1.Expert consensus on stages of public health strategies for myopia prevention and control in children and adolescents.
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2023;57(6):806-814
Myopia has emerged as a public health issue with the increasing prevalence of myopia in children and adolescents in China. In the clinical diagnosis and treatment of myopia, there are clinical stages and classifications, but they are not suitable for the prevention and control of myopia at the public health level. At the public health level, because there is no staging standard for myopia, there is a lack of staging prevention and control guidance for different refractive errors. Therefore, the Public Health Ophthalmology Branch of the Chinese Preventive Medicine Association organized domestic experts in relevant fields to conduct literature searches and discuss based on the research data on myopia at home and abroad, put forward the stages of public health strategies for myopia prevention and control and corresponding group prevention and control measures for each stage to reached this experts consensus. This consensus first proposes a method for assessing myopia risk, in order to predict the occurrence and development of myopia in children and adolescents; From the perspective of public health, myopia prevention and control is further divided into four stages: myopia prodromal stage, myopia development stage, high myopia stage, and pathological myopia stage. According to this consensus, myopia prevention and control technology is targeted and implemented in different stages to provide guidance for myopia prevention and control from the perspective of public health.
Humans
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Child
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Adolescent
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Public Health
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Consensus
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Myopia/epidemiology*
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Refractive Errors/epidemiology*
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Asian People
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China/epidemiology*
2.Prevalence Rate and Factors of Myopia in Preschool Children.
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2005;35(2):390-398
PURPOSE: This study was aimed at providing basic data for developing a nursing intervention program which enables systematic and correct visual acuity care by discovering out visual acuity conditions, prevalence rate of myopia, and the factors related to myopia with Preschool children. METHOD: The subjects of this study consisted of 519 children between 3 and 6 years of age from 12 kindergartens in Seoul which were selected through multiple cluster sampling. Myopia was defined as the spherical equivalent (SE) of more than -0.5 diopters (D) inthe right eye. The data was analyzed by t-test, X2-test, ANOVA, and logistic regression by using the SAS program. RESULT: The prevalence rate of myopia was 8.7%. the odds ratio of child myopia when one parent had myopia was 2.2 times higher than when neither parent had myopia. The odds ratio of child myopia when reading more than three books per week was 0.27 times higher than reading less than three books. CONCLUSION: Myopia should be continuously and intensively managed from the age of 3.
Visual Acuity
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Prevalence
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Myopia/diagnosis/*epidemiology/nursing
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Male
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Korea/epidemiology
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Humans
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Female
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Child, Preschool
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Child
3.Characteristics of optic disc parameters and its association in normal Chinese population: the Handan Eye Study.
Qing ZHANG ; Sizhen LI ; ; Yuanbo LIANG ; ; Fenghua WANG ; Weiwei CHEN ; Ningli WANG ;
Chinese Medical Journal 2014;127(9):1702-1709
BACKGROUNDAssessment of the optic disc and retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) is essential for the diagnosis and monitoring of glaucoma. Knowledge of normal optic disc topography provides a benchmark for evaluating glaucomatous pathologic changes, especially in its early stages. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the characteristics and correlation factors of the optic disc parameters using the Heidelberg Retina Tomograph II (HRT II) in a large sample of normal eyes of adult Chinese subjects.
METHODSDisc data were obtained from 6 830 subjects aged >30 years from the Handan Eye Study. All participants underwent comprehensive eye examinations and physical examinations. The associations of gender, age, body mass index, blood pressure, waist-to-hip ratio; refractive error, intraocular pressure, axial length, and disc area were assessed using simple and multiple regression analysis. The correlation between HRT II parameters was evaluated.
RESULTSOf the 7 557 eligible subjects, 6 830 took part in the study (90.4% response rate) and 2 633 normal eyes with good-quality HRT II images were selected. The mean disc area was 2.28 mm(2) (standard deviation (SD) 0.43) and mean neural rim area was 1.80 mm(2) (SD 0.29). In multiple regression analysis, optic disc area significantly correlated with age, gender, and axial length (P < 0.001). All optic disc parameters showed a significant correlation with disc area (0.054 CONCLUSIONSThe optic disc area in rural Chinese population is larger than reported in white and Japanese populations, similar to that of Indian population and urban Chinese population. Most optic disc measurements were moderately or weakly affected by disc area. In addition to the RNFL, there may be other factors affecting the rim area. The relationship between optic disc and axial length may suggest a link between larger disc area, thinning of the lamina cribrosa, and increased glaucoma susceptibility in myopic eyes.
Adult
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Female
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Glaucoma
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epidemiology
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Myopia
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epidemiology
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Optic Disk
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anatomy & histology
4.Myopia in premature infants at the age of 6 months.
Jee Youn KIM ; Sang In KWAK ; Young Su YU
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology 1992;6(1):44-49
>The authors performed cycloplegic refractions in 180 eyes of 99 premature infants at the age of 6 months to evaluate the incidence and the degree of myopia according to the development and disease course of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) and to investigate the effect of cryotherapy on the refractive error. The incidences of myopia were not different between premature infants without ROP and premature infants with spontaneously and totally regressed ROP (36.3%, 25.5%),and the degrees of myopia were low in both groups (-1.76 D, -2.25 D). In premature infants with totally regressed ROP after cryotherapy, the incidence of myopia was high (75.5%) but the degree of myopia was low (-3.03 D). In premature infants with cicatricial ROP, cryotreated or not, both the incidence and the degree of myopia were high (93.9%, -5.50 D). It is suggested that cryotherapyincreases the incidence of myopia but the degree of myopia induced by cryotherap y is low.
Cryosurgery
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Humans
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Incidence
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Infant
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Infant, Newborn
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*Infant, Premature
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Korea/epidemiology
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Myopia/*epidemiology
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Refraction, Ocular
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Retinopathy of Prematurity/epidemiology/surgery
5.Correlations between Magnitude of Refractive Error and Other Optical Components in Korean Myopes.
Sangkyu LEE ; Boyun KIM ; Tae Hoon OH ; Hyun Seung KIM
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology 2012;26(5):324-330
PURPOSE: We evaluated ocular optical components and their interrelationships in myopic Korean patients. METHODS: In this prospective observational study, 1,011 consecutive patients were recruited from a refractive surgery clinic. The best-corrected visual acuity was >20 / 20 in all patients. The refractive error, axial length (AL), anterior chamber depth (ACD), lens thickness (LT), and vitreous chamber depth (VCD) were measured by an autorefractor and partial coherence laser interferometry (IOL Master). Central corneal thickness (CCT) was measured by ORBscan II topography. RESULTS: The refractive errors had a positive correlation with LT but negative correlations with AL, ACD, VCD, and CCT. As the axial length increased, the ACD, VCD, and CCT increased but the LT decreased. The CCT had a positive correlation with gender, refractive errors, ACD, VCD, and AL but no correlation with age. The mean CCT was increased in proportion to the increase in AL. CONCLUSIONS: In myopic Korean patients, as axial elongation progressed, the VCD and ACD deepened and the CCT thickened but the LT decreased. The CCT had a positive correlation with the degree of myopia and the AL.
Adult
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Female
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Myopia/*epidemiology/therapy
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Prospective Studies
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Refractive Errors/*epidemiology/therapy
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Visual Acuity
6.Comparison of Refractive Errors Measured by Several Different Methods.
Sang Il CHOI ; Eui Sang JUNG ; Woo Jung KIM
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 2001;42(12):1729-1733
PURPOSE: Preoperative measurement of refractive error before LASIK or PRK is very important for good postoperative result because the measured refractive error is the basis of correction amount of operation. We analyzed the difference in spherical equivalent values of manifest refraction by operator (OMR), manifest and cycloplegic refraction by resident (RMR and RCR), noncycloplegic automated refraction (AMR). METHODS: The randomized charts of 50 patients (100 eyes) who had undergone LASIK or PRK for myopia at the Department of Ophthalmology at Samsung Medical Center between May 2000 and November 2000 were reviewed retrospectively and spherical equivalent values of preoperative OMR, RMR, RCR, and AMR by Nikon NRK-8000 autorefractor were analyzed by paired T-test. RESULTS: The mean spherical equivalent values of OMR, RMR, RCR, AMR were -5.40+/-2.10 D, -5.47+/-2.23 D, -5.36+/-2.18 D, -6.25+/-2.24 D, respectively. The spherical equivalent value of AMR was more myopic than the values of others and the bias was statistically significant. The absolute difference of spherical equivalent diopter between OMR and RMR was 0.27+/-0.27 D and that between OMR and RCR was 0.30+/-0.33 D. These two absolute difference did not show statistical significance. CONCLUSIONS: This study revealed that there was statistically significant difference in spherical equivalent diopter measured by AMR compared to those measured by OMR, RMR, or RCR. So we recommend the method of manifest and cycloplegic refraction by two ophthalmologists before LASIK or PRK for accurate measurement of refractive error.
Bias (Epidemiology)
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Humans
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Keratomileusis, Laser In Situ
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Myopia
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Ophthalmology
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Refractive Errors*
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Retrospective Studies
7.Ocular Findings in Children with Single Umbilical Artery: A Case Series of 14 Children.
Jongshin KIM ; Kyo Hoon PARK ; Jeong Min HWANG
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology 2014;28(2):155-158
PURPOSE: Single umbilical artery (SUA) is the most common malformation of the umbilical cord. However, there have been no studies on the ocular findings in SUA, except for one case report. This study aimed to investigate the ocular findings in children with SUA. METHODS: Fourteen children (eight boys and six girls) with SUA were evaluated retrospectively. All children underwent a complete ophthalmologic examination. RESULTS: The prevalence of abnormal ocular findings in children was up to 42.9%. Refractive errors are detected in four eyes (14.3%): myopia > or =-1.50 diopters (D) in one eye (3.6%) and hyperopia > or =+2.00 D in three eyes (10.7%). Epiblepharon was found in three children (21.4%), and strabismus was detected in one child (7.1%). CONCLUSIONS: Approximately half of the children with SUA showed abnormal ocular findings, therefore, our case series highlight the need for a comprehensive ocular examination and larger prospective research studies in young patients with SUA.
Child, Preschool
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Eyelid Diseases/*congenital/epidemiology
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Eyelids/*abnormalities
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Female
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Humans
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Hyperopia/diagnosis/*epidemiology
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Infant
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Male
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Myopia/diagnosis/*epidemiology
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Prevalence
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Retrospective Studies
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Single Umbilical Artery/*epidemiology
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Strabismus/*epidemiology
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Umbilical Arteries/*abnormalities
8.A prospective cohort study on refractive status of schoolchildren in Huangzhong District, Xining City, Qinghai Province.
Qi LIN ; En Tuan YANG ; Li LI ; Ji Feng YU ; Xue LIU ; Hua Xin ZUO ; Man Jun LIU ; Hui Hui CHU ; Yin Zheng ZHAO ; Jidi ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2022;56(9):1251-1256
Objective: To determine the characteristics and progress of the visual acuity and refractive state of schoolchildren in Huangzhong District, Xining City, Qinghai Province in China. Methods: Cohort study. Department of Ophthalmology, Beijing Children's Hospital carried out a cohort study by collecting the visual acuity and refractive state of Grade 1-5 schoolchildren among 16 primary schools in Huangzhong District, Xining City, Qinghai Province in September 2020 and July 2021. Cycloplegic retinoscopy with eye drop which contained tropicamide (0.5%) and phenylephrine hydrochloride (0.5%) was performed in children with low vision(<1.0). Myopia was defined as the spherical equivalent (SE) ≤-0.5 D after cycloplegic retinoscopy. Measurement data was analyzed by t-test and enumeration data was analyzed by χ2 test. Multiple linear regression was used to analyze the influencing factors. Results: The 2 489 individuals with repeated tests in two years were included in the follow-up study, among whom the prevalence of myopia was 26.24%(653/2 489) in 2020, while 32.94% (820/2 489)respectively in 2021. The incidence of myopia in one school year from grades 1 to 5 was 11.19%(47/420), 5.44%(21/386), 6.39%(25/391), 11.52%(44/382) and 11.67%(30/257). The average SE of children in all grades in 2021 increased negatively from the previous year (Grade 1 to Grade 5 increased respectively: 0.40 D, 0.69 D, 0.62 D, 0.52 D and 0.37 D). Conclusions: The prevalence of myopia among schoolchildren in Huangzhong District, Xining City, Qinghai Province was relatively high. There were two peaks of myopia incidence in the first, fourth and fifth grades. Female, age, and the baseline of SE were the related influencing factors for myopia progression.
Child
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Cohort Studies
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Female
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Mydriatics
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Myopia/epidemiology*
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Ophthalmic Solutions
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Phenylephrine
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Prevalence
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Prospective Studies
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Tropicamide
10.Race, culture and Myopia in 110,236 young Singaporean males.
K G Au EONG ; T H TAY ; M K LIM
Singapore medical journal 1993;34(1):29-32
Computerised data of 110,236 Singaporean males aged 15 to 25 (mean 17.75) years who underwent compulsory medical examination from April 1987 to January 1992 was used to estimate the prevalence of myopia among young Chinese, Malay, Indian and Eurasian Singaporean males. The prevalence of myopia amongst the different racial groups was compared after they had been matched for important known confounding factors such as age, sex, educational attainment and degree of urbanization of place of residence. The estimated myopia prevalence was 48.5% in Chinese, 34.7% in Eurasians, 30.4% in Indians and 24.5% in Malays. The overall myopia prevalence rate for all races combined was 44.2%. Within each educational group, the Chinese generally had the highest myopia prevalence whilst the Malays generally had the lowest. Myopia prevalence among the Indians tended to be between that of the Chinese and the Malays. Having matched the various racial groups for age, sex, educational attainment and degree of residential urbanization, it would appear that racial and cultural differences are major influences responsible for the difference in myopia prevalence observed amongst the different races.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Asia
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ethnology
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Europe
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ethnology
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Humans
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Male
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Myopia
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ethnology
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Prevalence
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Retrospective Studies
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Singapore
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epidemiology