1. The Influence of Accommodative Demand on Ocular Aberrations: A Study of Zernike Coefficients Repeatability and Variability.
- Author
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Mechó-García M, Arcas-Carbonell M, Orduna-Hospital E, Sánchez-Cano A, and González-Méijome JM
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Reproducibility of Results, Prospective Studies, Adult, Young Adult, Refraction, Ocular physiology, Visual Acuity physiology, Accommodation, Ocular physiology, Aberrometry, Corneal Wavefront Aberration physiopathology, Corneal Wavefront Aberration diagnosis, Healthy Volunteers
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the repeatability of the Zernike coefficients in healthy eyes when monocular accommodation was stimulated at different vergences demands., Methods: A total of 36 right eyes from healthy volunteers were prospectively and consecutively recruited for this study. Wavefront aberrometry was conducted to objectively characterize the ocular optical quality during accommodation, from the individual's far point to a 5 D accommodation demand in steps of 0.5 D. The repeatability of Zernike coefficients up to the fourth order was assessed by calculating the within-eye repeatability ( Sw ), the coefficient of repeatability ( CR ), the coefficient of variation ( CV ), and the intraclass correlation coefficient ( ICC ) as an indicator of measurement reliability., Results: Correlation among repeated measurements showed high reliability (ICC > 0.513) for all parameters measured except some fourth-order Zernike coefficients, C(4, -4) (ICC < 0.766), C(4, -2) (ICC < 0.875), C(4, 2) (ICC < 0.778) and C(4, 4) (ICC < 0.811). Greater repeatability and less variability were obtained for high-order Zernike coefficients (CR < 0.154), although an increase in CR in the coefficients analyzed was observed with increasing accommodative demand. No clear trend was evident in CV; however, it was observed that the low-order Zernike coefficients exhibit lower CV (CV < 1.93) compared to the high-order Zernike coefficients (CV > 0)., Conclusions: The reliability of Zernike coefficients up to the fourth order in healthy young individuals demonstrated a strong consistency in measuring terms up to the fourth order, with more variability observed for high-order terms. The Zernike coefficients up to the third order exhibited the highest level of repeatability.
- Published
- 2024
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