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A longitudinal study of cycloplegic refraction in a cohort of 350 Japanese schoolchildren. Cycloplegic refraction
Author(s) -
Watanabe S.,
Yamashita T.,
Ohba N.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
ophthalmic and physiological optics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.147
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1475-1313
pISSN - 0275-5408
DOI - 10.1046/j.1475-1313.1999.00406.x
Subject(s) - emmetropia , cycloplegia , medicine , refraction , linear regression , ophthalmology , optometry , longitudinal study , cohort , refractive error , demography , visual acuity , mathematics , optics , physics , statistics , pathology , sociology
Summary We performed a 5 year longitudinal study of cycloplegic refraction in a cohort of 350 Japanese schoolchildren from 6 to 11 years of age in a rural area of southwestern Japan. The spherical refraction was measured under cycloplegia with an infrared autorefractometer. The grouped data from 350 right eyes showed leptokurtic frequency distributions, and the median was +0.91 D at age 6 yrs, shifted towards emmetropia with increasing age and reached +0.34 D at age 11 years. The prevalence of myopia of −1.0 D or more was 0.3%, 0.6%, 2.0%, 2.6%, 2.9%, and 4.9% from age 6 to 11 years, and the prevalence of myopia of more than −2.0 D was less than 1% at age 6–9 years and thereafter increased up to 6.0% at age 11 years. Linear regression analysis for the longitudinal refractive data revealed that 247 (70.6%) of the 350 eyes exhibited first‐order linear decrease in hyperopia or increase in myopia with an average annual change of −0.15 D/year, 14 (4%) showed second‐order curvilinear change, and 89 (25.4%) remained unchanged. In the eyes with linear change, there was a significant relationship between the refraction at age 6 years and the rate of subsequent change such that the less hyperopic or emmetropic at age 6 years, the larger the change. The refraction at birth was estimated by extrapolation of the linear regression analysis results, implying that 88% of newborns have hyperopia of +1.0 D or greater and myopia is rare. These results indicate the current state of refraction in Japanese schoolchildren of a rural area.

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