6 results on '"Elise B. Ciner"'
Search Results
2. Common Eye Diseases, Their Visual Outcomes, and Strategies for Enhancing Use of Remaining Vision
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Erin Kenny, Jean Marie Pagani, Sarah D. Appel, Marcy Graboyes, and Elise B. Ciner
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- 2023
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3. The Impact of Hyperopia on Academic Performance Among Children: A Systematic Review
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Sonia Mavi, Ving Fai Chan, Gianni Virgili, Ilaria Biagini, Nathan Congdon, Prabhath Piyasena, Ai Chee Yong, Elise B. Ciner, Marjean Taylor Kulp, T. Rowan Candy, Megan Collins, Andrew Bastawrous, Priya Morjaria, Elanor Watts, Lynett Erita Masiwa, Christopher Kumora, Bruce Moore, and Julie-Anne Little
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Ophthalmology ,Eyeglasses ,Hyperopia ,Academic Performance ,Visual Acuity ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Child ,Emmetropia - Abstract
PURPOSE: To assess the impact of uncorrected hyperopia and hyperopic spectacle correction on children's academic performance.DESIGN: Systematic review and meta-analysis.METHODS: We searched 9 electronic databases from inception to July 26, 2021, for studies assessing associations between hyperopia and academic performance. There were no restrictions on language, publication date, or geographic location. A quality checklist was applied. Random-effects models estimated pooled effect size as a standardized mean difference (SMD) in 4 outcome domains: cognitive skills, educational performance, reading skills, and reading speed. (PROSPERO registration: CRD-42021268972).RESULTS: Twenty-five studies (21 observational and 4 interventional) out of 3415 met the inclusion criteria. No full-scale randomized trials were identified. Meta-analyses of the 5 studies revealed a small but significant adverse effect on educational performance in uncorrected hyperopic compared to emmetropic children {SMD -0.18 [95% confidence interval (CI), -0.27 to -0.09]; P CONCLUSIONS: Evidence indicates that uncorrected hyperopia is associated with poor academic performance. Given the limitations of current methodologies, further research is needed to evaluate the impact on academic performance of providing hyperopic correction.
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- 2022
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4. Myopia in Chinese families shows linkage to 10q26.13
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Anthony M, Musolf, Claire L, Simpson, Kyle A, Long, Bilal A, Moiz, Deyana D, Lewis, Candace D, Middlebrooks, Laura, Portas, Federico, Murgia, Elise B, Ciner, Joan E, Bailey-Wilson, and Dwight, Stambolian
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Adult ,Male ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 10 ,Genetic Linkage ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,High-Temperature Requirement A Serine Peptidase 1 ,eye diseases ,Asian People ,Haplotypes ,Genetic Loci ,Myopia ,Humans ,Family ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Carrier Proteins ,Child ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Research Article - Abstract
Purpose To determine genetic linkage between myopia and Han Chinese patients with a family history of the disease. Methods One hundred seventy-six Han Chinese patients from 34 extended families were given eye examinations, and mean spherical equivalent (MSE) in diopters (D) was calculated by adding the spherical component of the refraction to one-half the cylindrical component and taking the average of both eyes. The MSE was converted to a binary phenotype, where all patients with an MSE of -1.00 D or less were coded as affected. Unaffected individuals had an MSE greater than 0.00 D (ages 21 years and up), +1.50 (ages 11–20), or +2.00 D (ages 6–10 years). Individuals between the given upper threshold and −1.00 were coded as unknown. Patients were genotyped on an exome chip. Three types of linkage analyses were performed: single-variant two-point, multipoint, and collapsed haplotype pattern (CHP) variant two-point. Results The CHP variant two-point results identified a significant peak (heterogeneity logarithm of the odds [HLOD] = 3.73) at 10q26.13 in TACC2. The single-variant two-point and multipoint analyses showed highly suggestive linkage to the same region. The single-variant two-point results identified 25 suggestive variants at HTRA1, also at 10q26.13. Conclusions We report a significant genetic linkage between myopia and Han Chinese patients at 10q26.13. 10q26.13 contains several good candidate genes, such as TACC2 and the known age-related macular degeneration gene HTRA1. Targeted sequencing of the region is planned to identify the causal variant(s).
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- 2017
5. Associations between Hyperopia and Other Vision and Refractive Error Characteristics
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Marjean Taylor, Kulp, Gui-Shuang, Ying, Jiayan, Huang, Maureen, Maguire, Graham, Quinn, Elise B, Ciner, Lynn A, Cyert, Deborah A, Orel-Bixler, Bruce D, Moore, and Maryann, Redford
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Refractive error ,Visual acuity ,Visual Acuity ,Amblyopia ,Article ,Anisometropia ,Ophthalmology ,medicine ,Humans ,Vision test ,Strabismus ,Dioptre ,business.industry ,Vision Tests ,Astigmatism ,medicine.disease ,Stereoscopic acuity ,Hyperopia ,Child, Preschool ,Head start ,Optometry ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Purpose. To investigate the association of hyperopia greater than +3.25 diopters (D) with amblyopia, strabismus, anisometropia, astigmatism, and reduced stereoacuity in preschoolers. Methods. Three- to five-year-old Head Start preschoolers (N = 4040) underwent vision examination including monocular visual acuity (VA), cover testing, and cycloplegic refraction during the Vision in Preschoolers Study. Visual acuity was tested with habitual correction and was retested with full cycloplegic correction when VAwas reduced below age norms in the presence of significant refractive error. Stereoacuity testing (Stereo Smile II) was performed on 2898 children during study years 2 and 3. Hyperopia was classified into three levels of severity (based on the most positive meridian on cycloplegic refraction): group 1: greater than or equal to +5.00 D, group 2: greater than +3.25 D to less than +5.00 D with interocular difference in spherical equivalent greater than or equal to 0.50 D, and group 3: greater than +3.25 D to less than +5.00 D with interocular difference in spherical equivalent less than 0.50 D. ‘‘Without’’ hyperopia was defined as refractive error of +3.25 D or less in the most positive meridian in both eyes. Standard definitions were applied for amblyopia, strabismus, anisometropia, and astigmatism. Results. Relative to children without hyperopia, children with hyperopia greater than +3.25 D (n = 472, groups 1, 2, and 3) had a higher proportion of amblyopia (34.5 vs. 2.8%, p G 0.0001) and strabismus (17.0 vs. 2.2%, p G 0.0001). More severe levels of hyperopia were associated with higher proportions of amblyopia (51.5% in group 1 vs. 13.2% in group 3) and strabismus (32.9% in group 1 vs. 8.4% in group 3; trend p G 0.0001 for both). The presence of hyperopia greater than +3.25 D was also associated with a higher proportion of anisometropia (26.9 vs. 5.1%, p G 0.0001) and astigmatism (29.4 vs. 10.3%, p G 0.0001). Median stereoacuity of nonstrabismic, nonamblyopic children with hyperopia (n = 206) (120 arcsec) was worse than that of children without hyperopia (60 arcsec) (p G 0.0001), and more severe levels of hyperopia were associated with worse stereoacuity (480 arcsec for group 1 and 120 arcsec for groups 2 and 3, p G 0.0001). Conclusions. The presence and magnitude of hyperopia among preschoolers were associated with higher proportions of amblyopia, strabismus, anisometropia, and astigmatism and with worse stereoacuity even among nonstrabismic, nonamblyopic children. (Optom Vis Sci 2014;91:383Y389)
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- 2014
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6. Visual Function of Moderately Hyperopic 4- and 5-Year-Old Children in the Vision In Preschoolers - Hyperopia In Preschoolers Study
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Elise B. Ciner, Marjean Taylor Kulp, Maureen G. Maguire, Maxwell Pistilli, T. Rowan Candy, Bruce Moore, Gui-shuang Ying, Graham Quinn, Gale Orlansky, Lynn Cyert, Elise Ciner, Whitley Harbison, Zack Margolies, Sarah McHugh-Grant, Erin Engle, Richard Schulang, Leah Sack, Jasmine Campbell, Julie Preston, Andrew Toole, Tamara Oechslin, Nancy Stevens, Pam Wessel, Marcia Feist-Moore, Catherine Johnson, Stacy Lyons, Nicole Quinn, Renee Mills, Maureen Maguire, Maria Blanco, Mary Brightwell-Arnold, James Dattilo, Sandra Harkins, Christopher Helker, Ellen Peskin, Gui-Shuang Ying, Jill Pentimonti, Robert H. Bradley, Laura Justice, Velma Dobson, and Maryann Redford
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Male ,genetic structures ,Visual Acuity ,Emmetropia ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Strabismus ,Dioptre ,Anisometropia ,Vision, Binocular ,business.industry ,Accommodation, Ocular ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Confidence interval ,Stereoscopic acuity ,Ophthalmology ,Meridian (perimetry, visual field) ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Hyperopia ,Child, Preschool ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Optometry ,Female ,business ,Accommodation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
To compare visual performance between emmetropic and uncorrected moderately hyperopic preschool-age children without strabismus or amblyopia.Cross-sectional study.setting: Multicenter, institutional. patient or study population: Children aged 4 or 5 years. intervention or observation procedures: Visual functions were classified as normal or reduced for each child based on the 95% confidence interval for emmetropic individuals. Hyperopic (≥3.0 diopters [D] to ≤6.0 D in the most hyperopic meridian; astigmatism ≤1.50 D; anisometropia ≤1.0 D) and emmetropic status were determined by cycloplegic autorefraction.Uncorrected monocular distance and binocular near visual acuity (VA); accommodative response; and near random dot stereoacuity.Mean (± standard deviation) logMAR distance visual acuity (VA) among 248 emmetropic children was better than among 244 hyperopic children for the better (0.05 ± 0.10 vs 0.14 ± 0.11, P.001) and worse eyes (0.10 ± 0.11 vs 0.19 ± 0.10, P.001). Mean binocular logMAR near VA was better in emmetropic than in hyperopic children (0.13 ± 0.11 vs 0.21 ± 0.11, P.001). Mean accommodative response for emmetropic children was lower than for hyperopic subjects for both Monocular Estimation Method (1.03 ± 0.51 D vs 2.03 ± 1.03 D, P.001) and Grand Seiko (0.46 ± 0.45 D vs 0.99 ± 1.0 D, P.001). Median near stereoacuity was better in emmetropic than in than hyperopic children (40 sec arc vs 120 sec arc, P.001). The average number of reduced visual functions was lower in emmetropic than in hyperopic children (0.19 vs 1.0, P.001).VA, accommodative response, and stereoacuity were significantly reduced in moderate uncorrected hyperopic preschool children compared to emmetropic subjects. Those with higher hyperopia (≥4 D to ≤6 D) were at greatest risk, although more than half of children with lower magnitudes (≥3 D to4 D) demonstrated 1 or more reductions in function.
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- 2016
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