46 results on '"Kleinstein RN"'
Search Results
2. Corneal and crystalline lens dimensions before and after myopia onset.
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Mutti DO, Mitchell GL, Sinnott LT, Jones-Jordan LA, Moeschberger ML, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Twelker JD, Zadnik K, CLEERE Study Group, Mutti, Donald O, Mitchell, G Lynn, Sinnott, Loraine T, Jones-Jordan, Lisa A, Moeschberger, Melvin L, Cotter, Susan A, Kleinstein, Robert N, Manny, Ruth E, and Twelker, J Daniel
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- 2012
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3. Intraocular pressure, ethnicity, and refractive error.
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Manny RE, Mitchell GL, Cotter SA, Jones-Jordan LA, Kleinstein RN, Mutti DO, Twelker JD, Zadnik K, CLEERE Study Group, Manny, Ruth E, Mitchell, G Lynn, Cotter, Susan A, Jones-Jordan, Lisa A, Kleinstein, Robert N, Mutti, Donald O, Twelker, J Daniel, and Zadnik, Karla
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- 2011
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4. Predicting the onset of myopia in children by age, sex, and ethnicity: Results from the CLEERE Study.
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Mutti DO, Sinnott LT, Cotter SA, Jones-Jordan LA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Age Factors, Age of Onset, Follow-Up Studies, Sex Factors, United States epidemiology, Asian, White, Racial Groups, Ethnicity, Myopia epidemiology, Myopia ethnology, Myopia physiopathology, Refraction, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
Significance: Clinicians and researchers would benefit from being able to predict the onset of myopia for an individual child. This report provides a model for calculating the probability of myopia onset, year-by-year and cumulatively, based on results from the largest, most ethnically diverse study of myopia onset in the United States., Purpose: This study aimed to model the probability of the onset of myopia in previously nonmyopic school-aged children., Methods: Children aged 6 years to less than 14 years of age at baseline participating in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study who were nonmyopic and less hyperopic than +3.00 D (spherical equivalent) were followed up for 1 to 7 years through eighth grade. Annual measurements included cycloplegic autorefraction, keratometry, ultrasound axial dimensions, and parental report of children's near work and time spent in outdoor and/or sports activities. The onset of myopia was defined as the first visit with at least -0.75 D of myopia in each principal meridian. The predictive model was built using discrete time survival analysis and evaluated with C statistics., Results: The model of the probability of the onset of myopia included cycloplegic spherical equivalent refractive error, the horizontal/vertical component of astigmatism (J0), age, sex, and race/ethnicity. Onset of myopia was more likely with lower amounts of hyperopia and less positive/more negative values of J0. Younger Asian American females had the highest eventual probability of onset, whereas older White males had the lowest. Model performance increased with older baseline age, with C statistics ranging from 0.83 at 6 years of age to 0.92 at 13 years., Conclusions: The probability of the onset of myopia can be estimated for children in the major racial/ethnic groups within the United States on a year-by-year and cumulative basis up to age 14 years based on a simple set of refractive error and demographic variables., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Disclosure: The authors listed report a financial conflict of interest (KZ, DOM: Vyluma, Inc.). The sponsor provided financial support but had no role in the study design, conduct, analysis and interpretation, or writing of the report. The authors were responsible for preparation of this manuscript and the decision to submit this article for publication. Each of the authors had limited access to the study data and takes full responsibility for their presentation in this article., (Copyright © 2024 American Academy of Optometry.)
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- 2024
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5. Accuracy and Repeatability of Internet-ordered Spectacle Lenses.
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Gordon A, Twa MD, Cutter G, and Kleinstein RN
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- Humans, Internet, Refraction, Ocular, Eyeglasses, Prescriptions
- Abstract
Significance: Both consumers and eye care practitioners need to know how well online optical vendors conform with the accepted standards for quality and safety. We found that almost 1 in 10 prescriptions failed to meet national standards, which is a significant improvement over previous studies., Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess the accuracy and repeatability of spectacle lens prescriptions ordered from a sample of online vendors., Methods: Spectacle lens prescriptions were ordered by paid participants with no optical training who were masked to the study objectives. The prescription powers ordered (sphere, cylinder, and axis) were statistically sampled from 1000 previously filled prescriptions. A total of 100 orders were placed with each of three online vendors that included a range of high- and low-powered single vision lenses and progressive addition lenses, and duplicate orders to assess repeatability. An independent certified testing laboratory was contracted to assess conformance with voluntary consensus standards (ANSI Z80.1-2015) and Food and Drug Administration drop-ball safety testing. Lenses not meeting these standards were counted as failures., Results: The overall failure rates for the three vendors were 11.2 ± 3.2% (vendor A), 8.0 ± 2.7% (vendor B), and 8.2 ± 2.8% (vendor C). The repeatability for 20 prescriptions ordered five times from each vendor was high, with correlation coefficients greater than 90%. There were no observed lens impact failures., Conclusions: Almost 1 in 10 spectacle lens prescriptions ordered from three online vendors failed to meet national standards for optical quality. Additional studies are needed to assess eyewear ordered online for other important patient-specific variables that can influence visual performance and ultimate acceptability of prescription eyewear, such as lens placement relative to the visual axis, frame fit, and cosmetic acceptability., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Disclosure: None of the authors have reported a financial conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 American Academy of Optometry.)
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- 2021
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6. Myopia Progression as a Function of Sex, Age, and Ethnicity.
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Jones-Jordan LA, Sinnott LT, Chu RH, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Mutti DO, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Age Distribution, Child, Disease Progression, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Myopia, Degenerative physiopathology, Prevalence, Reading, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sex Distribution, United States epidemiology, Ethnicity, Forecasting, Myopia, Degenerative ethnology, Refraction, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To model juvenile-onset myopia progression as a function of race/ethnicity, age, sex, parental history of myopia, and time spent reading or in outdoor/sports activity., Methods: Subjects were 594 children in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study with at least three study visits: one visit with a spherical equivalent (SPHEQ) less myopic/more hyperopic than -0.75 diopter (D), the first visit with a SPHEQ of -0.75 D or more myopia (onset visit), and another after myopia onset. Myopia progression from the time of onset was modeled using cubic models as a function of age, race/ethnicity, and other covariates., Results: Younger children had faster progression of myopia; for example, the model-estimated 3-year progression in an Asian American child was -1.93 D when onset was at age 7 years compared with -1.43 D when onset was at age 10 years. Annual progression for girls was 0.093 D faster than for boys. Asian American children experienced statistically significantly faster myopia progression compared with Hispanic (estimated 3-year difference of -0.46 D), Black children (-0.88 D), and Native American children (-0.48 D), but with similar progression compared with White children (-0.19 D). Parental history of myopia, time spent reading, and time spent in outdoor/sports activity were not statistically significant factors in multivariate models., Conclusions: Younger age, female sex, and racial/ethnic group were the factors associated with faster myopic progression. This multivariate model can facilitate the planning of clinical trials for myopia control interventions by informing the prediction of myopia progression rates.
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- 2021
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7. Uncorrected Refractive Error and Distance Visual Acuity in Children Aged 6 to 14 Years.
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Kleinstein RN, Mutti DO, Sinnott LT, Jones-Jordan LA, Cotter SA, Manny RE, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Accommodation, Ocular, Adolescent, Astigmatism physiopathology, Child, Female, Humans, Hyperopia physiopathology, Male, Myopia physiopathology, ROC Curve, Sensitivity and Specificity, Vision Tests, Distance Perception physiology, Refractive Errors physiopathology, Visual Acuity physiology
- Abstract
Significance: This study presents the relationship between distance visual acuity and a range of uncorrected refractive errors, a complex association that is fundamental to clinical eye care and the identification of children needing refractive correction., Purpose: This study aimed to analyze data from the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error Study to describe the relationship between distance uncorrected refractive error and visual acuity in children., Methods: Subjects were 2212 children (51.2% female) 6 to 14 years of age (mean ± standard deviation, 10.2 ± 2.1 years) participating in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error Study between 2000 and 2010. Uncorrected distance visual acuity was measured using a high-contrast projected logMAR chart. Cycloplegic refractive error was measured using the Grand Seiko WR-5100K autorefractor. The ability of logMAR acuity to detect various categories of refractive error was examined using receiver operating characteristic curves., Results: Isoacuity curves show that increasing myopic spherical refractive errors, increasing astigmatic refractive errors, or a combination of both reduces distance visual acuity. Visual acuity was reduced by approximately 0.5 minutes of MAR per 0.30 to 0.40 D of spherical refractive error and by approximately 0.5 minutes of MAR per 0.60 to 0.90 D of astigmatism. Higher uncorrected hyperopic refractive error had little effect on distance visual acuity. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis suggests that a logMAR distance acuity of 0.20 to 0.32 provides the best balance between sensitivity and specificity for detecting refractive errors other than hyperopia. Distance acuity alone was ineffective for detecting hyperopic refractive errors., Conclusions: Higher myopic and/or astigmatic refractive errors were associated with predictable reductions in uncorrected distance visual acuity. The reduction in acuity per diopter of cylindrical error was about half that for spherical myopic error. Although distance acuity may be a useful adjunct to the detection of myopic spherocylindrical refractive errors, accommodation presumably prevents acuity from assisting in the detection of hyperopia. Alternate procedures need to be used to detect hyperopia., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Disclosure: None of the authors have reported a conflict of interest (RNK, LTS, LAJ-J, SAC, JDT). DOM receives an honorarium for services on the Welch Allyn Vision Care Advisory Board. KZ is a consultant for Nevakar, LLC., (Copyright © 2020 American Academy of Optometry.)
- Published
- 2021
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8. The Response AC/A Ratio Before and After the Onset of Myopia.
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Mutti DO, Mitchell GL, Jones-Jordan LA, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Adolescent, Child, Disease Progression, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Myopia diagnosis, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Accommodation, Ocular physiology, Convergence, Ocular physiology, Myopia physiopathology, Refraction, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the ratio of accommodative convergence per diopter of accommodative response (AC/A ratio) before, during, and after myopia onset., Methods: Subjects were 698 children aged 6 to 14 years who became myopic and 430 emmetropic children participating in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error. Refractive error was measured using cycloplegic autorefraction, near work by parent survey, and the AC/A ratio by simultaneously monitoring convergence and accommodative response. The response AC/A ratios of children who became myopic were compared with age-, sex-, and ethnicity-matched model estimates for emmetropic children from 5 years before through 5 years after the onset of myopia., Results: The response AC/A ratio was not significantly different between the two groups 5 years before onset, then increased monotonically in children who became myopic until reaching a plateau at myopia onset of about 7 Δ/D compared to about 4 Δ/D for children who remained emmetropic (differences between groups significant at P < 0.01 from 4 years before onset through 5 years after onset). A higher AC/A ratio was associated with greater accommodative lag but not with the rate of myopia progression regardless of the level of near work., Conclusions: An increasing AC/A ratio is an early sign of becoming myopic, is related to greater accommodative lag, but does not affect the rate of myopia progression. The association with accommodative lag suggests that the AC/A ratio increase is from greater neural effort needed per diopter of accommodation rather than change in the accommodative convergence crosslink gain relationship.
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- 2017
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9. Prediction of Juvenile-Onset Myopia.
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Zadnik K, Sinnott LT, Cotter SA, Jones-Jordan LA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Twelker JD, and Mutti DO
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- Adolescent, Axial Length, Eye pathology, Child, Cornea physiopathology, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Hyperopia diagnosis, Lens, Crystalline physiopathology, Male, Myopia ethnology, Odds Ratio, Refraction, Ocular, Risk Factors, Myopia diagnosis
- Abstract
Importance: Myopia (nearsightedness) has its onset in childhood and affects about one-third of adults in the United States. Along with its high prevalence, myopia is expensive to correct and is associated with ocular diseases that include glaucoma and retinal detachment., Objective: To determine the best set of predictors for myopia onset in school-aged children., Design, Setting, and Participants: The Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study was an observational cohort study of ocular development and myopia onset conducted at 5 clinical sites from September 1, 1989, through May 22, 2010. Data were collected from 4512 ethnically diverse, nonmyopic school-aged children from grades 1 through 8 (baseline grades 1 through 6) (ages 6 through 13 years [baseline, 6 through 11 years])., Main Outcomes and Measures: We evaluated 13 candidate risk factors for their ability to predict the onset of myopia. Myopia onset was defined as -0.75 diopters or more of myopia in each principal meridian in the right eye as measured by cycloplegic autorefraction at any visit after baseline until grade 8 (age 13 years). We evaluated risk factors using odds ratios from discrete time survival analysis, the area under the curve, and cross validation., Results: A total of 414 children became myopic from grades 2 through 8 (ages 7 through 13 years). Of the 13 factors evaluated, 10 were associated with the risk for myopia onset (P < .05). Of these 10 factors, 8 retained their association in multivariate models: spherical equivalent refractive error at baseline, parental myopia, axial length, corneal power, crystalline lens power, ratio of accommodative convergence to accommodation (AC/A ratio), horizontal/vertical astigmatism magnitude, and visual activity. A less hyperopic/more myopic baseline refractive error was consistently associated with risk of myopia onset in multivariate models (odds ratios from 0.02 to 0.13, P < .001), while near work, time outdoors, and having myopic parents were not. Spherical equivalent refractive error was the single best predictive factor that performed as well as all 8 factors together, with an area under the curve (C statistic) ranging from 0.87 to 0.93 (95% CI, 0.79-0.99)., Conclusions and Relevance: Future myopia can be predicted in a nonmyopic child using a simple, single measure of refractive error. Future trials for prevention of myopia should target the child with low hyperopia as the child at risk.
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- 2015
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10. The contributions of near work and outdoor activity to the correlation between siblings in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study.
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Jones-Jordan LA, Sinnott LT, Graham ND, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Mutti DO, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Adolescent, Child, Disease Progression, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Refractive Errors ethnology, Refractive Errors etiology, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, Activities of Daily Living, Environmental Exposure, Ethnicity, Motor Activity, Refraction, Ocular physiology, Refractive Errors genetics, Siblings
- Abstract
Purpose: We determined the correlation between sibling refractive errors adjusted for shared and unique environmental factors using data from the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study., Methods: Refractive error from subjects' last study visits was used to estimate the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) between siblings. The correlation models used environmental factors (diopter-hours and outdoor/sports activity) assessed annually from parents by survey to adjust for shared and unique environmental exposures when estimating the heritability of refractive error (2*ICC)., Results: Data from 700 families contributed to the between-sibling correlation for spherical equivalent refractive error. The mean age of the children at the last visit was 13.3 ± 0.90 years. Siblings engaged in similar amounts of near and outdoor activities (correlations ranged from 0.40-0.76). The ICC for spherical equivalent, controlling for age, sex, ethnicity, and site was 0.367 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.304, 0.420), with an estimated heritability of no more than 0.733. After controlling for these variables, and near and outdoor/sports activities, the resulting ICC was 0.364 (95% CI = 0.304, 0.420; estimated heritability no more than 0.728, 95% CI = 0.608, 0.850). The ICCs did not differ significantly between male-female and single sex pairs., Conclusions: Adjusting for shared family and unique, child-specific environmental factors only reduced the estimate of refractive error correlation between siblings by 0.5%. Consistent with a lack of association between myopia progression and either near work or outdoor/sports activity, substantial common environmental exposures had little effect on this correlation. Genetic effects appear to have the major role in determining the similarity of refractive error between siblings., (Copyright 2014 The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.)
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- 2014
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11. Time outdoors, visual activity, and myopia progression in juvenile-onset myopes.
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Jones-Jordan LA, Sinnott LT, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Mutti DO, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Adolescent, Age of Onset, Child, Disease Progression, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Leisure Activities, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Reading, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Motor Activity physiology, Myopia epidemiology, Myopia physiopathology, Sports physiology, Vision, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the association between myopia progression and time spent outdoors and in various visual activities., Methods: Subjects were 835 myopes (both principal meridians -0.75 diopters [D] or more myopia by cycloplegic autorefraction) in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study with both progression data and at least one measure of activity associated with a progression interval. Activity data were collected by parental survey. Average activity level (mean of the activity at the beginning and the end of a 1-year progression interval) was the primary predictor in a repeated-measures mixed model. The model controlled for age, sex, ethnicity, refractive error at the beginning of the progression interval, clinic site, and type of autorefractor used. Effects were scaled based on performing an additional 10 hours per week of an activity., Results: In the multivariate model, the number of hours of reading for pleasure per week was not significantly associated with annual myopia progression at an a priori level of P ≤ 0.01, nor were the other near activities, the near-work composite variable diopter-hours, or outdoor/sports activity. The magnitude of effects was clinically small. For example, the largest multivariate effect was that each additional 10 hours of reading for pleasure per week at the end of a progression interval was associated with an increase in average annual progression by -0.08 D., Conclusions: Despite protective associations previously reported for time outdoors reducing the risk of myopia onset, outdoor/sports activity was not associated with less myopia progression following onset. Near work also had little meaningful effect on the rate of myopia progression.
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- 2012
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12. New cases of myopia in children.
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Kleinstein RN, Sinnott LT, Jones-Jordan LA, Sims J, and Zadnik K
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- Adolescent, Age Distribution, Age of Onset, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Myopia diagnosis, Prevalence, Sex Distribution, United States epidemiology, Ethnicity, Myopia ethnology, Racial Groups
- Abstract
Objective: To report the percentage of new cases of myopia in 4927 children aged 5 to 16 years who participated in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error Study between 1989 and 2009., Design: A multicenter, longitudinal, observational, volunteer study of refractive error and ocular development in children from 5 racial/ethnic groups in which the participants were children who were not myopic (right eye cycloplegic auto refraction of less myopia/more hyperopia than -0.75 diopters [D] in both principal meridians) at study entry. A new case was a diagnosis of myopia (right eye cycloplegic auto refraction of -0.75 D or more myopia in both principal meridians) after study entry., Results: Of the 4556 children entering the study who were not myopic, 749 (16.4%) received a diagnosis of myopia after study entry. Among these 749 children, the ages of the participants at diagnosis varied from 7 to 16 years, with the largest number diagnosed at age 11 years(136 participants [18.2%]). New cases of myopia occurred in 27.3% of Asians, 21.4% of Hispanics, 14.5% of Native Americans, 13.9% of African Americans, and 11% of whites. Female participants had more new cases than did male participants (18.5% vs 14.5%). Normal-birth weight children had more new cases than did low-birth weight children (16.9% vs 15.5%)., Conclusions: Sixteen percent of children enrolled in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error Study developed myopia during their school-aged years. The percentage increased yearly until age 11 years, after which it decreased. New cases of myopia varied by ethnic/racial group.
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- 2012
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13. Visual activity before and after the onset of juvenile myopia.
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Jones-Jordan LA, Mitchell GL, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Mutti DO, Twelker JD, Sims JR, and Zadnik K
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- Activities of Daily Living, Adolescent, Child, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Leisure Activities, Male, Motor Activity, Myopia ethnology, Refraction, Ocular physiology, Sports, Myopia physiopathology, Visual Acuity physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate visual activities before and after the onset of juvenile myopia., Methods: The subjects were 731 incident myopes (-0.75 D or more myopia on cycloplegic autorefraction in both meridians) and 587 emmetropes (between -0.25 and +1.00 D) in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study. Parents supplied visual activity data annually. Data from myopic children 5 years before through 5 years after myopia onset were compared to data from age-, sex-, and ethnicity-matched models of children who remained emmetropic., Results: Hours per week spent reading or using a computer/playing video games did not differ between the groups before myopia onset; however, hours per week for both activities were significantly greater in myopes than in emmetropes at onset and in 4 of the 5 years after onset by 0.7 to 1.6 hours per week. Hours per week spent in outdoor/sports activities were significantly fewer for children who became myopic 3 years before onset through 4 years after onset by 1.1 to 1.8 hours per week. Studying and TV watching were not significantly different before myopia onset., Conclusions: Before myopia onset, near work activities of future myopic children did not differ from those of emmetropes. Those who became myopic had fewer outdoor/sports activity hours than the emmetropes before, at, and after myopia onset. Myopia onset may influence children's near work behavior, but the lack of difference before onset argues against a major causative role for near work. Less outdoor/sports activity before myopia onset may exert a stronger influence on development than near work.
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- 2011
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14. Relative peripheral refractive error and the risk of onset and progression of myopia in children.
- Author
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Mutti DO, Sinnott LT, Mitchell GL, Jones-Jordan LA, Moeschberger ML, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Axial Length, Eye, Child, Disease Progression, Ethnicity, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Hyperopia ethnology, Male, Risk Factors, Hyperopia complications, Myopia etiology, Myopia physiopathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate whether relative peripheral hyperopia is a risk factor for either the onset of myopia in children or the rate of myopic progression., Methods: The risk of myopia onset was assessed in 2043 nonmyopic third-grade children (mean age ± SD = 8.8 ± 0.52 years) participating in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study between 1995 and 2007, 324 of whom became myopic by the eighth grade. Progression analyses used data from 774 myopic children in grades 1 to 8. Foveal and relative peripheral refractive error 30° in the nasal visual field was measured annually by using cycloplegic autorefraction. Axial length was measured by A-scan ultrasonography., Results: The association between more hyperopic relative peripheral refractive error in the third grade and the risk of the onset of myopia by the eighth grade varied by ethnic group (Asian children odds ratio [OR] = 1.56, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.06-2.30; African-American children OR = 0.75, 95% CI = 0.58-0.96; Hispanics, Native Americans, and whites showed no significant association). Myopia progression was greater per diopter of more hyperopic relative peripheral refractive error, but only by a small amount (-0.024 D per year; P = 0.02). Axial elongation was unrelated to the average relative peripheral refractive error (P = 0.77), regardless of ethnicity., Conclusions: Relative peripheral hyperopia appears to exert little consistent influence on the risk of the onset of myopic refractive error, on the rate of myopia progression, or on axial elongation.
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- 2011
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15. Early childhood refractive error and parental history of myopia as predictors of myopia.
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Jones-Jordan LA, Sinnott LT, Manny RE, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Mutti DO, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Refraction, Ocular, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Child of Impaired Parents, Myopia genetics, Parents, Refractive Errors genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine the utility of a child's first grade refractive error and parental history of myopia as predictors of myopia onset between the second and eighth grades., Methods: Subjects were nonmyopic children in the first grade who were enrolled in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study. Myopia was defined as -0.75 D or more myopia in both meridians (by cycloplegic autorefraction). The children were classified as having a high (versus low) risk of myopia with a cycloplegic sphere cutoff of +0.75 D or less (versus more) of hyperopia. Parental myopia was determined by a parent-completed survey. Discrete-time survival models predicted the risk of myopia., Results: Of the 1854 nonmyopic first graders, 21.3% were at high risk of myopia. More high-risk subjects had two myopic parents, 25.4% compared with 16.5% in the low-risk group (P < 0.0001). The low-risk survival function was similar regardless of the number of myopic parents. Among high-risk eighth graders, the survival probability was lower than in the low-risk group, decreasing with an increase in the number of myopic parents. The sensitivity and specificity of first grade refractive error with the number of myopic parents as predictors for myopia onset were 62.5% and 81.9%, respectively., Conclusions: First grade refractive error and the number of myopic parents can predict a child's risk of myopia; however, because the sensitivity of these factors is low, these two predictors may not be sufficient at this young age when a more accurate prediction of myopia onset is needed.
- Published
- 2010
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16. C677T methylene-H4-folate-reductase variant decreases binocular accommodation.
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Krumdieck CL, Fernandez JR, Desmond RA, Kleinstein RN, Shipp MD, and Prince CW
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- Adult, Female, Folic Acid blood, Genotype, Homocysteine blood, Humans, Male, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Accommodation, Ocular genetics, Genetic Variation, Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase (NADPH2) genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Vision, Binocular genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: The C677T polymorphism of methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) lowers the activity of this enzyme, producing moderate elevation of blood levels of homocysteine (Hcy) and lowering the levels of 5-methyl-tetrahydro-folic acid (5-MeTHFA), methionine (Meth), and S-adenosylmethionine (SAM). In this study we examined 100 apparently normal subjects of both sexes (average age 25.6 +/- 4.25) for the genotypic presence of the T allele and its association with accommodative amplitude (AA)., Methods: The amplitude of accommodation was measured by the subjective "push-up" technique. DNA from buccal cells was genotyped for the C677T polymorphism of MTHFR by a PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism genotyping assay. Descriptive statistics were obtained by frequency distribution and univariate analysis. Comparisons between monocular and binocular AA were obtained by t-test statistics or ANOVA. Associations between genotype and phenotype were analyzed using regression models., Results: The C677T polymorphism was associated with decreased binocular AA (p = 0.0087). Monocular AA was not associated with the MTHFR genotype., Conclusions: Our results suggest a role for the C677T polymorphism in damaging the neural aspects of binocular vergence accommodation. The postulated neural damage could be due to the decreased formation of 5-MeTHFA and the defective synthesis of Meth, SAM and neurotransmitters or other methyl acceptors in nervous tissue of bearers of the C677T polymorphism. The differential effect upon monocular and binocular accommodation is hypothetically explained by a greater involvement of methylation reactions in vergence accommodation. A similar mechanism is proposed to explain the prevalent insufficient accommodation of Down's syndrome in which the blood levels of Meth and SAM are reduced.
- Published
- 2008
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17. Refractive error, axial length, and relative peripheral refractive error before and after the onset of myopia.
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Mutti DO, Hayes JR, Mitchell GL, Jones LA, Moeschberger ML, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
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- Adolescent, Age of Onset, Child, Eye diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Hyperopia ethnology, Hyperopia physiopathology, Male, Models, Biological, Myopia ethnology, Ultrasonography, Eye pathology, Myopia physiopathology, Refraction, Ocular physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate refractive error, axial length, and relative peripheral refractive error before, during the year of, and after the onset of myopia in children who became myopic compared with emmetropes., Methods: Subjects were 605 children 6 to 14 years of age who became myopic (at least -0.75 D in each meridian) and 374 emmetropic (between -0.25 D and +1.00 D in each meridian at all visits) children participating between 1995 and 2003 in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study. Axial length was measured annually by A-scan ultrasonography. Relative peripheral refractive error (the difference between the spherical equivalent cycloplegic autorefraction 30 degrees in the nasal visual field and in primary gaze) was measured using either of two autorefractors (R-1; Canon, Lake Success, NY [no longer manufactured] or WR 5100-K; Grand Seiko, Hiroshima, Japan). Refractive error was measured with the same autorefractor with the subjects under cycloplegia. Each variable in children who became myopic was compared to age-, gender-, and ethnicity-matched model estimates of emmetrope values for each annual visit from 5 years before through 5 years after the onset of myopia., Results: In the sample as a whole, children who became myopic had less hyperopia and longer axial lengths than did emmetropes before and after the onset of myopia (4 years before through 5 years after for refractive error and 3 years before through 5 years after for axial length; P < 0.0001 for each year). Children who became myopic had more hyperopic relative peripheral refractive errors than did emmetropes from 2 years before onset through 5 years after onset of myopia (P < 0.002 for each year). The fastest rate of change in refractive error, axial length, and relative peripheral refractive error occurred during the year before onset rather than in any year after onset. Relative peripheral refractive error remained at a consistent level of hyperopia each year after onset, whereas axial length and myopic refractive error continued to elongate and to progress, respectively, although at slower rates compared with the rate at onset., Conclusions: A more negative refractive error, longer axial length, and more hyperopic relative peripheral refractive error in addition to faster rates of change in these variables may be useful for predicting the onset of myopia, but only within a span of 2 to 4 years before onset. Becoming myopic does not appear to be characterized by a consistent rate of increase in refractive error and expansion of the globe. Acceleration in myopia progression, axial elongation, and peripheral hyperopia in the year prior to onset followed by relatively slower, more stable rates of change after onset suggests that more than one factor may influence ocular expansion during myopia onset and progression.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Accommodative lag before and after the onset of myopia.
- Author
-
Mutti DO, Mitchell GL, Hayes JR, Jones LA, Moeschberger ML, Cotter SA, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Twelker JD, and Zadnik K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Male, Myopia ethnology, Accommodation, Ocular physiology, Myopia physiopathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate accommodative lag before, during the year of, and after the onset of myopia in children who became myopic, compared with emmetropes., Methods: The subjects were 568 children who became myopic (at least -0.75 D in each meridian) and 539 children who were emmetropic (between -0.25 D and +1.00 D in each meridian at all visits) participating between 1995 and 2003 in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study. Accommodative lag was measured annually with either a Canon R-1 (Canon USA., Lake Success, NY; no longer manufactured) or a Grand Seiko WR 5100-K (Grand Seiko Co., Hiroshima, Japan) autorefractor. Subjects wore their habitual refractive corrections while viewing a letter target accommodative stimulus of 4 D (either in a Badal system or at 25 cm from the subject, designated Badal and near, respectively) or of 2 D (Badal only). Refractive error was measured with the same autorefractor in subjects under cycloplegia. Accommodative lag in children who became myopic was compared to age-, gender-, and ethnicity-matched model estimates of emmetropic values for each annual visit from 5 years before, through 5 years after, the onset of myopia., Results: In the sample as a whole, accommodative lag was not significantly different in children who became myopic compared with model estimates in emmetropes in any year before onset of myopia for either the 4-D or 2-D Badal stimulus. For the 4-D near target, there was only a greater amount of accommodative lag in children who became myopic compared with emmetropes 4 years before onset (difference, 0.22 D; P = 0.0002). Accommodative lag was not significantly elevated during the year of onset of myopia in any of the three measurement conditions (P < 0.82 for all three). A consistently higher lag was seen in children after the onset of their myopia (range, 0.13-0.56 D; P < 0.004 for all comparisons). These patterns were generally followed by each ethnic group, with Asian children typically showing the most, African-American and white children showing the least, and Hispanic children having intermediate accommodative lag., Conclusions: Substantive and consistent elevations in accommodative lag relative to model estimates of lag in emmetropes did not occur in children who became myopic before the onset of myopia or during the year of onset. Increased accommodative lag occurred in children after the onset of myopia. Elevated accommodative lag is unlikely to be a useful predictive factor for the onset of myopia. Increased hyperopic defocus from accommodative lag may be a consequence rather than a cause of myopia.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Refractive error and ethnicity in children.
- Author
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Kleinstein RN, Jones LA, Hullett S, Kwon S, Lee RJ, Friedman NE, Manny RE, Mutti DO, Yu JA, and Zadnik K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Astigmatism ethnology, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Hyperopia ethnology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Myopia ethnology, Prevalence, Sex Distribution, United States epidemiology, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Asian statistics & numerical data, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Refractive Errors ethnology, White People statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To report the baseline prevalence of refractive error in the study population., Design: A multicenter, longitudinal, observational study of refractive error and ocular development in children from 4 ethnic groups., Patients and Methods: The study population included 2523 children (534 African American, 491 Asian, 463 Hispanic, and 1035 white) in grades 1 to 8 (age, 5-17 years). Myopia was defined as -0.75 diopters (D) or more and hyperopia as +1.25 D or more in each principal meridian, and astigmatism was defined as at least a 1.00-D difference between the 2 principal meridians (cycloplegic autorefraction)., Results: Overall, 9.2% of the children were myopic, 12.8% were hyperopic, and 28.4% were astigmatic. There were significant differences in the refractive error prevalences as a function of ethnicity (chi2, P<.001), even after controlling for age and sex (polychotomous logistic regression, P<.001). For myopia, Asians had the highest prevalence (18.5%), followed by Hispanics (13.2%). Whites had the lowest prevalence of myopia (4.4%), which was not significantly different from African Americans (6.6%). For hyperopia, whites had the highest prevalence (19.3%), followed by Hispanics (12.7%). Asians had the lowest prevalence of hyperopia (6.3%) and were not significantly different from African Americans (6.4%). For astigmatism, Asians and Hispanics had the highest prevalences (33.6% and 36.9%, respectively) and did not differ from each other (P =.17). African Americans had the lowest prevalence of astigmatism (20.0%), followed by whites (26.4%)., Conclusion: There were significant differences in the prevalence of refractive errors among ethnic groups, even after controlling for age and sex (P<.001).
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Healthy People 2010--vision objectives for the nation.
- Author
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Bowyer NK and Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Health Status, Humans, Prevalence, United States, Vision Disorders prevention & control, Health Promotion trends, Optometry trends, Vision, Ocular
- Abstract
Background: In January 2000, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released new national health goals and objectives in a report entitled Healthy People 2010. This national report includes specific objectives for improving the vision of people in the United States during the 2000-2010 decade through prevention, early detection, treatment, and rehabilitation. The vision objectives, along with other health objectives, are designed to help the nation achieve two major outcomes: (1) increase the quality and years of healthy life and (2) eliminate health disparities among different groups. These health objectives will strongly influence many health care programs and the provision of health care through laws, regulations, reimbursements, and clinical guidelines enacted by federal and state agencies., Purpose: The purpose of this article is to inform optometrists about the new Healthy People 2010 vision objectives., Methods: A summary of the Healthy People process for developing the objectives--and the specific vision objectives--is provided. These objectives address many important areas, including: regular dilated eye examinations; vision screening for preschool children; uncorrected visual impairment due to refractive errors; blindness and visual impairment in children and adolescents; visual impairment due to diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma, and cataracts; occupational eye injury; the use of personal protective eye wear in recreational activities and hazardous situations around the home; and the use of vision rehabilitation services and adaptive devices by people with visual impairments., Conclusion: These new national health goals and objectives will impact optometrists. Therefore, it is important that optometrists understand these objectives and actively work to help implement them at the national, state, and local levels. By doing this, they can help provide the services needed to reduce visual impairments and improve the vision of people in their communities.
- Published
- 2000
21. Myopia and ambient night-time lighting. CLEERE Study Group. Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error.
- Author
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Zadnik K, Jones LA, Irvin BC, Kleinstein RN, Manny RE, Shin JA, and Mutti DO
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Humans, Infant, Infant Care, Lighting, Myopia etiology
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Short-term repeatability of hand-held keratometry measurements.
- Author
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Shin JA, Manny RE, Kleinstein RN, Mutti DO, and Zadnik K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Observer Variation, Reproducibility of Results, Cornea anatomy & histology, Corneal Topography standards
- Abstract
Purpose: The Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (CLEERE) Study is a multi-center, observational investigation of ocular component and refractive error development in schoolchildren. Anterior corneal curvature is one of several ocular components which influence refractive status of the eye, and the CLEERE Study uses the Alcon Auto-Keratometer to measure corneal curvature. This report assesses the repeatability of this hand-held instrument. Previous studies have demonstrated the validity of the Alcon Auto-Keratometer; however, none have assessed its repeatability., Methods: Sixty children were recruited from clinics affiliated with the Southern California College of Optometry and the University of Houston College of Optometry. Two sets of five hand-held keratometry measurements were obtained on the right eye of each child by one investigator at each site using the Alcon Auto-Keratometer. The two sets of measurements were performed at least 10 minutes apart., Results: The mean differences between the two occasions were not significantly different from zero for either the flat or steep corneal curvature measurements regardless of the number of readings taken. The largest improvement in repeatability, primarily for the steep meridian, occurred when the first two readings were averaged. The addition of readings 3, 4, and 5 to the average did not substantially improve repeatability for either meridian. The 95% limits of agreement between the average of two readings on two occasions for the flat and steep meridians were +/-0.28 and +/-0.39 D, respectively. The 95% limits of agreement after two readings were +/-0.28, +/-0.20, and +/-0.24 D for the M, J0, and J45 vectors, respectively., Conclusion: The Alcon hand-held keratometer provides a repeatable measure of corneal curvature as demonstrated by short-term repeat agreement within +/-0.50 D. This level of repeatability can be achieved only by manually averaging two consecutive measurements.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Cycloplegia in African-American children.
- Author
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Kleinstein RN, Mutti DO, Manny RE, Shin JA, and Zadnik K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cyclopentolate administration & dosage, Cyclopentolate therapeutic use, Drug Therapy, Combination, Eye Color, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Iris physiology, Male, Mydriatics administration & dosage, Ophthalmic Solutions administration & dosage, Ophthalmic Solutions therapeutic use, Propoxycaine administration & dosage, Propoxycaine therapeutic use, Pupil drug effects, Tropicamide administration & dosage, Tropicamide therapeutic use, Accommodation, Ocular drug effects, Black or African American, Ciliary Body drug effects, Mydriatics therapeutic use, Refraction, Ocular drug effects
- Abstract
Purpose: The selection of a cycloplegic agent depends on the desired outcome, the characteristics of the patient receiving the drug, and the associated risks. The Orinda Longitudinal Study of Myopia (OLSM) has used 1% tropicamide to assess the ocular components and cycloplegic refractions in a large cohort of predominantly Caucasian children. Although tropicamide has provided adequate cycloplegia and mydriasis for the OLSM cohort, conventional clinical wisdom and scientific investigations have suggested that tropicamide might not produce adequate cycloplegia and mydriasis for subjects with darker iris pigmentation. In this study one drop of 1% tropicamide followed by one drop of 1% cyclopentolate was used to determine their effectiveness in producing adequate cycloplegia and mydriasis for cycloplegic refraction and ocular component measurements in a group of African-American children., Methods: Nineteen children [age range 5.5 to 15.6 years, mean 8.4 years +/- (SD) 2.5 years] were tested at Family HealthCare of Alabama, Eutaw, AL. Their accommodative responses were measured using a Canon R-1 autorefractor prior to and at 30, 45, and 60 min after instillation of one drop of 0.5% proparacaine, 1% tropicamide (Mydriacyl), and 1% cyclopentolate (Cyclogyl) in both eyes. A target of 20/155 letters in a 4x4 grid positioned behind a +6.50 diopter (D) Badal lens provided accommodative stimuli of 1.00 D, 2.00 D, and 4.00 D., Results: All results are presented as mean +/-1 SD. Pupils, measured from video frames, dilated rapidly and maximally at 30 min after instillation of eye drops (7.3+/-0.5 mm) Predilation, the mean accommodative responses were 0.17+/-0.29 D for the 1.00 D stimulus, 1.01+/-0.40 D for the 2.00 D stimulus, and 2.77+/-0.74 for the 4.00 D stimulus. At 30 min after drop instillation, the responses were 0.07+/-0.14 D for the 1.00 D stimulus, 0.36+/-0.35 D for the 2.00 D stimulus, and 0.77+/-0.61 for the 4.00 D stimulus. Results were very similar at 45 and 60 min after drop instillation., Conclusions: Combining 1% tropicamide and 1% cyclopentolate was very effective in providing both cycloplegia and mydriasis adequate for ocular biometry and cycloplegic refractions 30 min after drop instillation in African-American children.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Evaluating the value of low-vision services.
- Author
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Raasch TW, Leat SJ, Kleinstein RN, Bullimore MA, and Cutter GR
- Subjects
- Disability Evaluation, Humans, Optometry methods, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Quality of Life, Delivery of Health Care methods, Vision, Low rehabilitation
- Abstract
Background: Low-vision care is a widely accepted and valued service provided by many optometrists. As in other areas of health care, evaluation of the outcome of low-vision care is increasingly necessary so it can be properly positioned in the health care delivery system., Methods: This article reviews the literature relating to the prevalence of low vision, its impact on affected individuals, and how low-vision intervention affects those with visual impairments. This review considers the ways in which the impact of low-vision care has been evaluated., Results: The existing literature demonstrates that low-vision intervention can be highly valued by low-vision patients and can have a significant impact on an individual's daily life and activities. Evaluating this impact is a significant challenge-particularly if the goal is to gauge the outcome of low vision care as broadly as possible., Conclusions: Evaluation of health-related quality of life is a desirable option for evaluation of outcomes, and the application of quality of life instruments to the visually impaired population is necessary. There remain unresolved issues of optometric research that need to be addressed.
- Published
- 1997
25. Healthy People 2000--health promotion and disease prevention, a new opportunity for optometrists.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Vision Disorders prevention & control, Health Promotion legislation & jurisprudence, Optometry, Primary Prevention legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
The Healthy People 2000 objectives represent a major opportunity for optometry to expand its scope of practice, enhance its quality of patient care, and become involved in making policies and programs that will directly affect the services and patient care it provides. If optometrists take advantage of this opportunity they will: 1. Increase the visibility of optometry and enhance our image as the primary eye and vision care provider. 2. Increase the number of patients seen by optometrists. 3. Expand the number of organizations, policy makers and third party providers who understand the services optometrists provide and their importance in achieving the Healthy People 2000 objectives. 4. Increase the number of referrals from nontraditional sources. 5. Enhance the overall health of their patients. 6. Be recognized as the leader of health promotion and disease prevention activities involving eye and vision care. The question is, "Will optometrists become involved and use this opportunity?" We must look back from the perspective of the year 2000 and be able to answer this question with a definite YES!
- Published
- 1994
26. Why should optometric research be designated as a priority for the profession?
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Health Priorities, Humans, Research trends, Vision Disorders, Optometry trends
- Abstract
Research is the discovery of new information, ideas or theories that increases our knowledge and understanding of ourselves and our environment. Optometric research focuses on the health, functioning and performance of people with emphasis on their eyes and vision. The goal of optometric research is to enable optometrists to provide high quality eye and vision care for their patients.
- Published
- 1992
27. Modeling HTL of industrial workers using multiple regression and path analytic techniques.
- Author
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Smith CR, Seitz MR, Borton TE, Kleinstein RN, and Wilmoth JN
- Subjects
- Adult, Auditory Threshold, Female, Humans, Male, Regression Analysis, Risk, Auditory Fatigue, Eye Color, Noise adverse effects, Noise, Occupational adverse effects
- Abstract
This study compared path analytic with multiple regression analyses of hearing threshold levels (HTLs) on 258 adult textile workers evenly divided into low- and high-noise exposure groups. Demographic variables common in HTL studies were examined, with the addition of iris color, as well as selected two-way interactions. Variables of interest were similarly distributed in both groups. The results indicated that (1) different statistical procedures can lead to different conclusions even with the same HTL data for the same Ss; (2) conflicting conclusions may be artifacts of the analytic methodologies employed for data analysis; (3) a well-formulated theory under which path analytic techniques are employed may clarify somewhat the way a variable affects HTL values through its correlational connections with other antecedent variables included in the theoretical model; (4) multicollinearity among independent variables on which HTL is regressed usually presents a problem in unraveling exactly how each variable influences noise-induced hearing loss; and (5) because of the contradictory nature of its direct and indirect effects on HTL, iris color provides little, if any, explanatory assistance for modeling HTL.
- Published
- 1984
28. 5-year followup of the effect on optometrists of continuing education about hypertension.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN, Gordon A, Wayne J, and Charles E
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Alabama, Behavior, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Mass Screening, Middle Aged, Education, Continuing, Hypertension prevention & control, Optometry education
- Abstract
All 319 participants of an intensive continuing education course on optometric hypertension screening at the University of Alabama at Birmingham were surveyed 5 years after completion of the course. Almost 85 percent of 211 responding optometrists reported that they were continuing to screen for hypertension in their practices. They estimated that 24 percent of their patients had hypertension and that of these 11 percent were previously undetected. The criteria used by these optometrists for tentative diagnosis and referral were consistent with currently accepted guidelines. Hypertension screening by optometrists is cost-effective, and this survey suggests that continuing education courses providing intensive didactic and clinical instruction may be an effective method for changing clinicians' behavior. For most optometrists who participated in this continuing education program, the program appears to have positively changed their clinical behavior.
- Published
- 1985
29. Screening for rubella in schools of optometry.
- Author
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Kleinstein RN, Alexander WJ, and Walls LL
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Rubella immunology, Optometry, Rubella prevention & control, Rubella Vaccine therapeutic use, Students, Health Occupations
- Abstract
Rubella can cause birth defects in fetuses of pregnant women who are susceptible to this disease. Because national immunization efforts have been relatively successful, most cases of rubella occur in young adults. The School of Optometry and Jefferson County Department of Health in Alabama, and the Division of Optometry in Northeastern Oklahoma, cooperated to provide a voluntary serologic rubella screening for their students. About 9% were seronegative and were immunized against rubella. To eliminate the risk of future optometrists transmitting rubella to susceptible patients, we recommend that optometry students be screened for rubella antibodies and be provided immunization if found to be seronegative.
- Published
- 1982
30. Vision disorders in public health.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Amblyopia etiology, Amblyopia prevention & control, Blindness etiology, Cataract complications, Child, Child, Preschool, Diabetic Retinopathy complications, Eye Neoplasms complications, Female, Glaucoma complications, Humans, Infant, Macular Degeneration complications, Male, Middle Aged, Refractive Errors etiology, Strabismus etiology, Visual Acuity, Public Health, Vision Disorders etiology, Vision Disorders prevention & control, Vision Disorders psychology
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Pressure dependency of transcleral flow.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN and Fatt I
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane Permeability, Rabbits, Intraocular Pressure, Sclera physiology
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. In vivo aqueous humor oxygen tension--as estimated from measurements on bare stroma.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN, Kwan M, Fatt I, and Weissman BA
- Subjects
- Animals, Polarography instrumentation, Polarography methods, Rabbits, Aqueous Humor analysis, Cornea analysis, Oxygen analysis
- Abstract
Aqueous humor oxygen tension of the in vivo rabbit eye was estimated by a relatively atraumatic procedure. The anterior corneal surface of the eye was first scraped free of its epithelial layer. A polarographic oxygen electrode was then used to measure the oxygen tension at the bare stromal surface. Aqueous humor oxygen tension can be estimated from this measured steady-state stromal surface oxygen tension by correcting the measured oxygen tension for the tension drop across the stroma and endothelium. When animals breathed room air (155 mm Hg oxygen tension), the oxygen tension of the aqueous humor was 13 mm Hg; this rose to 150 mm Hg when the inspired oxygen tension was 713 mm Hg.
- Published
- 1981
33. Incidence and prevalence of eye cancer.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN and Lehman HF
- Subjects
- Black People, Child, Eye Neoplasms mortality, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Factors, United States, White People, Black or African American, Eye Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Cancer of the eye is the only ocular disease which directly threatens life. The average annual incidence rate (new cases) in the U.S. is about 1/100,000 population and the estimated prevalence rate (total cases) is about 12/100,000 population. With few exceptions, eye cancer occurs more frequently in whites than in blacks and more often in older than in younger people. The survival rate for persons with localized ocular tumors receiving early treatment is almost 80%. This statistic indicates the importance of optometric detection of this uncommon disease.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Simplified fitting procedures for toric soft contact lenses.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Adult, Astigmatism therapy, Humans, Pilot Projects, Contact Lenses, Hydrophilic
- Abstract
This pilot study assessed a simplified procedure for fitting toric soft contact lenses without the use of a diagnostic fitting set. The sample consisted of 12 patients (21 eyes) who has astigmatic refractive effects of -0.75 D.C. to -2.50 D.C. and who ranged in age from 21-38 years. Patients were fit using a standard protocol. Using the criteria of success as defined in this paper, 17 of the 21 eyes were successfully fit with Hydromarc toric soft contact lenses.
- Published
- 1984
35. A descriptive epidemiological study of optometry services in the Birmingham Veterans Administration Hospital.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN and Newcomb RD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Alabama, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Vision Disorders diagnosis, Hospitals, Veterans, Optometry statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The Optometry Service in the Birmingham Veterans Administration Hospital has been delivering comprehensive vision care to outpatients and inpatients for almost 3 years. The veteran population receiving care and the optometric services provi4ed are described.
- Published
- 1976
36. A survey of the graduates of the University of Alabama School of Optometry. Screening for hypertension.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN, Maxwell L, Wayne JB, and Charles ED Jr
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Alabama, Black People, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Referral and Consultation, Rural Population, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Black or African American, Hypertension epidemiology, Mass Screening, Optometry standards
- Abstract
Systemic hypertension is a major health problem in the United States. Almost 16 million people with this disease are estimated to be untreated or inadequately treated. Optometry graduates of the University of Alabama in Birmingham School of Optometry have always received clinical and didactic training in the routine assessment of blood pressure. This study reports the results of a survey of these graduates to determine the number who screened for high blood pressure following graduation, their criteria for referral, their management of hypertensive patients, and their patient characteristics. Over 90% of the optometrists surveyed screened for high blood pressure, and they screened 57% of their patients. Twenty percent of these patients were found to have high blood pressure. These results indicate that optometrists are an important and significant resource in the detection of hypertension in many high risk groups.
- Published
- 1982
37. Muscular and intraocular pressure responses among ocular-hypertensive subjects: is there a rationale for biofeedback?
- Author
-
Raczynski JM, Mason DA, Wilson RP, Silvia ES, and Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Adult, Anxiety diagnosis, Anxiety psychology, Electromyography, Female, Humans, Male, Ocular Hypertension psychology, Personality Inventory, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Stress, Psychological psychology, Biofeedback, Psychology physiology, Facial Muscles physiology, Intraocular Pressure, Ocular Hypertension physiopathology
- Abstract
Several animal and human investigations have indicated that intraocular pressure (IOP) levels may be associated with extreme drug-induced changes in the extraocular muscles. Further, recent data suggest that, among individuals with normal IOP level, moderate increases in facial muscle (EMG) activity around the eye while the eye is open are associated with increases in IOP. To investigate further the relationship between facial EMG activity and IOP levels and to examine a group of individuals with elevated IOP levels, subjects were recruited from outpatients at an optometry clinic. Three groups of subjects were selected: a group of ocular hypertensive subjects who showed elevated pressures at the optometry clinic and upon the day of testing, a group of labile ocular hypertensive subjects who evinced elevated pressures during their visit to the optometry clinic but lower pressures on the day of testing, and a group of normal IOP subjects who showed normal pressures both during their optometry clinic visit and on the day of testing. To investigate anxiety differences, subjects were administered the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, but subsequent analysis revealed no group differences. To evaluate the role of stress upon muscle (EMG) functioning around the eye, subjects were subjected to imagery and standardized mental arithmetic stressors; analyses of these results also revealed no significant group differences. Finally, subjects were given EMG biofeedback for muscle activity around the eye while IOP was assessed during five alternating periods in which they made decreases and increases in EMG activity. Results revealed significant group, period, and group by period interaction effects. The pattern of results is interpreted as implicating EMG activity in IOP fluctuations; the implications of these data for potential biofeedback and stress management treatments are discussed.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Iris color and hearing loss.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN, Seitz MR, Barton TE, and Smith CR
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Noise, Occupational, Racial Groups, Sex Factors, Eye Color, Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced etiology
- Abstract
This study investigated the relation between iris color and hearing loss in 261 adult textile workers exposed to either a low-noise environment (below 85 dB) or a high-noise environment (above 102 dB). The subjects included 48% white males, 28% white females, 15% black males, and 9% black females. No relation was found between iris color and hearing loss in the control or low-noise group. A significant relation between iris color and hearing loss or hearing threshold levels was found for workers in the high-noise environment. Other variables, however, were found to predict susceptibility to hearing loss better than iris color alone.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Screening for hypertension by optometrists.
- Author
-
Pierce JR and Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Alabama, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Hypertension diagnosis, Mass Screening, Optometry
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Estimated prevalence of ocular toxoplasmosis and toxocariasis in Alabama.
- Author
-
Maetz HM, Kleinstein RN, Federico D, and Wayne J
- Subjects
- Alabama, Humans, Ascariasis epidemiology, Eye Diseases epidemiology, Toxocariasis epidemiology, Toxoplasmosis, Ocular epidemiology
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Detectability of a luminance increment.
- Author
-
Cohn TE, Thibos LN, and Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Discrimination, Psychological, Humans, Information Theory, Male, Photic Stimulation, Psychophysics, Memory, Visual Perception
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Primary health care - the role of optometry.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN and Lehman HF
- Subjects
- Forecasting, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Mortality, Risk, Role, United States, Optometry, Primary Health Care, Vision Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
Optometrists, like all health care providers, should emphasize primary or preventive care. To provide this care optometrists must be aware of the risk factors for major causes of mortality. As an example, the risk profile for a white male age 45 to 49 years is given and discussed. Suggestions for primary vision care and detection of major risk factors by optometrists are also presented.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Self-regulated facial muscle tension effects on intraocular pressure.
- Author
-
Silvia ES, Raczynski JM, and Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Female, Glaucoma therapy, Humans, Male, Muscle Contraction, Ocular Hypertension therapy, Biofeedback, Psychology physiology, Facial Muscles physiology, Intraocular Pressure
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Reading with a 10X telescope.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- Cataract complications, Child, Humans, Male, Nystagmus, Pathologic complications, Visual Acuity, Lenses, Reading, Vision Disorders rehabilitation
- Abstract
A 10-yr-old partially sighted, one-eyed patient with 10/200 distance acuity and no experience in using an optical aid was able to read successfully by using a 10 x Selsi telescope with a + 3.50 D reading cap, an easel to hold in material upright and free his hands to hold the telescope and write, and a high-intensity desk lamp to provide adequate retinal illiumination through a congenital cataract.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Detection of diabetic retinopathy by optometrists.
- Author
-
Kleinstein RN, Roseman JM, Herman WH, Holcombe J, and Louv WC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Diagnostic Errors, Female, Fluorescein Angiography, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Referral and Consultation, Diabetic Retinopathy diagnosis, Optometry
- Abstract
Optometrists examined 25 eyes with varying severity of diabetic retinopathy. No history or clinical information was provided to the optometrists who performed fundus examinations on dilated eyes using direct or indirect ophthalmoscopes. Color stereoscopic fundus photographs were independently graded and used as the standard. Optometrists made a correct diagnosis of whether retinopathy was present in 77% of the eyes (95% confidence interval (CI): 73%, 82%). They made a correct diagnosis of the type and degree of diabetic retinopathy in 57% of the eyes (95% CI: 39%, 75%). This diagnosis rate exceeded the rate reported for physician examiners (39%) and equaled that of general ophthalmologists (52%) in the only other similar study. Sensitivity for diagnosis of diabetic retinopathy in eyes of diabetic patients using only ophthalmoscopy was 74% (95% CI: 67%, 81%), while specificity for diagnosis of the absence of retinopathy was 84% (95% CI: 73%, 96%). 100% of these optometrists would have referred the eye with preproliferative retinopathy. 53% would have referred the eye classified as proliferative retinopathy without high risk characteristics, and 79% would have referred the eye with macular edema.
- Published
- 1987
46. The availability of optometric manpower in California 1968-2000.
- Author
-
Peters HB and Kleinstein RN
- Subjects
- California, Statistics as Topic, Workforce, Optometry education
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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