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Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment of unilateral amblyopia: factors influencing visual outcome.

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TLDR
Factors influencing outcome with treatment for amblyopia are occlusion dose, the rate of delivery and cumulative dose worn, the initial severity of the amblyopy, binocular vision status, fixation of the Amblyopic eye, and the age of the subject at the start of treatment.
Abstract
PURPOSE To identify factors that influence the outcome of treatment for unilateral amblyopia, as a part of the Monitored Occlusion Treatment of Amblyopia Study (MOTAS). METHODS This was an intervention study consisting of three nonoverlapping phases: "Baseline", "refractive adaptation" (18 weeks of full-time spectacle wear), and "occlusion" (6 hours of patching per day, objectively monitored). Condition factors: type of amblyopia, age of participant, initial severity of amblyopia, fixation, and binocular vision status; treatment factors: refractive adaptation and occlusion (total dose [hours] and dose rate [hours per day]) were assessed for their influence on visual outcome. Visual outcome was expressed in three ways: logMAR (logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution) change, residual amblyopia, and proportion of the deficit corrected. RESULTS The study included 85 participants (mean age, 5.1 +/- 1.4 years) with amblyopia associated with strabismus (n = 32) or anisometropia (n = 20) or associated with both anisometropia and strabismus (n = 33). Treatment factors: cumulative occlusion dose exceeding 50 hours, and dose rates > or =1 hour per day resulted in (P < or = 0.01) lower residual amblyopia and a greater proportion of the deficit corrected. Condition factors associated with poor outcome (high residual amblyopia) were presence of eccentric fixation, severe initial amblyopia, and no binocular vision. CONCLUSIONS Factors influencing outcome with treatment for amblyopia are occlusion dose (the rate of delivery and cumulative dose worn), the initial severity of the amblyopia, binocular vision status, fixation of the amblyopic eye, and the age of the subject at the start of treatment.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Amblyopia and Strabismus in White and African American Children Aged 6 through 71 Months: The Baltimore Pediatric Eye Disease Study

TL;DR: In this article, the authors determined the age-specific prevalence of strabismus in white and African American children aged 6 through 71 months and of amblyopia in young children aged 30 through 31 months.
Journal ArticleDOI

Amblyopia and binocular vision.

TL;DR: Using a combination of psychophysical, electrophysiological, imaging, risk factor analysis, and fine motor skill assessment, the primary role of binocular dysfunction in the genesis of amblyopia and the constellation of visual and motor deficits that accompany the visual acuity deficit has been identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Perceptual learning as a potential treatment for amblyopia: A mini-review

TL;DR: A critical review and "meta-analysis" of perceptual learning in adults and children with amblyopia is provided, with a view to extracting principles that might make PL more effective and efficient.
Journal ArticleDOI

The clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of screening programmes for amblyopia and strabismus in children up to the age of 4–5 years: a systematic review and economic evaluation

TL;DR: The results show that the cost-effectiveness of screening for amblyopia is dependent on the long-term utility effects of unilateral vision loss, and any utility study investigating such effects would need to be careful to avoid introducing bias.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improving the performance of the amblyopic visual system

TL;DR: This review re-examines the notion of a sensitive period for the treatment of amblyopia in the light of recent experimental and clinical evidence for neural plasticity and results suggest that perceptual learning may be effective in improving a range of visual performance and, importantly, the improvements may transfer to visual acuity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The period of susceptibility to the physiological effects of unilateral eye closure in kittens

TL;DR: Kittens were visually deprived by suturing the lids of the right eye for various periods of time at different ages to study the effect of monocular eye closure on the number of cells that can be influenced by the previously closed eye.
Journal ArticleDOI

A randomized trial of atropine vs patching for treatment of moderate amblyopia in children

Stephen R. Glaser, +97 more
TL;DR: Both treatments were well tolerated, although atropine had a slightly higher degree of acceptability on a parental questionnaire and more patients in the atropin group had reduced acuity in the sound eye at 6 months, but this did not persist with further follow-up.
Journal ArticleDOI

A randomized trial of patching regimens for treatment of moderate amblyopia in children.

TL;DR: When combined with prescribing 1 hour of near visual activities, 2 hours of daily patching produces an improvement in visual acuity that is of similar magnitude to the improvement produced by 6 hours ofdaily patching in treating moderate amblyopia in children aged 3 to 7 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

A randomized trial of prescribed patching regimens for treatment of severe amblyopia in children.

TL;DR: Six hours of prescribed daily patching produces an improvement in visual acuity that is of similar magnitude to the improvement produced by prescribed full-time patching in treating severe amblyopia in children 3 to less than 7 years of age.
Book

Health For All Children

David Hall
TL;DR: The universal programme for health for all children and health care for school aged children and young people is implemented, with a focus on parents and promoting child development.
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