View clinical trials related to Accomodation.
Filter by:This study will examine the accommodative behavior in young adults wearing multifocal soft contact lenses. undergoing myopia control treatments. Subjects will undergo auditory biofeedback training while wearing the multifocal contact lenses to improve the accommodative. This pilot study is divided into three separate experiments and aims to assess: 1. the time course of the effect of biofeedback training in young adults wearing MFCLs -- the time course group 2. whether repeated biofeedback training increases the efficacy in young adults wearing MFCLs -- the repetition group 3. whether a longer training duration, given repeatedly, increases the efficacy in young adults wearing MFCLs -- the longer duration group The results of this study will be used to design a larger clinical trial to investigate whether increasing accommodative responses through the multifocal contact lenses increases multifocal lenses' treatment effect on myopia management in children.
Atropine has a ciliary muscle-paralysing effect and causes hyperopic drift. Besides, atropine has been proven to slow the progression of myopia. Many studies have suggested that atropine can increase the thickness of the choroid. However, few studies have discussed changes in the ciliary muscle after treatment with atropine or other cycloplegic agents. This study aimed to assess the difference in ciliary muscle morphology before and after two different cycloplegic agents and to analyze the correlation between the changes of ciliary muscle biological parameters and the changes of eye axis, spherical equivalent, lens diopter, choroidal thickness, etc. One hundred and forty-four children would be randomly assigned 1:1 to the 1% atropine group and the tropicamide group. This study might provide clinical evidence for the role of regulatory factors in the occurrence and development of myopia.
This study is exploratory and examines whether the refraction results obtained from a novel optical device yields results similar to the ophthalmic refraction measurements obtained from an autorefractor in children.