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Auteur Donald Mutti
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Ajouter le résultat dans votre panier Affiner la rechercheAccommodation in Children after 4.7 Years of Multifocal Contact Lens Wear in the BLINK Study Randomized Clinical Trial / Moriah A. Chandler in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, Vol.100, 07 (Juillet 2023)
[article]
in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science > Vol.100, 07 (Juillet 2023)
Titre : Accommodation in Children after 4.7 Years of Multifocal Contact Lens Wear in the BLINK Study Randomized Clinical Trial Type de document : article de périodique Auteurs : Moriah A. Chandler ; Matthew L. Robich ; Lisa Jones-Jordan ; Donald Mutti ; David A. Berntsen ; Rachel Fenton ; Elizabeth Day ; Jeffrey J. Walline Année de publication : 2023 Langues : Français (fre) Descripteurs (mots clés) : [Thésaurus Mesh]Accommodation oculaire
[Thésaurus Mesh]Enfant
[Thésaurus Mesh]Étude comparative
[Thésaurus Mesh]Lentilles de contact
[Thésaurus Mesh]Myopie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Thérapeutique
[Thésaurus HELB]:Optique:port de lentilles de contactMots-clés : lentilles de contact multifocales souples longue durée Résumé : SIGNIFICANCE
When worn for myopia control in children, soft multifocal contact lenses with a +2.50 D add reduced the accommodative response over a 3-year period, but wearing them for more than 4 years did not affect accommodative amplitudes, lag, or facility.
PURPOSE
This study aimed to compare the accommodative response to a 3D stimulus between single-vision, +1.50-D add, and +2.50-D add multifocal contact lens wearers during 3 years of contact lens wear and then to compare accommodative amplitude, lag, and facility between the three groups after an average of 4.7 years of wear.
METHODS
Bifocal Lenses In Nearsighted Kids study participants aged 7 to 11 years old were randomly assigned to wear single-vision, +1.50-D add, or +2.50-D add soft contact lenses (CooperVision, Pleasanton, CA). The accommodative response to a 3D stimulus was measured at baseline and annually for 3 years. After 4.7 years, we measured objective accommodative amplitudes, lead/lag, and binocular facility with ±2.00-D flippers. We compared the three accommodative measures using multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA), adjusting for clinic site, sex, and age group (7 to 9 or 10 to 11 years).
RESULTS
The +2.50-D add contact lens wearers exhibited lower accommodative response than the single-vision contact lens wearers for 3 years, but the +1.50-D add contact lens wearers exhibited only lower accommodative response than did the single-vision contact lens wearers for 2 years. After adjustment for clinic site, sex, and age group, there were no statistically significant or clinically meaningful differences between the three treatment groups for accommodative amplitude (MANOVA, P = .49), accommodative lag (MANOVA, P = .41), or accommodative facility (MANOVA, P = .87) after an average of 4.7 years of contact lens wear.
CONCLUSIONS
Almost 5 years of multifocal contact lens wear did not affect the accommodative amplitude, lag, or facility of children.Permalink : https://bibliotheque.helb-prigogine.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id= [article]Exemplaires
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire Bifocal & atropine in myopia study : baseline data and methods / Juan Huang in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol. 96, 05 (Mai 2019)
[article]
in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science > vol. 96, 05 (Mai 2019)
Titre : Bifocal & atropine in myopia study : baseline data and methods Type de document : article de périodique Auteurs : Juan Huang ; Donald Mutti ; Lisa Jones-Jordan ; Jeffrey J. Walline Année de publication : 2019 Langues : Français (fre) Descripteurs (mots clés) : [Thésaurus Mesh]:M:Myopie:Myopie / thérapie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Atropine
[Thésaurus Mesh]Collecte de données
[Thésaurus Mesh]Myopie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Traitement médicamenteux
[Thésaurus HELB]:Optique:lentilles de contact bifocales souplesRésumé : SIGNIFICANCE The Bifocal & Atropine in Myopia (BAM) study aims to determine whether combining 0.01% atropine and +2.50-diopter add center-distance soft bifocal contact lenses (SBCL) slows myopia progression more than SBCL alone. The results could provide significant information on the myopia control effect of combining optical and pharmacological treatments.
PURPOSE This article describes the subject characteristics at baseline, the study methods, and the short-term effects of this combination treatment on visual acuity (VA) and vision-related outcomes.
METHODS Subjects from the BAM study who met the baseline eligibility criteria were dispensed the combination treatment for 2 weeks to determine final eligibility. Outcome measures included VA at near and distance (Bailey-Lovie logMAR charts), near phoria (modified Thorington), accommodative lag (Grand Seiko WAM-5500), and pupil size (NeurOptics VIP-200 Pupillometer). Compliance was monitored using surveys. Two subgroups in the Bifocal Lenses In Nearsighted Kids study, single-vision contact lens wearers and those who wore +2.50-diopter add SBCL, will serve as the age-matched historical controls for BAM study.
RESULTS Forty-nine BAM subjects (9.6 ± 1.4 years) were enrolled; mean spherical equivalent cycloplegic autorefraction was −2.33 ± 1.03 diopters. After 2 weeks of treatment, the best-corrected low-contrast (10% Michelson) distance VA was reduced (pre-treatment, +0.09 ± 0.07; post-treatment, +0.16 ± 0.08; P < .0001), but the high-contrast VA at near or distance was unaffected. Near phoria increased by approximately 2△ in the exo direction (P = .01), but the accommodative lag was unchanged. The pupil size was not significantly different between pre-treatment and post-treatment of either the photopic or mesopic condition. Surveys indicated that the subjects wore SBCL 77 ± 22% of waking hours and used atropine 6.4 ± 0.7 days per week.
CONCLUSIONS Two weeks of combination treatment reduced low-contrast distance VA and increased near exophoria slightly, but the subjects were compliant and tolerated the treatment well.Permalink : https://bibliotheque.helb-prigogine.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id= [article]Exemplaires
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire Compensation for Vitreous Chamber Elongation in Infancy and Childhood / Donald Mutti in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol. 100, 01 (Janvier 2023)
[article]
in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science > vol. 100, 01 (Janvier 2023)
Titre : Compensation for Vitreous Chamber Elongation in Infancy and Childhood Type de document : article de périodique Auteurs : Donald Mutti ; Loraine T. Sinnott ; Karla Zadnik Année de publication : 2023 Langues : Français (fre) Descripteurs (mots clés) : [Thésaurus Mesh]Optométrie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Réfraction oculaire
[Thésaurus Mesh]Troubles de la réfraction oculaireRésumé : SIGNIFICANCE: The ratios of diopters of change in refractive error produced per millimeter of eye elongation
(D/mm) are rarely those predicted from geometric optics because of changes in other ocular components. Quantifying this optical compensation in millimeters instead of ratios reveals some important principles about eye
growth and refractive error.
PURPOSE: The study purpose was to sort total vitreous chamber elongation into millimeters that either contributed
(uncompensated) or did not contribute to change in refractive error (compensated).
METHODS: Participants were infants in the Berkeley Infant Biometry Study (n = 271, ages 3 months to 6 years) or
schoolchildren in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error (n = 456 emmetropes
and 522 myopes, ages 6 to 14 years). Refractive error was measured using cycloplegic retinoscopy in infants
(cyclopentolate 1%) and cycloplegic autorefraction in schoolchildren (tropicamide 1% or combined with
cyclopentolate 1%). Axial dimensions were assessed using A-scan ultrasonography. Uncompensated millimeters
were estimated from ratios of change in refractive error per millimeter of elongation using Gullstrand eye models.
Compensated millimeters were the difference between measured elongation and uncompensated millimeters.
RESULTS: Compensated millimeters exceeded uncompensated millimeters in emmetropic children across ages,
but uncompensated millimeters exceeded compensated millimeters in myopic children. Compensated millimeters
were highest in infancy and decreased with age, reaching less than 0.10 mm per year by age 10 years in both myopic and emmetropic children. There were no statistically significant differences in compensated millimeters between myopic and emmetropic children between ages 8 and 14 years (P values from .17 to .73).
CONCLUSIONS: The ability of the ocular components, primarily crystalline lens, to compensate for vitreous elongation is independent of the higher demands of myopic eye growth. The limited compensation after age 10 years
suggests the target for elongation in myopia control needed to arrest myopia progression may be that seen in
emmetropes or less.Permalink : https://bibliotheque.helb-prigogine.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id= [article]Exemplaires
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire Effect of Combining 0.01% Atropine with Soft Multifocal Contact Lenses on Myopia Progression in Children / Jenny Huang Jones in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol.99, 05 (Mai 2022)
[article]
in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science > vol.99, 05 (Mai 2022)
Titre : Effect of Combining 0.01% Atropine with Soft Multifocal Contact Lenses on Myopia Progression in Children Type de document : article de périodique Auteurs : Jenny Huang Jones ; Donald Mutti ; Lisa Jones-Jordan ; Jeffrey J. Walline Année de publication : 2022 Langues : Français (fre) Descripteurs (mots clés) : [Thésaurus Mesh]:M:Myopie:Myopie / thérapie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Atropine
[Thésaurus Mesh]Enfant
[Thésaurus Mesh]Évolution de la maladie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Lentilles de contactMots-clés : lentilles de contact multifocales souples Résumé : SIGNIFICANCE: Combining 0.01% atropine with soft multifocal contact lenses (SMCLs) failed to demonstrate better myopia control than SMCLs alone.
PURPOSE: The Bifocal & Atropine in Myopia (BAM) Study investigated whether combining 0.01% atropine andSMCLs with +2.50-D add power leads to greater slowing of myopia progression and axial elongation than SMCLs alone.
METHODS: Participants of the BAM Study wore SMCLs with +2.50-D add power daily and administered 0.01% atropine eye drops nightly (n = 46). The BAM subjects (bifocal-atropine) were age-matched to 46 participants in the Bifocal Lenses in Nearsighted Kids Study who wore SMCLs with +2.50-D add power (bifocal) and 46 Bifocal Lenses in Nearsighted Kids participants who wore single-vision contact lenses (single vision). The primary outcome was the 3-year change in spherical equivalent refractive error determined by cycloplegic autorefraction, and the 3-year change in axial elongation was also evaluated.
RESULTS: Of the total 138 subjects, the mean ± standard deviation age was 10.1 ± 1.2 years, and the mean ± standard deviation spherical equivalent was −2.28 ± 0.89 D. The 3-year adjusted mean myopia progression was −0.52 D for bifocal-atropine, −0.55 D for bifocal, and −1.09 D for single vision. The difference in myopia progression was 0.03 D (95% confidence interval [CI], −0.14 to 0.21 D) for bifocal-atropine versus bifocal and 0.57 D (95% CI, 0.38 to 0.77 D) for bifocal-atropine versus single vision. The 3-year adjusted axial elongation was 0.31 mm for bifocal-atropine, 0.39 mm for bifocal, and 0.68 mm for single vision. The difference in axial elongation was −0.08 mm (95% CI, −0.16 to 0.002 mm) for bifocal-atropine versus bifocal and −0.37 mm (95% CI, −0.46 to −0.28 mm) for bifocal-atropine versus single vision.
CONCLUSIONS: Adding 0.01% atropine to SMCLs with +2.50-D add power failed to demonstrate better myopiaPermalink : https://bibliotheque.helb-prigogine.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id= [article]Exemplaires
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire Evaluation of a Pilot Protocol for Detecting Infant Hyperopia / Ann M Morrison in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol. 100, 05 (Mai 2023)
[article]
in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science > vol. 100, 05 (Mai 2023)
Titre : Evaluation of a Pilot Protocol for Detecting Infant Hyperopia Type de document : article de périodique Auteurs : Ann M Morrison ; Donald Mutti Année de publication : 2023 Langues : Français (fre) Descripteurs (mots clés) : [Thésaurus HELB]:Paramédical:Dépistage
[Thésaurus Mesh]Amblyopie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Diagnostic
[Thésaurus Mesh]Enfant
[Thésaurus Mesh]Hypermétropie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Lecture
[Thésaurus Mesh]Réfraction oculaire
[Thésaurus Mesh]Rétinoscopie
[Thésaurus Mesh]Strabisme
[Thésaurus Mesh]Troubles de l'apprentissageMots-clés : programme pilote réfraction cycloplégique autoréfraction Résumé : SIGNIFICANCE: Highly hyperopic children are at greater risk for developing conditions such as strabismus, amblyopia, and early literacy and reading problems. High hyperopia is a common finding in infants in a pediatric medical practice, and early detection can be done effectively in that setting with tropicamide autorefraction. PURPOSE: This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a pilot screening program to detect high hyperopia in 2-month-old infants in a pediatric medical practice in Columbus, Ohio. METHODS: Cycloplegic refractive error (1% tropicamide) was measured by retinoscopy and autorefraction with the Welch Allyn SureSight (Welch Allyn/Hillrom, Skaneateles Falls, NY) in 473 infants (55.4% female) who were undergoing their 2-month well-baby visit at their pediatrician's medical practice. Cycloplegic retinoscopy (1% cyclopentolate) was repeated at a subsequent visit in 35 infants with ≥+5.00 D hyperopia in the most hyperopic meridian during the screening. RESULTS: Twenty-eight infants (5.9%) had high hyperopia (spherical equivalent, ≥+5.00 D), and 61 (12.9%) had high hyperopia (≥+5.00 D in at least one meridian of at least one eye) by retinoscopy with 1% tropicamide. The mean ± standard deviation spherical equivalent tropicamide cycloplegic refractive error measured with retinoscopy was +2.54 ± 1.54 D (range, −3.25 to +7.00 D) and with SureSight was +2.29 ± 1.64 D (range, −2.90 to +7.53 D). Retinoscopy done using 1% cyclopentolate was 0.44 ± 0.54 D more hyperopic in spherical equivalent than with 1% tropicamide ( P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: High hyperopia was a common finding in 2-month-old infants in a pediatric medical setting that could be detected effectively by cycloplegic autorefraction using tropicamide. Greater cooperation between pediatric primary vision and medical care could lead to effective vision screenings designed to detect high hyperopia in infants. Permalink : https://bibliotheque.helb-prigogine.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id= [article]Exemplaires
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire Ocular and Nonocular Adverse Events during 3 Years of Soft Contact Lens Wear in Children / Amber Gaume Giannoni in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol. 99, 06 (Juin 2022)
PermalinkRepeatability and Validity of Peripheral Refraction with Two Different Autorefractors / Ann M Morrison in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol. 97, 06 (Juin 2020)
PermalinkRepeated Low-level Red-light Therapy: The Next Wave in Myopia Management? / Aaron D. Salzano in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol. 100, 12 (Décembre 2023)
PermalinkThe Limited Value of Prior Change in Predicting Future Progression of Juvenile-onset Myopia / Donald Mutti in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol.99, 05 (Mai 2022)
PermalinkUncorrected Refractive Error and Distance Visual Acuity in Children Aged 6 to 14 Years / Robert N. Kleinstein in OVS : Optometry & Vision Science, vol. 98, 01 (Janvier 2021)
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