Preschool children with insufficient physiological hyperopia experience accelerated myopic drift.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 OPHTHALMOLOGY Optometry and Vision Science Pub Date : 2025-02-17 DOI:10.1097/OPX.0000000000002235
Shimeng Bian, Jianing Pu, Wei Chen, Zhen Zhou, Ranran Zhang, Dan Wang, Xuejing Mi, Yanyan Yang, Chuzhi Peng, Huaying Xu, Mingrui Jin, Yonghong Jiao
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Abstract

Significance: This study reveals that preschool children with insufficient physiological hyperopia experience accelerated myopic drift and axial length elongation. Regular monitoring can serve as an early warning for impending myopia during early childhood, highlighting its critical role in future myopia prevention strategies.

Purpose: This study examines the patterns of spherical equivalent and biometric parameters if physiological hyperopia has shown an accelerated tendency to regress by preschool age and whether the early onset of physiological hyperopia regression accelerates myopia onset.

Methods: This kindergarten-based longitudinal observational study included 1308 children between 3 and 6 years old from kindergartens in Haidian District, Beijing, China. Comprehensive eye examinations were performed on all participants.

Results: Two grouping methods were used for all children. The first was based on their baseline age and divided into four groups of 3 to 6 years. The second was based on spherical equivalent, with spherical equivalent >0.75 D designated as the physiological hyperopia group and spherical equivalent ≤+0.75 D designated as the pre-myopia or myopia group. Physiological hyperopia and the proportion of children with physiological hyperopia displayed a declining trend over time in all age groups (p<0.001), with the older the baseline age, the more pronounced the decline (p<0.001), and the rate increased year by year (p<0.001). In contrast, axial length, anterior chamber depth, and axial length/corneal curvature radius displayed an increasing trend (p<0.001), and the rate of increase of axial length and anterior chamber depth accelerated over time (p<0.001). Female children have more physiological hyperopia and a higher proportion of children with physiological hyperopia compared with males (p<0.001) but displayed a more rapid decline (p<0.001). The axial length, anterior chamber depth, and the axial length/curvature radius were found to be elevated in the pre-myopia or myopia group in comparison to the physiological hyperopia group (p<0.001). Furthermore, the magnitude of the rate increase in myopic drift and axial length was found to be greater in the aforementioned group.

Conclusions: The regression of physiological hyperopia accelerates in preschool-age children, with older children showing faster regression and lower levels of physiological hyperopia. This premature decline correlates with an increased rate of myopic drift and accelerated biometric growth. Therefore, regular monitoring of physiological hyperopia should begin at preschool age, as the rate of regression serves as a more reliable predictor of future myopia than refraction alone.

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来源期刊
Optometry and Vision Science
Optometry and Vision Science 医学-眼科学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
7.10%
发文量
210
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Optometry and Vision Science is the monthly peer-reviewed scientific publication of the American Academy of Optometry, publishing original research since 1924. Optometry and Vision Science is an internationally recognized source for education and information on current discoveries in optometry, physiological optics, vision science, and related fields. The journal considers original contributions that advance clinical practice, vision science, and public health. Authors should remember that the journal reaches readers worldwide and their submissions should be relevant and of interest to a broad audience. Topical priorities include, but are not limited to: clinical and laboratory research, evidence-based reviews, contact lenses, ocular growth and refractive error development, eye movements, visual function and perception, biology of the eye and ocular disease, epidemiology and public health, biomedical optics and instrumentation, novel and important clinical observations and treatments, and optometric education.
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