| Literature DB >> 30817826 |
Daniel Ian Flitcroft1, Mingguang He2, Jost B Jonas3, Monica Jong4, Kovin Naidoo4, Kyoko Ohno-Matsui5, Jugnoo Rahi6, Serge Resnikoff4, Susan Vitale7, Lawrence Yannuzzi8.
Abstract
Purpose: We provide a standardized set of terminology, definitions, and thresholds of myopia and its main ocular complications.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30817826 PMCID: PMC6735818 DOI: 10.1167/iovs.18-25957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci ISSN: 0146-0404 Impact factor: 4.799
Descriptive Terms Used to Describe Various Subtypes of Myopia According to Classification Based on Presumed Etiology, Age of Onset, Progression, Amount of Myopia and Structural Complications
| Presumed etiology | Axial, benign, component, correlational, curvature, index, lenticular, physiologic, physiological, refractive, school, simple, syndromic |
| Age at onset | Childhood, congenital, acquired, juvenile onset, youth onset, school, adult, early adult onset, late adult onset |
| Progression pattern | Permanently progressive, progressive, progressive high, progressive high degenerative, stationary, temporarily progressive |
| Amount of myopia | Low, medium, intermediate, moderate, high, pathologic, pathological, physiologic, physiological, severe, simple |
| Structural complications | Degenerative, degenerative high, malignant, pathologic, pathological, pernicious, progressive, progressive high, progressive high degenerative |
Summary of Proposed General and Quantitative Thresholds for Myopia
| Qualitative definitions | |
| Myopia | A refractive error in which rays of light entering the eye parallel to the optic axis are brought to a focus in front of the retina when ocular accommodation is relaxed. This usually results from the eyeball being too long from front to back, but can be caused by an overly curved cornea and/or a lens with increased optical power. It also is called nearsightedness. |
| Axial myopia | A myopic refractive state primarily resulting from a greater than normal axial length. |
| Refractive myopia | A myopic refractive state that can be attributed to changes in the structure or location of the image forming structures of the eye, i.e. the cornea and lens. |
| Secondary myopia | A myopic refractive state for which a single, specific cause (e.g., drug, corneal disease or systemic clinical syndrome) can be identified that is not a recognized population risk factor for myopia development. |
| Quantitative definitions | |
| Myopia | A condition in which the spherical equivalent refractive error of an eye is ≤ −0.50 D when ocular accommodation is relaxed. |
| Low myopia | A condition in which the spherical equivalent refractive error of an eye is ≤ −0.50 and > −6.00 D when ocular accommodation is relaxed. |
| High myopia | A condition in which the spherical equivalent refractive error of an eye is ≤ −6.00 D when ocular accommodation is relaxed. |
| Pre-myopia | A refractive state of an eye of ≤ +0.75 D and > −0.50 D in children where a combination of baseline refraction, age, and other quantifiable risk factors provide a sufficient likelihood of the future development of myopia to merit preventative interventions. |
Definitions for the Structural Complications of Myopia
| Descriptive definitions | |
| Pathologic myopia | Excessive axial elongation associated with myopia that leads to structural changes in the posterior segment of the eye (including posterior staphyloma, myopic maculopathy, and high myopia-associated optic neuropathy) and that can lead to loss of best-corrected visual acuity. |
| Myopic macular degeneration (MMD) | A vision-threatening condition occurring in people with myopia, usually high myopia that comprises diffuse or patchy macular atrophy with or without lacquer cracks, macular Bruch's membrane defects, CNV and Fuchs spot. |
| Diagnostic subdivisions of MMD | |
| Myopic maculopathy | Category 0: no myopic retinal degenerative lesion. |
| Category 1: tessellated fundus. | |
| Category 2: diffuse chorioretinal atrophy. | |
| Category 3: patchy chorioretinal atrophy. | |
| Category 4: macular atrophy. | |
| “Plus” features (can be applied to any category): lacquer cracks, myopic choroidal neovascularization, and Fuchs spot. | |
| Presumed myopic macular degeneration | A person who has vision impairment and vision acuity that is not improved by pinhole, which cannot be attributed to other causes, and: |
| The direct ophthalmoscopy records a supplementary lens < −5.00 D and shows changes such as “patchy atrophy” in the retina or, The direct ophthalmoscopy records a supplementary lens < −10.00 D. | |
| Specific clinical conditions characteristic of pathologic myopia | |
| Myopic traction maculopathy (MTM) | A combination of macular retinoschisis, lamellar macula hole and/or foveal retinal detachment (FRD) in eyes with high myopic attributable to traction forces arising from adherent vitreous cortex, epiretinal membrane, internal limiting membrane, retinal vessels, and posterior staphyloma. |
| Myopia-associated glaucoma-like optic neuropathy | Optic neuropathy characterized by a loss of neuroretinal rim and enlargement of the optic cup, occurring in eyes with high myopia eyes with a secondary macrodisc or peripapillary delta zone at a normal IOP. |
Figure 1Variation in the choice of diagnostic thresholds for myopia in terms of spherical equivalent within epidemiologic studies included in meta-analysis (n = 138 studies).
Figure 2Variation in the choice of the inclusion thresholds for myopia in terms of spherical equivalent within intervention studies (n = 27 studies).
Figure 3Variation in the choice of thresholds for high myopia within epidemiologic studies (n = 59 studies).
Figure 4Variation in the choice of high myopia inclusion thresholds within intervention studies (n = 25 studies).