Pharmacological Effects on Accommodative Adaptation
- 1 April 1992
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Optometry and Vision Science
- Vol. 69 (4) , 276-282
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006324-199204000-00004
Abstract
We review the research which has attempted to determine whether the characteristics of autonomic innervation of ciliary smooth muscle are relevant to the process of accommodative adaptation. The effect of various topical autonomic drugs on the three phases of adaptation were analyzed: pretask tonic accommodation (open-loop); within-task accommodative response (closed-loop); and post-task regression of accommodation to pretask tonic levels. Although it is clear that parasympathetic innervation predominates, there is evidence that some individuals utilize supplementary inhibitory sympathetic innervation. When sympathetic innervation is augmented by substantial levels of concurrent parasympathetic accommodative activity, it may serve to attenuate the magnitude and duration of post-task shifts in tonic accommodation. It is proposed that individuals with a deficit in sympathetic inhibition may therefore be predisposed to anomalies of accommodative adaptation. However, the mechanism by which the oculomotor system responds to such predisposition is at present obscure.Keywords
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