Literature DB >> 33498877

Multifocal Orthokeratology versus Conventional Orthokeratology for Myopia Control: A Paired-Eye Study.

Martin Loertscher1,2, Simon Backhouse3, John R Phillips1,4.   

Abstract

We conducted a prospective, paired-eye, investigator masked study in 30 children with myopia (-1.25 D to -4.00 D; age 10 to 14 years) to test the efficacy of a novel multifocal orthokeratology (MOK) lens compared to conventional orthokeratology (OK) in slowing axial eye growth. The MOK lens molded a center-distance, multifocal surface onto the anterior cornea, with a concentric treatment zone power of +2.50 D. Children wore an MOK lens in one eye and a conventional OK lens in the fellow eye nightly for 18 months. Eye growth was monitored with non-contact ocular biometry. Over 18 months, MOK-treated eyes showed significantly less axial expansion than OK-treated eyes (axial length change: MOK 0.173 mm less than OK; p < 0.01), and inner axial length (posterior cornea to anterior sclera change: MOK 0.156 mm less than OK, p < 0.01). The reduced elongation was constant across different baseline progression rates (range -0.50 D/year to -2.00 D/year). Visual acuity was less in MOK vs. OK-treated eyes (e.g., at six months, MOK: 0.09 ± 0.01 vs. OK: 0.02 ± 0.01 logMAR; p = 0.01). We conclude that MOK lenses significantly reduce eye growth compared to conventional OK lenses over 18 months.

Entities:  

Keywords:  eye length; multifocal optics; myopia control; myopia progression; orthokeratology

Year:  2021        PMID: 33498877      PMCID: PMC7865534          DOI: 10.3390/jcm10030447

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Med        ISSN: 2077-0383            Impact factor:   4.241


  32 in total

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9.  Increasing Prevalence of Myopia in Europe and the Impact of Education.

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10.  Relative peripheral refraction across 4 meridians after orthokeratology and LASIK surgery.

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  3 in total

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2.  The Limited Value of Prior Change in Predicting Future Progression of Juvenile-onset Myopia.

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3.  Axial length shortening after orthokeratology and its relationship with myopic control.

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  3 in total

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