| Literature DB >> 35275382 |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The aim of this article was to comprehensively review the relationship between light exposure and myopia with a focus on the effects of the light wavelength, illuminance, and contrast on the occurrence and progression of myopia.Entities:
Keywords: Illuminance; Light; Myopia; Wavelength
Year: 2022 PMID: 35275382 PMCID: PMC9114237 DOI: 10.1007/s40123-022-00490-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmol Ther
Fig. 1Relationship between light wavelength and the refraction of light on both sides of the retina. As a result of the LCA effect, short-wavelength light, such as blue light, tends to focus in front of the retina, and long-wavelength light, such as red light, tends to focus behind the retina
Fig. 2As a result of LCA, for myopic defocus, the ratio of S-cone contrast to L-or M-cone contrast is relatively constant with the increase in myopic defocus, creating a dominant change in luminance contrast and slow growth of the eye. For hyperopic defocus, the ratio of S-cone contrast to L- or M-cone contrast is nonlinear with the increase in hyperopic defocus, creating a change in the chroma and promoting the growth of the eye, which leads to myopia
(Modified from Rucker et al. [103] with permission from ARVO)
Effects of red light on myopia
| Study/year | Subjects | Light source; illuminance/luminance | Wavelength | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liu et al. [ | Infant rhesus monkeys | LED tubes; determined by the spectral sensitivity function assay | 610 nm (half bandwidth of 5 nm) | Two of nine monkeys in the RL group developed myopia at week 16 |
| Smith et al. [ | Infant rhesus monkeys | Long-wavelength-pass filters; 580 ± 235 lx | At least 50% of the light transmitted at wavelengths longer than approximately 660 nm | Eyes of the subjects belonging to both the BRL and MRL groups developed relative hyperopia after wearing the red filters |
| Gawne et al. [ | Infant tree shrews | LED tubes; 527–749 lx | 624 ± 10 nm | Three RL groups were hyperopic compared with the normal groups; the choroidal thickness appeared to be strongly increased by the RL treatment |
| Hung et al. [ | Rhesus monkeys | LED; 274 ± 64 lx | 630 nm; 20 nm half-max bandwidth | Monkeys in four RL treatment groups were significantly more hyperopic than normal monkeys; an increased choroidal thickness was observed after RL treatment |
| Gawne et al. [ | Infant tree shrews | LED; 527 lx (steady); 329 lx (flickering) | 628 ± 10 nm | Both steady and flickering red light produced strong hyperopia with a deeper vitreous chamber |
| Rucker and Wallman [ | White Leghorn chicks | Interference filters; 0.67 lx | 620 nm; 10 nm bandwidth | Degree of choroidal thickening to positive lenses was greater under red than blue light and hyperopia was induced |
| Jiang et al. [ | Children aged 8–13 years | Semiconductor laser diodes; 1600 lx | 650 ± 10 nm | A 69.4% reduction in myopia progression as detected; adjusted mean change in the choroidal thickness of the RLRL group over 12 months was 12.1 μm |
| Lin et al. [ | White Leghorn chicks | LED; 424 lx | 628 ± 10 nm | Choroidal thickness increased under red light compared with blue light, and the refractions were more hyperopia under blue than red light |
| Wang et al. [ | Guinea pigs | Red diode; 800 lx | Red flashing light | Eyes became more myopic after the red flashing light |
| Wang et al. [ | White Leghorn chicks | LED; 453 lx | 620 nm | Chicks reared under RL developed relative myopia |
| Foulds et al. [ | Chicks | LED; 33.37 cd/m2 | 600–680 nm | Axial myopia can be induced in chicks by rearing in RL and it can be reversed |
| Thakur et al. [ | Young adults | LED; 37 cd/m2 | 623 nm; half maximum width: 35 nm | Significant increase in the axial length and significant thinning of the choroid were observed |
| Ward et al. [ | Tree shrews | LED; 527–749 lx | 624 ± 10 nm | Average hyperopic shift from normal rose exponentially with increases in the duration |
| Jiang et al. [ | Guinea pigs | LED; 300 lx | 600 ± 5 nm | RL induced early thinning of the choroid and relative myopia compared with the findings observed with white light |
| Gisbert et al. [ | Chicken | Red filter spectacles; 514 ± 35 lx | Red cutoff filters with transmission above 580 nm | Hyperopia shift |
| Yang et al. [ | C57BL/6J mice | LED; 275 ± 30 lx | 629 nm | Hyperopic shift induced by RL was highly significant |
LED light-emitting diode, MRL one eye with red light, BRL both eyes with red light, RLRL repeated low-level red light therapy, RL red light
Fig. 3FR/NIR may contribute to increase choroidal perfusion and activation of the TGFβ/Smad pathway to improve sclera hypoxia, inhibiting fibroblast transdifferentiation
Fig. 4Relationship between light and myopia
| Myopia is a significant challenge for global health because of its high prevalence. |
| Substantial progress in treatment options and their effects has been made, but the mechanism of myopia remains incompletely understood. |
| Elucidating the relationship between light exposure and myopia may contribute to the development of new therapeutic modalities for myopia. |
| The effect of red light on myopia has become popular recently. |
| FR/NIR (far red/near-infrared) light has the potential to control myopia. |