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Esophoria clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00214487 Completed - Myopia Clinical Trials

Bifocal Soft Contact Lenses and Their Effect on Myopia Progression in Children and Adolescents.

Start date: October 2003
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether bifocal soft contact lenses are effective in controlling the progression of myopia in children and adolescents that exhibit a tendency to excessively cross their eyes while reading (esophoria or eso fixation disparity). Several studies have demonstrated that bifocal or progressive multifocal spectacles are effective in slowing the progression of myopia in children either with near point esophoria and/or with inadequate focusing at near. A prominent theory for one cause of myopia progression is that poorly focused images on the back of the eye (retina) cause the eye to lengthen, causing an increase in myopia. Bifocal contact lenses may reduce this retinal defocus, reducing the stimulus to eye elongation, and thus may reduce myopia progression.

NCT ID: NCT00000128 Active, not recruiting - Myopia Clinical Trials

A Trial of Bifocals in Myopic Children With Esophoria

Start date: June 1996
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

To test the hypothesis that correction with bifocal spectacle lenses rather than single-vision lenses will slow the progression of myopia in children with near-point esophoria. The primary outcome variable is cycloplegic refraction as measured with an automated refractor. Axial length is measured with ultrasound in order to test the corollary hypothesis that use of bifocals will slow ocular growth in these myopic children. We will also examine the amount of close work performed by subjects and the degree of parental myopia as factors that may influence myopia progression.