Korean J Ophthalmol.  1992 Jun;6(1):44-49. 10.3341/kjo.1992.6.1.44.

Myopia in premature infants at the age of 6 months

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Ophthalmology, College of Medicine, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

>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.

Keyword

cryotherapy; cyclopegic refraction; myopia; premature infants; retinopathy of prematurity

MeSH Terms

Cryosurgery
Humans
Incidence
Infant
Infant, Newborn
*Infant, Premature
Korea/epidemiology
Myopia/*epidemiology
Refraction, Ocular
Retinopathy of Prematurity/epidemiology/surgery

Cited by  1 articles

Refractive Errors, Amblyopia and Strabismus in 3-year-old Premature Children
Ji Hyun Bae, Dong Gyu Choi
J Korean Ophthalmol Soc. 2010;51(10):1385-1391.    doi: 10.3341/jkos.2010.51.10.1385.

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