ABSTRACT
PURPOSE: To investigate the influence of method of measurement and refractive error on the open-loop accommodation response. METHODS: Open-loop accommodation was measured in darkness (dark accommodation, DA) and using a pinhole pupil (pinhole accommodation, PA) in emmetropic subjects (EMMs, n = 63), subjects with late-onset myopia (LOMs, n = 50) and subjects with early onset myopia (EOMs, n = 51). Further a control experiment examined the differences between DA and bright-field accommodation (BA) conditions in a subset of subjects. All measurements of open-loop accommodation were carried out monocularly using a Canon R1 infra-red optometer in static recording mode. All myopic subjects were fully corrected using soft contact lenses. RESULTS: A significant variation (p < 0.001) in open-loop accommodation was found between DA and PA, but no variation in open-loop level was observed between the three refractive groups. There was no interaction between these two factors. No significant difference was found between the BA level and DA level in any of the refractive groups. CONCLUSIONS: Open-loop accommodation response positions vary according to the experimental conditions employed during measurement. No refractive group differences in the open-loop response were apparent.
Subject(s)
Accommodation, Ocular/physiology , Myopia/physiopathology , Refractive Errors/physiopathology , Adolescent , Adult , Dark Adaptation , Humans , Light , Pupil , Refraction, OcularABSTRACT
Using topical instillation of non-selective and selective beta-adrenoceptor antagonists we examine the proposal that a deficit in inhibitory sympathetic innervation of ciliary smooth muscle may be a specific precursor to the onset and development of late-onset myopia (LOM). Post-task accommodative hysteresis, a possible consequence of such a deficit, was assessed by measuring the time-course of regression of accommodation when open-loop (darkness) conditions were immediately imposed following far and near tasks. For the proposal to be feasible only LOMs should exhibit post-task responses which fail to differentiate the type of beta-antagonist employed. As the overall profile of responses to beta-adrenoceptor antagonism was equivalent for each of the three different refractive groups (emmetropes N = 6; early-onset myopes N = 5; LOMs N = 5) we conclude that a propensity to LOM is not associated with a deficit in sympathetic inhibition.