Higher order aberrations and retinal image quality during short-term accommodation in children

•Higher order aberrations increase significantly during accommodation in children.•Accommodation-induced optical changes in children degraded retinal image quality.•Primary spherical aberration (C40) shifts negatively during accommodation in children.•Optical changes during near work in children cou...

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Veröffentlicht in:Vision research (Oxford) 2021-11, Vol.188, p.74-84
Hauptverfasser: Hughes, Rohan P.J., Read, Scott A., Collins, Michael J., Vincent, Stephen J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Higher order aberrations increase significantly during accommodation in children.•Accommodation-induced optical changes in children degraded retinal image quality.•Primary spherical aberration (C40) shifts negatively during accommodation in children.•Optical changes during near work in children could act as a myopiagenic stimulus. Changes in higher order aberrations (HOA’s) and retinal image quality during accommodation have not previously been examined in children. This study measured ocular HOA’s in ninety non-myopic, school-aged children during short-term accommodation tasks at 0, 3, 6, and 9 D demands presented via a Badal optometer mounted to a Hartmann-Shack wavefront aberrometer (COAS-HD, Wavefront Sciences). Eighty-four participants who exhibited active accommodation were included in the analyses. An eighth order Zernike polynomial was fit across a 2.3 mm, 4 mm, and natural pupil diameter to evaluate changes in refractive power vectors (M, J180, and J45), accommodation errors (lags and leads), HOA root mean square (RMS) variables, individual Zernike coefficients, and the visual Strehl ratio based on the optical transfer function (VSOTF). All HOA RMS variables changed significantly with accommodation, with the greatest change observed for the 9 D demand. Of the individual Zernike coefficients, primary (C40) and secondary spherical aberration (C60) exhibited the greatest magnitude of change, becoming negative and positive with increasing accommodation, respectively. The VSOTF changed significantly with greater accommodation for both the 4 mm and natural pupil size, becoming significantly worse for the 9 D demand. HOA’s increase and retinal image quality decreases significantly during higher levels of accommodation in children, similar to adults. These findings provide a greater understanding of the optical properties of children’s eyes and insights into possible mechanisms for the association between accommodation, near work, and refractive error development.
ISSN:0042-6989
1878-5646
DOI:10.1016/j.visres.2021.07.004