Abstract
In this review the effects of changes in the quality of the visual environment on the development of myopia during eye growth in various mammalian and avian species are described. The effect of changes in the light/dark cycle on myopia development has been studied only in the avian eye, mainly that of the domestic fowl. In the eyes of chicks reared from hatching to maturity under continuous illumination, the following findings were reported: myopia, astigmatism, increases in axial length and equatorial width, shallow anterior chamber, increase in corneal diameter, reduction of corneal curvature, increased intra-ocular pressure (IOP), low outflow facility, reduction in aqueous space, buphthalmos, macrophthalmos and glaucoma. The above mentioned changes were consistent in the majority of the studies. In a few experiments where a change in one of the above mentioned parameters was not found, no tendency for the opposite condition was reported. When the illumination level of the visual environment was changed in the avian eye there was an increase in the total size of the eye as well as exophthalmos. Other parameters were not examined. It is quite possible that myopia and eye enlargement in avians are caused by entirely different processes than myopia and eye enlargement in mammals since they can be induced either by changes in the diurnal rhythm or by low intensity light. The involvement of the pineal gland in the control of eye growth in avians is therefore possible. The effect of continuous dark rearing was studied in the avian and in the mammalian eye. In developing chicks reared in continuous darkness some enlargement of the eye took place, but a condition of hyperopia was found as opposed to the expected myopia. This result is in agreement with the results of experiments performed on monkeys and cats reared from infancy to adulthood in complete darkness. The effect of near vision conditions during growth was studied in monkeys, cats and chicks confined to small chambers, cages or rooms. A slight myopia was usually obtained in all of the above species but the incidence of myopia increased consistently in the experimental animals compared to the normal controls. The effect of optically restricting the visual field during growth was studied in chicks. Using special occluders, the eyes of the chicks were exposed only to the frontal fields of vision. This manipulation induced a considerably high myopia and an increase in the axial length of the eye and in the depth of the anterior chamber. Removal of the occluders resulted in a reversal of the induced myopia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)