the vast majority. Background To describe the design and methodology of the Shanghai Child and Adolescent Large‐scale Eye Study (SCALE). Design The SCALE was a city wide, school‐based, prospective survey. Participants Children and adolescents aged 4–14 years from kindergarten (middle and senior), primary schools and junior high schools of all 17 districts and counties of the city of Shanghai, China were examined in 2012–2013. Methods Each enrolled child underwent vision assessment (distance visual acuity; uncorrected and with corrective device if worn) and their parent/carer completed a questionnaire designed to elicit risk factors associated with myopia. Additionally, non‐cycloplegic autorefraction and ocular axial length was measured in a subset of the larger sample. Main Outcome Measures Prevalence and the associated factors of vision impairment, myopia and high myopia in Shanghai. Results In 2012–2013, a total of 910 245 of the eligible 1 196 763 children and adolescents identified from census (76%, mean age 9.0 ± 2.7 years [4–14 years]) were enrolled with visual acuity screened in the city of Shanghai. Of these, 610 952 children (67% of the entire sample) underwent non‐cycloplegic autorefraction and 219 188 (24% of the entire sample) had both non‐cycloplegic autorefraction and axial length measurements. Conclusions and Relevance The study results will provide insights on the burden of vision impairment, myopia and high myopia in children and adolescents in a metropolitan area of China, and contribute to the policies and strategies to address and limit the burden.
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- 2017
6. Prevalence of fundus tessellation and its associated factors in Chinese children and adolescents with high myopia.
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Cheng, Tianyu, Deng, Junjie, Xu, Xian, Zhang, Bo, Wang, Jingjing, Xiong, Shuyu, Du, Yuchen, Yu, Suqin, Gong, Wei, Zhao, Huijuan, Luan, Mengli, Fan, Ying, Zhu, Jianfeng, Zou, Haidong, Xu, Xun, and He, Xiangui
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CHOROID ,MYOPIA ,TEENAGERS ,DIABETIC retinopathy - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the prevalence and associated factors of fundus tessellation in highly myopic children and adolescents. Methods: A total of 513 high myopes (spherical equivalent [SE] ≤ −5.0 D, 4–19 years of age) without any advanced pathological myopic lesions were enrolled. Fundus photographs and choroidal thickness (ChT) data were collected by SS‐OCT. A novel grading approach was adopted to classify fundus tessellation into four categories on colour fundus photography, referring to the location of tessellation divided by an Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study grid centred on the fovea, through which closer to the fovea represents higher grades of fundus tessellation. Peripapillary atrophy (PPA) area and ovality index were also measured. Results: Among the participants, with a mean age of 13.47 ± 3.13 years and mean SE of − 8.34 ± 1.91 D, there were 29 (5.7%), 95 (18.5%), 233 (45.4%) and 156 (30.4%) participants with grade 0 to grade 3 fundus tessellation, respectively. The ChT in both the macular and peripapillary area was negatively correlated with the fundus tessellation grade (R = −0.763 and −0.537, respectively, all p < 0.001). Higher grades of fundus tessellation were independently associated with thinner macular ChT (OR = 1.734, 95% CI: 1.621–1.856, p < 0.001), longer axial length (OR = 1.368, 95% CI: 1.105–1.695, p = 0.004), larger PPA area (OR = 1.391, 95% CI: 1.073–1.802, p = 0.013) and the female sex (OR = 1.605, 95% CI: 1.092–2.359, p = 0.016). Conclusion: The fundus tessellation grade could reflect the ChT, representing the severity of myopic maculopathy among young high myopes who rarely had any advanced lesions of pathological myopia. Fundus tessellation grade might be a potential index for assessing early‐stage myopic maculopathy in children and adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Design and Pilot data of the high myopia registration study: Shanghai Child and Adolescent Large‐scale Eye Study (SCALE‐HM).
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He, Xiangui, Deng, Junjie, Xu, Xian, Wang, Jingjing, Cheng, Tianyu, Zhang, Bo, Zhao, Huijuan, Luan, Mengli, Fan, Ying, Xiong, Shuyu, Zhu, Jianfeng, Zou, Haidong, and Xu, Xun
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MYOPIA ,SALIVA analysis ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,TEENAGERS ,INTRAOCULAR pressure ,VISUAL acuity - Abstract
Purpose: To describe the methodology and pilot data of the Shanghai Child and Adolescent Large‐scale Eye Study (SCALE‐HM). Methods: This is a population‐based, prospective, examiner‐masked study with annual follow‐up. Patients are 4‐ to 18‐year‐olds with high myopia. The participants will fill out questionnaires and then undergo visual acuity, axial length (AL), intraocular pressure, ophthalmologist assessment, microperimetry, cycloplegic refraction, Pentacam, wavefront aberration, fundus, blood and saliva examinations. To describe the pilot data, intergroup differences were assessed with t‐tests or analysis of variance and a logistic regression model was used to determine the independent factors associated with peripapillary atrophy (PPA). Results: Overall, 134 eyes of 79 participants met the pilot study recruitment criteria. The mean AL and spherical equivalent were 26.91 ± 1.07 mm and −9.40 ± 1.77 D, respectively. Peripapillary atrophy (PPA) (N = 112) and tessellated fundus (N = 67) were the most common fundus changes. The mean AL was significantly longer in PPA (27.08 ± 0.93 mm) than in non‐PPA eyes (26.06 ± 1.31 mm; p < 0.001). Axial length (AL) (p = 0.041) was the only independent factor associated with PPA. Axial length (AL) was significantly longer in eyes with diffuse chorioretinal atrophy (N = 11; 28.02 ± 1.31 mm) than without myopic retinal lesions (N = 56; 26.48 ± 0.91 mm, p < 0.001) or with tessellated fundus (N = 67; 27.09 ± 0.97 mm, p = 0.012). The myopic degree was higher in eyes with diffuse chorioretinal atrophy than without myopic retinal lesions (−10.51 ± 2.76 D versus −9.06 ± 1.58 D, p = 0.039). Conclusion: Peripapillary atrophy and tessellated fundus were common in children and adolescents with high myopia. Results from this prospective study will help to understand the mechanisms, development and prognosis of these changes and can guide early myopia screening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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8. Retinal oxygen saturation in 1461 healthy children aged 7–19 and its associated factors.
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Liu, Xiaoxiao, He, Xiangui, Yin, Yao, Zhang, Bo, Sun, Sifei, Zhu, Jianfeng, Zou, Haidong, Wang, Ling, and Xu, Xun
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DISSOLVED oxygen in water ,RETINAL artery ,BODY mass index ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,INTRAOCULAR pressure - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of the present study was to investigate age‐specific normative retinal oxygen saturation values and explore the associated factors in healthy Chinese school‐aged children with different refractive statuses. Design: Population‐based observational cross‐sectional study. Methods: Children aged 7–19 years were enrolled. Each participant underwent a series of comprehensive ocular examinations, including axial length (AL), cycloplegic refraction and Oxymap T1 imagery following cycloplegia. The acquired oximetry images were measured, and the values of the retinal oxygen saturation parameters were calculated. The independent factors of the retinal oxygen saturation were analysed using multiple linear regression. The oxygen saturation of retinal arteries (SaO2) and veins (SvO2) as well as the differences between the arteries and veins (AVD) were measured as the main outcomes. Results: In total, 1461 participants were included in the study. The mean age of the participants was 12.1 ± 3.2 years, and 53.0% were boys. The mean SaO2, SvO2 and AVD values were 83.7 ± 6.4%, 50.1 ± 5.4% and 33.6 ± 5.4%, respectively, and the values increased with age. Girls had higher SvO2 and lower AVD than boys (p < 0.05). The Pearson correlation coefficients among spherical equivalent (SE) and SaO2, SvO2 and AVD were −0.372, −0.203 and −0.240, respectively (all p < 0.001), while the correlations between AL and SaO2, SvO2 and AVD were 0.276, 0.106 and 0.221, respectively (all p < 0.001). The myopia group had significantly higher SaO2, SvO2 and AVD than the emmetropia and hyperopia groups (p < 0.001), but the high myopia group had lower SaO2 and SvO2 than the moderate myopia group. When age, gender, body mass index (BMI), intraocular pressure (IOP) and axial length (AL) were included as factors in the multiple regression, older age was associated with higher SaO2, SvO2 and AVD, while longer AL was associated with higher SaO2 and AVD. Gender was an independent factor predicting SvO2, while gender and BMI were the independent factors predicting AVD. Age explained more variance than AL in SaO2, SvO2 and AVD. Conclusions: Our population‐based study provides age‐specific profiles of retinal oxygen saturation in Chinese children and adolescents. Older age and longer AL were important independent factors of increased retinal oxygen saturation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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9. Distribution of scleral thickness and associated factors in 810 Chinese children and adolescents: a swept‐source optical coherence tomography study.
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Deng, Junjie, Jin, Jiali, Lv, Minzhi, Jiang, Wenhan, Sun, Sifei, Yao, Chunxia, Zhu, Jianfeng, Zou, Haidong, Wang, Ling, He, Xiangui, and Xu, Xun
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OPTICAL coherence tomography ,SCLERA ,TEENAGERS ,CHOROID ,REFRACTIVE errors - Abstract
Purpose: To explore the subfoveal thickness of sclera (SST), choroid (SCT) and retina (SRT) as well as their relationship in healthy Chinese children with varying levels of refractive error. Methods: A total of 810 healthy Chinese schoolchildren and adolescents underwent a series of comprehensive ocular examinations, as well as swept‐source optical coherence tomography (OCT) after induced cycloplegia. The thicknesses of the sclera, choroid and retina below the central fovea were measured manually, and each measurement was compared across different refractive statuses. Independent factors associated with the thickness of each layer were analysed. Results: The mean SST, SCT and SRT were 524 ± 57 μm, 195 ± 49 μm and 224 ± 19 μm, respectively. The SSTs and SCTs of myopes were significantly thinner than those of emmetropes and hyperopes (all p < 0.001). Although the choroid seemed to be thicker in hyperopes (225 ± 46 μm) than in emmetropes (211 ± 45 μm), no statistically significant difference was observed between emmetropes and hyperopes in the sclera and choroid. Thinner SSTs and SCTs were associated with greater levels of myopia, whereas the SRT was similar in children with different myopic levels. SST (p < 0.001) and SCT (p = 0.003) as well as age (p < 0.001), sex (p < 0.001) and axial length (p < 0.001) were independently associated with spherical equivalent refraction (SER). Older age (p = 0.013), myopic‐shifted SER (p < 0.001), thicker SCT (p < 0.001) and thinner SRT (p = 0.012) were independently associated with a thinner SST. Conclusion: The subfoveal sclera and choroid were thinner in myopes than in emmetropes and hyperopes, while the retina remains constant. Age, refractive error and choroidal and retinal thicknesses are related to subfoveal scleral thickness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Shanghai Time Outside to Reduce Myopia trial: design and baseline data.
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He, Xiangui, Sankaridurg, Padmaja, Xiong, Shuyu, Li, Wayne, Zhang, Bo, Weng, Rebecca, Zhu, Jianfeng, Naduvilath, Thomas, Resnikoff, Serge, Zou, Haidong, and Xu, Xun
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MYOPIA ,CLUSTER randomized controlled trials ,PHOTOREFRACTIVE keratectomy ,LENGTH measurement ,LASIK - Abstract
Importance Myopia is a major public health concern worldwide, while outdoor time is indicated to be protective against the onset of myopia. Background: To describe the methodology and baseline data of the Shanghai Time Outside to Reduce Myopia (STORM) trial. Design A 2‐year, school‐based, prospective, cluster randomized trial. Participants: Children from grade I and II classes of 24 schools from eight districts in Shanghai, China, were randomized to either a control group, a test group I (40‐min outdoor time/day) or test group II (80‐min outdoor time/day). Methods: At baseline and annual intervals, cycloplegic autorefraction and axial length measurement will be performed. Time outdoors and light exposure will be monitored via parent/carer questionnaires and a wearable device. Main Outcome Measures: Spherical equivalent, prevalence of myopia and time outdoors in each group. Results: A total of 6295 eligible children (age 7.2 ± 0.7 y [6‐9 y]) were randomized to control (n = 2037), test group I (n = 2329) and test group II (n = 1929). At baseline, spherical equivalent was +0.98 ± 1.02D, +1.02 ± 1.02D and +1.00 ± 0.99D (P = 0.708), myopia prevalence was 8.9, 7.7 and 7.8% (P = 0.270) and time outdoors was 58.5 ± 35.8, 59.8 ± 34.7 and 58.5 ± 35.3 min/d (P = 0.886) for control, test groups I and II, respectively. Conclusions and Relevance: Myopia prevalence was high at nearly 8 to 9% in school children aged 7 years in Shanghai, China. The current trial will help evaluate if increased time outdoors has a role to play in reducing the incidence of myopia and/or slow the progression of myopia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. Increased Vertical Asymmetry of Macular Retinal Layers in Myopic Chinese Children.
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Deng, Junjie, He, Xiangui, Zhang, Bo, Xiong, Shuyu, Zhu, Jianfeng, Wang, Ling, Wang, Mingjin, and Xu, Xun
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OPTICAL coherence tomography ,RETINAL ganglion cells - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this project is to explore the changes in and factors associated with asymmetry between the superior and inferior hemiretina in children with different refractive levels. Materials and Methods: A total of 2964 children from 12 primary and middle schools in Shanghai, China, were included. The mean thickness of the GCL+ layer (ganglion cell layer+ inner plexiform layer), the GCC layer (ganglion cell complex, a combination of the retinal nerve fiber layer and the GCL+ layer), and the neural retina was measured according to the sectors defined by the Early Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) grid with swept-source optical coherence tomography. The asymmetry index (AI), calculated via the formula AI = |log
10 (superior/inferior hemiretinal layer thickness) |, was used to assess the asymmetry of each retinal layer. Results: The mean age of the children was 11.67 (3.45) years old. The AIs of all retinal layers were larger in myopes than in hyperopes and emmetropes in the perifoveal region (all p < 0.001), and the AIs became even larger in the GCL+ layer and neural retina in children with a higher degree of myopia. However, no statistical differences were observed between various refractive groups in the parafoveal region. Regression analyses indicated that with increasing myopia, the asymmetry of retinal layers increased in the perifoveal region (all p < 0.001) and slightly decreased in the parafoveal region (all p < 0.05). Conclusions and relevance: The vertical asymmetry of retinal layers increased in the perifoveal region in myopic children, and the change in asymmetry was more obvious in the GCL+ layer and neural retina than in the GCC layer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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12. Design and methodology of the Shanghai child and adolescent large‐scale eye study (SCALE).
- Author
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He, Xiangui, Zhao, Rong, Sankaridurg, Padmaja, Zhu, Jianfeng, Naduvilath, Thomas, Ma, Yingyan, Lu, Lina, Lv, Minzhi, Smith, Iii, Earl L., Resnikoff, Serge, Naidoo, Kovin, Zou, Haidong, and Xu, Xun
- Subjects
DISEASES in teenagers ,MYOPIA ,VISUAL acuity ,SCHOOL children ,DISEASE prevalence ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Abstract: Importance: Nearly half of children suffering vision impairment reside in China with myopia accounting for the vast majority. Background: To describe the design and methodology of the Shanghai Child and Adolescent Large‐scale Eye Study (SCALE). Design: The SCALE was a city wide, school‐based, prospective survey. Participants: Children and adolescents aged 4–14 years from kindergarten (middle and senior), primary schools and junior high schools of all 17 districts and counties of the city of Shanghai, China were examined in 2012–2013. Methods: Each enrolled child underwent vision assessment (distance visual acuity; uncorrected and with corrective device if worn) and their parent/carer completed a questionnaire designed to elicit risk factors associated with myopia. Additionally, non‐cycloplegic autorefraction and ocular axial length was measured in a subset of the larger sample. Main Outcome Measures: Prevalence and the associated factors of vision impairment, myopia and high myopia in Shanghai. Results: In 2012–2013, a total of 910 245 of the eligible 1 196 763 children and adolescents identified from census (76%, mean age 9.0 ± 2.7 years [4–14 years]) were enrolled with visual acuity screened in the city of Shanghai. Of these, 610 952 children (67% of the entire sample) underwent non‐cycloplegic autorefraction and 219 188 (24% of the entire sample) had both non‐cycloplegic autorefraction and axial length measurements. Conclusions and Relevance: The study results will provide insights on the burden of vision impairment, myopia and high myopia in children and adolescents in a metropolitan area of China, and contribute to the policies and strategies to address and limit the burden. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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13. Different patterns of myopia prevalence and progression between internal migrant and local resident school children in Shanghai, China: a 2-year cohort study.
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Yingyan Ma, Senlin Lin, Jianfeng Zhu, Xun Xu, Lina Lu, Rong Zhao, Huijuan Zhao, Qiangqiang Li, Zhiyuan Hou, Xiangui He, Haidong Zou, Ma, Yingyan, Lin, Senlin, Zhu, Jianfeng, Xu, Xun, Lu, Lina, Zhao, Rong, Zhao, Huijuan, Li, Qiangqiang, and Hou, Zhiyuan
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MYOPIA ,HEALTH of school children ,SOCIAL conditions of immigrants ,PUBLIC health administration ,CHILDREN ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: In 2010, there were ~ 36 million migrant children under 18 y old in China. This study compared patterns of myopia prevalence and progression between migrant and resident children.Methods: Eight hundred forty-two migrant children from 2 migrant schools and 1081 from 2 local schools in Baoshan District, Shanghai, were randomly chosen. Baseline measurements were taken on children in grades one through four, and children in grades one and two were followed for 2 y. The children underwent comprehensive ophthalmic examinations, including cycloplegic refraction and axial length. The average time per week spent on homework and outdoor activities were investigated.Results: Migrant children in grades one and two showed a lower myopia prevalence than resident children; however, from grades three to four, the prevalence accelerated and exceeded that of residents. In the follow-up, the myopia incidence did not significantly change from grades one to two in resident children but was significantly higher in grade two in migrant children. Correspondingly, for migrant children, increased progression of refraction and axial length was observed; however, it decreased in resident children. The average time spent on homework increased from grades two to three in parallel with the acceleration of myopia prevalence for migrant children; however, the time spent outdoors did not correspondingly change.Conclusion: The patterns of myopia prevalence and progression are different between migrant and non-migrant children. The acceleration of myopia in migrant children might be a result of a change in their environment, such as intensive education pressure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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14. Comparison of noncycloplegic and cycloplegic autorefraction in categorizing refractive error data in children.
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Sankaridurg, Padmaja, He, Xiangui, Naduvilath, Thomas, Lv, Minzhi, Ho, Arthur, Smith, Earl, Erickson, Paul, Zhu, Jianfeng, Zou, Haidong, and Xu, Xun
- Subjects
CHILDREN ,MYOPIA ,REFRACTIVE errors ,CILIARY body ,CAREGIVERS - Abstract
Purpose To systematically analyse the differences between cycloplegic and noncycloplegic refractive errors ( RE) in children and to determine if the predictive value of noncycloplegic RE in categorizing RE can be improved. Methods Random cluster sampling was used to select 6825 children aged 4-15 years. Autorefraction was performed under both noncycloplegic and cycloplegic (induced with 1% cyclopentolate drops) conditions. Paired differences between noncycloplegic and cycloplegic spherical equivalent ( SE) RE were determined. A general linear model was developed to determine whether cycloplegic SE can be predicted using noncycloplegic SE, age and uncorrected visual acuity ( UCVA). Results Compared to cycloplegia, noncycloplegia resulted in a more myopic SE (paired difference: −0.63 ± 0.65D, 95% CI: −0.612 to −0.65D, 6017 eligible right eyes) with greater differences observed in younger participants and in eyes with more hyperopic RE and smaller AL. Using raw noncycloplegic data resulted in only 61% of the eyes being correctly classified as myopic, emmetropic or hyperopic. Using age and uncorrected VA in the model, the association improved and 77% of the eyes were classified correctly. However, predicted cycloplegic SE continued to show large residual errors for low myopic to hyperopic RE. Applying the model to only those eyes with uncorrected VA <6/6 resulted in an improvement ( R
2 = 0. 93), with 80% of the eyes correctly classified. A higher VA cut-off (i.e., ≤6/18) resulted in 97.5% of eyes classified correctly. Conclusion Noncycloplegic assessment of RE in children overestimates myopia and results in a high error rate for emmetropic and hyperopic RE. Adjusting for age and applying uncorrected VA cut-offs to noncycloplegic assessments improves detection of myopic RE and may help in identifying myopic RE in situations where cycloplegia is not available but does not help in identifying the magnitude of refractive error and therefore is of limited value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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15. Time Outdoors in Reducing Myopia: A School-Based Cluster Randomized Trial with Objective Monitoring of Outdoor Time and Light Intensity.
- Author
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He, Xiangui, Sankaridurg, Padmaja, Wang, Jingjing, Chen, Jun, Naduvilath, Thomas, He, Mingguang, Zhu, Zhuoting, Li, Wayne, Morgan, Ian G., Xiong, Shuyu, Zhu, Jianfeng, Zou, Haidong, Rose, Kathryn A., Zhang, Bo, Weng, Rebecca, Resnikoff, Serge, and Xu, Xun
- Subjects
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CLUSTER randomized controlled trials , *LIGHT intensity , *MYOPIA , *SCHOOL day - Abstract
To evaluate the efficacy of time outdoors per school day over 2 years on myopia onset and shift. A prospective, cluster-randomized, examiner-masked, 3-arm trial. A total of 6295 students aged 6 to 9 years from 24 primary schools in Shanghai, China, stratified and randomized by school in a 1:1:1 ratio to control (n = 2037), test I (n = 2329), or test II (n = 1929) group. An additional 40 or 80 minutes of outdoor time was allocated to each school day for test I and II groups. Children in the control group continued their habitual outdoor time. Objective monitoring of outdoor and indoor time and light intensity each day was measured with a wrist-worn wearable during the second-year follow-up. The 2-year cumulative incidence of myopia (defined as cycloplegic spherical equivalent [SE] of ≤–0.5 diopters [D] in the right eye) among the students without myopia at baseline and changes in SE and axial length (AL) after 2 years. The unadjusted 2-year cumulative incidence of myopia was 24.9%, 20.6%, and 23.8% for control, test I, and II groups, respectively. The adjusted incidence decreased by 16% (incidence risk ratio [IRR], 0.84; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.72–0.99; P = 0.035) in test I and 11% (IRR = 0.89; 95% CI, 0.79–0.99; P = 0.041) in test II when compared with the control group. The test groups showed less myopic shift and axial elongation compared with the control group (test I: –0.84 D and 0.55 mm, test II: –0.91 D and 0.57 mm, control: –1.04 D and 0.65 mm). There was no significant difference in the adjusted incidence of myopia and myopic shift between the 2 test groups. The test groups had similar outdoor time and light intensity (test I: 127 ± 30 minutes/day and 3557 ± 970 lux/minute; test II: 127 ± 26 minutes/day and 3662 ± 803 lux/minute) but significantly more outdoor time and higher light intensity compared with the control group (106 ± 27 minutes/day and 2984 ± 806 lux/minute). Daily outdoor time of 120 to 150 minutes at 5000 lux/minutes or cumulative outdoor light intensity of 600 000 to 750 000 lux significantly reduced the IRR by 15%~ 24%. Increasing outdoor time reduced the risk of myopia onset and myopic shifts, especially in nonmyopic children. The protective effect of outdoor time was related to the duration of exposure and light intensity. The dose–response effect between test I and test II was not observed probably because of insufficient outdoor time achieved in the test groups, which suggests that proper monitoring on the compliance on outdoor intervention is critical if one wants to see the protective effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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16. Perceived Stigmatization, Resilience, and Diurnal Cortisol Rhythm Among Children of Parents Living With HIV.
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Chi, Peilian, Slatcher, Richard B., Li, Xiaoming, Zhao, Junfeng, Zhao, Guoxiang, Ren, Xuequn, Zhu, Jianfeng, and Stanton, Bonita
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SOCIAL stigma , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience in children , *CIRCADIAN rhythms , *HYDROCORTISONE regulation , *HIV-positive children - Abstract
Stigmatization often puts at risk the health and well-being of children from marginalized groups. One potential protective factor for such children is resilience—one’s capability to adapt flexibly, persistently, and resourcefully to stressful situations. In this study, we investigated the associations among stigmatization, resilience, and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function in a sample of 645 youths affected by parents infected with HIV. Perceived stigmatization was associated with lower cortisol levels at awakening and flatter cortisol slopes, whereas resilience was independently associated with higher levels of salivary cortisol at awakening and steeper cortisol slopes. We found evidence for an indirect effect of resilience on diurnal cortisol through lower perceived stigmatization. These associations remained significant after we controlled for demographic and health factors and stressful life events. Our findings demonstrate that perceived stigmatization and resilience are associated with HPA-axis functioning in childhood. Broadly, the data suggest that resilience-promoting and stigma-reducing efforts should be considered to improve the health of children from disadvantaged groups. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
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