School of Optometry & Vision Science, University of Bradford, Richmond Road, Bradford BD7 1DP, United Kingdom.
Prog Retin Eye Res. 2013 Sep;36:120-58. doi: 10.1016/j.preteyeres.2013.05.001. Epub 2013 Jun 15.
This review aims to disentangle cause and effect in the relationship between anisometropia and amblyopia. Specifically, we examine the literature for evidence to support different possible developmental sequences that could ultimately lead to the presentation of both conditions. The prevalence of anisometropia is around 20% for an inter-ocular difference of 0.5D or greater in spherical equivalent refraction, falling to 2-3%, for an inter-ocular difference of 3D or above. Anisometropia prevalence is relatively high in the weeks following birth, in the teenage years coinciding with the onset of myopia and, most notably, in older adults starting after the onset of presbyopia. It has about one-third the prevalence of bilateral refractive errors of the same magnitude. Importantly, the prevalence of anisometropia is higher in highly ametropic groups, suggesting that emmetropization failures underlying ametropia and anisometropia may be similar. Amblyopia is present in 1-3% of humans and around one-half to two-thirds of amblyopes have anisometropia either alone or in combination with strabismus. The frequent co-existence of amblyopia and anisometropia at a child's first clinical examination promotes the belief that the anisometropia has caused the amblyopia, as has been demonstrated in animal models of the condition. In reviewing the human and monkey literature however it is clear that there are additional paths beyond this classic hypothesis to the co-occurrence of anisometropia and amblyopia. For example, after the emergence of amblyopia secondary to either deprivation or strabismus, anisometropia often follows. In cases of anisometropia with no apparent deprivation or strabismus, questions remain about the failure of the emmetropization mechanism that routinely eliminates infantile anisometropia. Also, the chronology of amblyopia development is poorly documented in cases of 'pure' anisometropic amblyopia. Although indirect, the therapeutic impact of refractive correction on anisometropic amblyopia provides strong support for the hypothesis that the anisometropia caused the amblyopia. Direct evidence for the aetiology of anisometropic amblyopia will require longitudinal tracking of at-risk infants, which poses numerous methodological and ethical challenges. However, if we are to prevent this condition, we must understand the factors that cause it to develop.
本综述旨在厘清屈光参差与弱视之间的因果关系。具体而言,我们查阅文献,寻找支持不同可能的发育顺序的证据,这些顺序最终可能导致这两种情况的发生。在等效球镜屈光度相差 0.5D 或以上时,屈光参差的患病率约为 20%,相差 3D 或以上时,患病率降至 2-3%。屈光参差在出生后数周内、青少年近视发生时以及最显著的远视发生后,患病率相对较高。它的患病率大约是双眼同等程度屈光不正的三分之一。重要的是,高度屈光参差患者的屈光参差患病率更高,这表明导致屈光不正和屈光参差的离焦性眼球发育失败可能相似。弱视在 1-3%的人群中存在,大约一半到三分之二的弱视患者存在屈光参差,无论是单独存在还是与斜视同时存在。在儿童首次临床检查时,弱视和屈光参差经常同时存在,这促使人们相信屈光参差是导致弱视的原因,动物模型已经证明了这一点。然而,在回顾人类和猴子的文献时,很明显,除了这个经典假说之外,还有其他途径导致屈光参差和弱视同时发生。例如,在剥夺性或斜视性弱视出现后,通常会出现屈光参差。在没有明显剥夺或斜视的屈光参差情况下,对于常规消除婴儿期屈光参差的离焦性眼球发育机制失败的问题仍存在疑问。此外,在“单纯”屈光参差性弱视病例中,弱视的发展时间顺序记录较差。尽管间接,但屈光不正矫正对屈光参差性弱视的治疗效果为屈光参差导致弱视的假说提供了有力支持。要获得屈光参差性弱视的病因学直接证据,需要对高危婴儿进行纵向跟踪,这存在许多方法学和伦理学挑战。然而,如果我们要预防这种情况,就必须了解导致其发生的因素。