Literature DB >> 8300354

Influence of type and severity of pure forms of age-related cataract on visual acuity and contrast sensitivity. Italian American Cataract Study Group.

G Maraini1, F Rosmini, P Graziosi, M C Tomba, M Bonacini, R Cotichini, P Pasquini, R D Sperduto.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To compare the relationship between logMAR visual acuity (VA) and cataract severity and between contrast sensitivity (CS) and cataract severity in pure types of age-related lens opacities.
METHODS: Analysis included patients followed in the ongoing Italian-American Study of the Natural History of Age-Related Cataract. Lens opacities were classified and graded according to the Lens Opacities Classification System II (LOCS II). Visual acuity was measured with the Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study Chart. Contrast sensitivity was measured with the Pelli-Robson chart.
RESULTS: Data from 1,076 eyes were used for the analysis (366 clear lenses; 550, 124, and 36 eyes with cortical, nuclear and posterior subcapsular cataract, respectively). In age-adjusted analyses, increasing severity of all three cataract types was associated with progressively higher logMAR VA, which translates into poorer acuity, and lower CS scores. For both VA and CS, the effect of increasing severity was greatest for nuclear and least for cortical opacities. After adjusting for age and VA, CS scores were no longer associated with cataract type and severity, with the exception of advanced cortical opacities.
CONCLUSIONS: Increased cataract severity, as determined by LOCS II grading, is strongly associated with both VA and CS scores. Contrast sensitivity scores obtained from testing at low spatial frequency do not seem to offer additional information over standard VA testing in early cortical and posterior subcapsular opacities nor in nuclear cataracts.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8300354

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci        ISSN: 0146-0404            Impact factor:   4.799


  6 in total

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