Myopia: Nature vs. Nuture Flashcards

1
Q

Emmetropia

A

Refractive state of the eye in which the conjugate focus of the retina is at infinity, with relaxed accommodation.

Generally -0.25 to +0.50/+0.75 (inc.)

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2
Q

Myopia

A

Refractive condition of eye where distant objects are focused in front of the retina.
D vision blurred, N is clearer
In general, eye has grown too long for the remaining refractive components
Concave spectacles used to correct

Generally ≤ -0.50

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3
Q

Hypermetropia

A

RC of eye where distant objects are focused behind the retina when accomm. is relaxed.
Eye too short, however image can be brought to focus on retina with accommodation (prov. AA sufficient)

Greater difficulty at N in moderate and high degrees of hypermetropia, BV disorders and age

Risk: convergent strabismus & amblyopia developing in infancy

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4
Q

Astigmatism

A

RC where image of point object is not single point, but 2 perpendicular lines at different distances from the optical system

Caused by ≥1 toroidal refracting surfaces of the eye

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5
Q

What are the refractive components of the eye?

A
  1. Cornea: power +43D (41-45)
  2. Lens:
    3: ACD: 3-4mm
  3. VCD: 16.5mm
  4. AL: 23.5mm (22-25) - 16.5mm neonate - 14mm in utero
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6
Q

How do we achieve emmetropia?

A

85% of ocular enlargement occurs in the 1st 3 years of life, remaining 15% over next 10-15yrs.

At birth, we are hyperopic. Eye is programmed to achieve emmetropia in youth (school aged children) and maintain this during early adulthood. Axial length contributes most to em/RE.

The refractive components change in a coordinated manner to achieve emmetropia and any breakdown of this growth coordination results in ametropia.

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7
Q

Population endpoint refractive state distribution

A

Young adult population:
Emm = 54%
Myopes = 27%
Hyperopes = 19%

Leptokurtotic distribution (large peak)

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8
Q

Relative distribution of RE in 40-90yo

A

Hyperopic shift as we age 40+

Myopic shift @ 80+ as lens becomes less flexible/formation of cataracts

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9
Q

Prevalence of myopia

A

Varies with ethnicity & location

Taiwan: 60% 12yo
AUS: 20% population; 1.5% 6yo, 13% 12yo
Singapore: 29% 6-7yo (cf. Sydney 3%)

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10
Q

Classification of Myopia

A

Degree of myopia: low, medium, high
Descriptive: association with pathology & age of onset
Cause: structural, mechanism

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11
Q

Significance of myopia

A

Very costly to healthcare system
Ocular elongation and stretch is associated with sight threatening sequelae (RD, tears/holes, CRA, glaucoma, cataracts, etc.)

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12
Q

Environmental contributors of myopia

A
Modification of visual environment
Higher education levels
Higher individual income
Professional/office-related professions
Better housing
Urban vs. rural living
Increased near work
Decreased outdoor activities

*low outdoor + high near work = 2-3x myopia risk
larger effect for outdoor than near
≥14hrs/wk of outdoor activity negated impact of having 2 myopic parents

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13
Q

Genetic contribution to myopia

A

High heritability of RE and ocular components:
- high concordance for twins (mono > dizygotic) & siblings
BUT also shared environment

FOH (AD, AR, X-LR)
Increased # of myopic parents increases:
prevalence, degree of myopia, AL, VCD, progression and AL growth

> 18 c’somal regions implicated in high myopia

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14
Q

Significance of hyperopia

A
Vision impairment
Strabismus/amblyopia
Reduced stereoacuity
Astigmatism, anisometropia
Learning difficulties, decreased academic performance
Asthenopia
Genetic and environmental factors
Syndromic conditions - crowding of ocular structures
ACG
AMD
DR?
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