Disease-Associated Visual Image Degradation and Spherical Refractive Errors in Children
- 1 October 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Optometry and Vision Science
- Vol. 62 (10) , 680-688
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00006324-198510000-00003
Abstract
Retrospective clinical data from 496 eyes of 256 children attending a low vision clinic were analyzed to determine the relation between disease states which involve visual image degradation and refractive error. Refractive data from 1023 normal vision children were used as a control. The low vision children were grouped according to their disease classification and the acknowledged age-of-onset of their visual disability. It was found that there was an overall inability to emmetropize and a trend towards myopia. It was also observed that the diseases which led to myopia were associated with a peripheral or peripheral plus central impairment of vision and that those conditions in which foveal vision was primarily impaired showed a mild hypermetropic trend. Eyes in which the visual impairment was not congenital but occurred before the age of 3 years tended to develop hypermetropia. The deviation from emmetropia decreased with increasing age-of-onset of the visual impairment, as did the variation about the mean refraction. The plastic period for emmetropization is estimated to end at 8 to 9 years of age.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: