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1From the New England College of Optometry, Boston, Massachusetts.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. Longitudinal and cross-sectional data were obtained from chicks that were raised undergoing four different visual manipulations known to alter axial eye growth: form deprivation by translucent occluders, spherical defocus by –10- or +10-D lenses, and constant light. The visual manipulations began at 5 days of age and continued for a week. Age-matched groups raised without any treatment or with Velcro rings or plano lenses served as control groups. Refractions in all birds were measured with a Hartinger refractometer, and infrared photokeratometry was performed in a subset of birds at the end of the treatment period.
RESULTS. In control birds, natural astigmatism decreased in magnitude over the 7-day treatment period. In contrast, birds treated with visual manipulations developed significant amounts of astigmatism throughout the treatment period. At the end of the 7-day treatment period, whereas only 8.6% of the control chicks had refractive astigmatism >1 D, the percentage of treated birds that had astigmatism >1 D in each treatment group ranged from 66.7% to 100%. The astigmatism in the treated eyes was predominantly against-the-rule, corneal in nature, and correlated significantly with spherical ametropia of the principal meridians.
CONCLUSIONS. Visual manipulations known to induce axial ametropia also promote the genesis of astigmatism in chickens. The characteristics of astigmatism associated with spherical myopia or hyperopia in chicks is similar to those reported in humans in many respects, supporting the hypothesis that vision-dependent changes in eye growth may contribute to the astigmatism commonly found in humans.
The sources of ocular astigmatism are mainly corneal and lenticular toricity.1 Of particular interest is the strong and significant correlation between total astigmatism and corneal astigmatism in humans1 25 26 27 28 and macaque monkeys.29 30 However, what causes the change in ocular toricity remains unclear. Previous models for the genesis of astigmatism have centered on mechanical factors that could act directly on the cornea. For example, astigmatic errors have been shown to correlate with the specific location of eyelid abnormalities,15 31 the alterations in normal eyelid tension,32 33 and the physical relationship between the cornea and the contact lens in contact lens wearers.34 35 On the other hand, although astigmatism has been associated with abnormal optic disc shape in humans,36 37 38 the relationship between the genesis of astigmatism and posterior structural abnormalities has not received much attention. Given that astigmatism is associated with ametropia2 39 and that alterations in ocular refraction and size are primarily a consequence of structural and molecular changes that occur at the posterior segment,40 41 42 43 44 it is possible that astigmatism is a passive byproduct of abnormal posterior axial eye growth. This hypothesis is in line with the suggestion that axial eye growth may alter anterior ocular structures through stretching45 46 and the fact that changes in axial length correlate significantly with changes in corneal power or lens power during early infancy.47
Exactly how abnormal axial eye growth promotes the genesis of astigmatism is unclear. However, there is ample evidence that spherical ametropia and astigmatism coexist. First, it is well known that infants frequently exhibit both spherical ametropia and astigmatism.26 48 49 Second, the magnitude of astigmatism correlates significantly with those of spherical myopia39 50 51 52 and hyperopia.39 Third, as predicted by the passive regulatory hypothesis just mentioned, simple astigmatism (i.e., one principal meridian is emmetropic while the other is ametropic) is less common. It has been reported that compound astigmatism (i.e., both principal meridians are ametropic) is two to three times more common than simple astigmatism.2 53 Fourth, a variety of visual manipulations known to influence postnatal axial eye growth have been shown to result in both axial ametropia and astigmatism in monkeys.30 The coexistence of astigmatism and spherical ametropia in these findings suggests that the mechanisms underlying astigmatism and spherical ametropia are probably related. If so, experimental conditions that lead to spherical ametropia are also likely to promote the development of astigmatism.
There is evidence that abnormal visual experience can promote astigmatism in monkeys and chickens. It has recently been demonstrated that monkeys frequently exhibit significant amounts of astigmatic errors when treated with diffusers or spherical or astigmatic lenses.29 30 More important, regardless of the treatments they receive, the characteristics of astigmatism observed in monkeys are remarkably similar, supporting the hypothesis that astigmatism may be a byproduct of abnormal eye growth. In chicks, despite their common use as an animal model for refractive-error development, effects of visual manipulations on the genesis of astigmatism have been reported in only a few studies.54 55 56 There has not been a systematic study on the characteristics of astigmatism associated with spherical ametropia in chickens. The primary purpose of this study was to determine whether a variety of visual manipulations, known to produce axial ametropia, would promote the development of astigmatism. We found that altered visual experience led to both spherical ametropia and astigmatism in chickens.
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Treatment Groups
We used four visual manipulations all known to induce consistent axial ametropia in chicks. The first three treatments monocularly manipulate the visual image by either form deprivation (white translucent plastic hemispheres, or diffusers) or optical spherical defocus (+10- and –10-D lenses; Conforma-K PMMA lenses; Conforma Laboratories, Norfolk, VA). To facilitate the removal of these optical devices for cleaning purposes, we first glued the diffuser or lens to a Velcro ring (Velcro USA, Inc., Manchester, NH) with optical adhesive (Norland Products Inc., New Brunswick, NJ) and later attached it to the Velcros mated fastener which was glued to the feathers around the treated eye (Collodion; Fisher Scientific, Fairlawn, NJ). The fourth treatment exposed both eyes of chicks without any optical devices to constant light in a 5000-cm2, evenly lit (
100 lux), sound-proof chamber. The treated eye was chosen based on the tagged number assigned to each animal (i.e., right eyes were used for even numbers, left eyes for odd numbers). The same rule was used for control chicks and chicks reared in constant light conditions. All the treated birds, including those from both longitudinal and cross-sectional studies, received visual manipulations starting from 5 days of age and ending at 12 days of age (i.e., the visual manipulations lasted for 7 days).
Experiment 1: Longitudinal Study
After the initial biometry measurements (described later) that were performed at 5 days of age, each chick was randomly assigned to one of four experimental groups: form deprivation by translucent diffusers (n = 8), spherical defocus by –10- (n = 9) or +10-D (n = 11) lenses, and constant light (n = 10). Refractometry was performed on both eyes after 1, 2, 3, 4, and 7 days of the visual treatments. In a subset of chicks (n = 29), keratometry was performed on the treated eye at the end of the 7-day treatment period.
Experiment 2: Cross-Sectional Study
The purposes of cross-sectional study were: (1) to determine whether the effects of visual manipulations had been affected by repeated biometry measurements in the longitudinal study and (2) to determine the contribution of corneal astigmatism to total astigmatism. Four groups of birds were reared while undergoing one of four visual manipulations: form deprivation by diffusers (n = 11), spherical defocus by –10-D (n = 10) or +10-D (n = 11) lenses, and constant light (n = 10). Both refractometry and keratometry were performed on the treated eyes at the end of the treatment period.
Control Groups
Because high magnitudes of astigmatism were found in the treatment groups throughout the treatment period in both the treated and fellow eyes (data provided later), both normal and control groups were included in the study. In addition to including age-matched untreated birds for longitudinal (n = 11) and cross-sectional studies (n = 10), the potential effects of the presence of the Velcro ring or PMMA lenses on refractive development were tested by rearing two additional control groups that wore either a Velcro ring (n = 5) or a plano lens (n = 9) over one eye from 5 to 12 days of age. Although the untreated control groups for longitudinal and cross-sectional studies underwent biometry measurements similar to those of the treatment groups, those that wore a Velcro ring or plano lens underwent refractometry measurements at 12 days of age only. At that time point, no significant differences were found in refractive astigmatism or the J0 or J45 astigmatic component either between the treated and fellow eyes or across the four groups of control birds (MANOVA, interaction [eyes x groups] and main effects; all P
0.3). There were also no significant interocular differences (treated minus fellow eye) of spherical equivalent refractive error, refractive astigmatism, or the J0 or J45 astigmatic component across the four groups of birds (one-way ANOVA, all P
0.07). Because of these results, the data of all normal and control birds at 12 days of age were combined and treated as a group.
Biometry Measurements
To avoid the potential variations in refractive error due to diurnal rhythms (Johnson CA et al. IOVS 2004;45:ARVO E-Abstract 4295), all biometry measurements were performed at about the same time during the day (±2 hours). To make the measurements, each animal was anesthetized by isoflurane inhalation (1.0%–1.5%), and their eyelids were gently held apart by the same custom-made speculum. For all biometry measurements, the tested eyes were positioned by visually aligning an imaginary line joining the inner and outer canthi57 (0° or 180°) parallel to the headholder platform. This alignment was checked before the eyelids were held apart and then frequently throughout the biometry measurements. The potential effect of the speculum on refractometry was tested by comparing refractive errors measured at the regular position to those at two other positions (45° clockwise and counterclockwise) in the treated eyes of two separate groups of birds (n = 6 each) with either form-deprivation or unrestricted vision from 5 to 12 days of age. Two-way repeated-measures ANOVA showed that the positions of the speculum had no significant effects on refractive astigmatism or the J0 and J45 astigmatic components (interaction [speculum position x treatment regimen] and main effect, all P
0.10). There was, however, an interaction effect (speculum position x treatment regimen) on spherical equivalent refractive error (two-way repeated-measures ANOVA, P < 0.01). One-way ANOVA (P < 0.01) with post hoc test (P < 0.04) showed that only the diffuser group exhibited a slightly but significantly lower average amount of spherical equivalent refractive error at the counterclockwise position than at the other two positions (–16.6, –17.0, and –17.3 D for the counterclockwise, regular, and clockwise positions, respectively).
Refractometry
Refractive errors of the two principal meridians were measured along the pupillary axis with a modified Hartingers coincidence refractometer (Jena Coincidence Refractometer; Carl Zeiss Meditec, GmbH, Jena, Germany)40 and specified in negative correcting cylinder form. A set of three readings was collected in each eye, and the average values for each astigmatic component were derived with Fourier analysis.58 The short-term repeatability of Hartinger refractometry in measuring refractive astigmatism was tested by obtaining two sets of consecutive data from a separate group of diffuser-treated chicks (n = 8). Each animal was realigned between the two measurement sessions, and usually the realignment took less than 5 minutes. The treated birds wore diffusers monocularly from 15 to 20 days of age, and refractometry was performed on the treated eyes at the end of the 5-day treatment period.
Infrared Photokeratometry
Corneal curvature was measured with a custom-made infrared photokeratometer similar to that described elsewhere.28 For each eye, a set of at least 12 individual images was acquired. Each image was first processed with a tested calibration curve to determine the corneal radius at four orientations and converted to corneal curvature using a reduced corneal refractive index of 1.333. To identify the flattest and steepest corneal curvatures (i.e., the two principal meridians), we best-fitted the corneal radii with an ellipsoid with custom software (MatLab; The MathWorks, Natick, MA). Corneal astigmatism for each image was the difference between the flattest and steepest corneal curvatures derived from this fitted ellipsoid. Because the instrument often acquired outlier readings in each set of keratometry measurements, the medians for corneal curvature, astigmatism, and axis were used and were decomposed into astigmatic components by using Fourier analysis.58 The short-term repeatability for infrared photokeratometry in measuring corneal astigmatism was tested by obtaining two sets of consecutive data from the treated eyes of the birds used in the cross-sectional study (experiment 2) at the end of the 7-day treatment period (12 days of age, n = 42). Each animal was realigned between the two measurement sessions; usually, the realignment took less than 5 minutes.
Statistical Analysis
Statistical analyses were performed with commercial software programs (Minitab ver. 12.21, Minitab Inc., State College, PA; S-Plus, MathSoft Inc., Needham, MA; and SAS ver. 8.0, SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC). The effects of visual manipulations across different treatment groups were tested by ANOVA. Depending on the dataset, One- or two-way ANOVA, repeated-measures ANOVA, or multivariate ANOVA (MANOVA) was used. If multifactorial ANOVA revealed a significant interaction effect, the simple effect was further examined. If the results of the ANOVA revealed a significant main or simple effect, a post hoc test was used to identify which pairs showed statistically significant differences. To test whether the axis of astigmatism was randomly distributed, we used the Rayleigh test59 (circular package, downloaded from the Comprehensive R Archive Network, http://cran.R-project.org/ hosted in the public domain by the Department of Statistics and Mathematics, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria). The comparison of Pearsons correlation coefficients across different groups of birds was performed through an online statistics tool maintained by the Chinese University of Hong Kong (http://department.obg.cuhk.edu.hk/researchsupport/statmenu.asp).
| Results |
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The Magnitude and Frequency of Experimentally Induced Astigmatism
Longitudinal Data.
At the beginning of the experiment, refractive astigmatism was not significantly different between the treated and fellow eyes or across the control and treated groups (two-way ANOVA, no interaction effect, P = 0.77; main effect, all P > 0.09). Figure 2 illustrates longitudinal changes in the magnitude of refractive astigmatism in the treated eyes for individual birds (different symbols) treated with diffusers (Fig. 2A) , –10-D lenses (Fig. 2B) , +10-D lenses (Fig. 2C) , and constant light (Fig. 2D) . In each plot, the shaded area covers the range of astigmatism found in the treated eyes of the control animals. Over time, the refractive astigmatism in control animals decreased in both magnitude and variability; in contrast, the treated animals frequently developed or maintained high magnitudes of astigmatism throughout the treatment period. Of interesting, a few birds from individual treatment groups exhibited overnight changes in the magnitude of refractive astigmatism that were quite large (e.g., Fig. 2C , bird represented by an inverted triangle). The insets in Figures 2A 2B 2C 2D illustrate the average changes (mean ± SEM) in the magnitude of astigmatism for treated and fellow eyes of individual treatment groups. Repeated-measures ANOVA showed that astigmatism in the treated eyes were significantly higher than those of the fellow eyes in diffuser (Fig. 2A) and +10-D (Fig. 2C) groups throughout the treatment period (both P < 0.01). In contrast, no significant differences in the magnitude of astigmatism were found between the treated and fellow eyes in (Fig. 2B) –10-D– and (Fig. 2D) constant light–treated groups (both P > 0.05).
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Cross-sectional Data.
Visual manipulations produced very similar effects on refractive astigmatism in both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies. In the treated eyes, no significant interaction effects were found between study design (longitudinal/cross-sectional) and treatment regimen for refractive astigmatism and J0 and J45 astigmatic components (MANOVA, interaction and main effects, all P > 0.22). Similarly, no interaction effects (study design x treatment regimen) were found in the fellow eyes (MANOVA for refractive astigmatism and J45 components, all P > 0.3) except for the J0 astigmatic component (MANOVA, P = 0.03). Examination of the J0 astigmatic component in the fellow eyes showed that only the difference in longitudinal and cross-sectional data from the diffuser-treated groups was statistically significant (post hoc test, P = 0.002).
Figure 3A illustrates frequency distributions of refractive astigmatism in the treated eyes at the end of the treatment period for control and treated birds from the longitudinal and cross-sectional studies. The horizontal box plots in each panel summarize the statistical values of the longitudinal and cross-sectional data sets. Whereas only 8.6% (3/35) of the control chicks had refractive astigmatism >1 D, the percentages of treated birds that had astigmatism >1 D in each treatment group ranged from 66.7% to 100%. One-way ANOVA of the cross-sectional data shows that all four visual manipulations produced significantly higher magnitudes of refractive astigmatism compared to control groups in the treated eyes at the end of the treatment period (P < 0.001; Tukey post hoc test, all P < 0.05). Similar to longitudinal studies, diffusers produced significantly higher refractive astigmatism compared with the other three treatment groups (Tukey post hoc test, all P < 0.03), but no significant differences in the magnitude of refractive astigmatism were found between groups treated with –10 D, +10 D, and constant light (Tukey post hoc test, all P > 0.7).
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0.009). A post hoc test showed that in addition to the two constant-light groups, only the diffuser group from the longitudinal study exhibited significantly higher magnitudes of refractive astigmatism in the fellow eyes than those of the control group (Tukey post hoc test, all P < 0.05). On the other hand, a post hoc test showed that significant differences in spherical equivalent refractive errors of the fellow eyes were found between the following three pairs: each of the two constant-light groups and the control group, and the longitudinal group and the cross-sectional form-deprived groups (Tukey post hoc test, all P < 0.05).
Nature of Astigmatism
Axis of Astigmatism.
According to the axes of the correcting negative cylinder, astigmatism
1 D was classified as with-the-rule (180° ± 30°), against-the-rule (90° ± 30°), or oblique (31°–59°, 121°–149°). At the onset of the experiment, the axes of refractive astigmatism in the treated eyes were predominantly oriented at the 90° meridian. Of the 50 birds that had refractive astigmatism
1 D, 80% (n = 40) were against-the-rule (range, 60°–117°) and 68% (n = 34) had astigmatic axes oriented exactly at 90°. At the end of the treatment period, against-the-rule astigmatism still predominated. Of the 60 treated birds that had refractive astigmatism
1 D, 73.3% had against-the-rule, 25% had oblique, and 1.7% had with-the-rule astigmatism. This trend was also reflected in treated chicks that had corneal astigmatism
1 D in the treated eye (n = 64): 82.8% had against-the-rule, 17.2% had oblique, and none had with-the-rule astigmatism.
The polar plots in Figure 4 illustrate the distributions of refractive (Fig. 4A) and corneal (Fig. 4B) astigmatism in the right or the left treated eyes on the treatment groups (longitudinal or cross-sectional) at the end of the treatment period. Data for control animals were excluded because of the small magnitude of astigmatism. For each treated eye, the magnitude and axis of astigmatism are represented by the distance from the origin and the vector angle, respectively. As shown in the figure, regardless of the treatment regimens, the treated eyes frequently exhibited refractive or corneal astigmatism with axes near the 90° meridian, although some were oriented more obliquely. The Rayleigh test showed that the axes for refractive (mean ± SEM: right eye = 109.9 ± 4.4°, left eye = 72.3 ± 3.7°) and corneal astigmatisms (mean ± SEM: right eye = 102.5 ± 2.3°, left eye = 71.8 ± 2.9°) were not randomly distributed (all r2 > 0.37, all P < 0.007). Although it should be noted that the data from right or left treated eyes were collected from different birds, the average axes of the refractive or corneal astigmatism in the two eyes appeared to be mirror symmetric about the 90° axis. In addition, visual manipulations did not produce significantly different effects on refractive J0, corneal J0, and corneal J45 astigmatic components in right or left treated eyes (MANOVA, all P > 0.12). However, MANOVA with post hoc test indicated that whereas the refractive J45 component in the right eyes was significantly different only between the diffuser and constant light treatment groups (MANOVA, P = 0.002; Tukey post hoc test, P = 0.03), those in the left eye were significantly different between the diffuser and all three other treatment groups (MANOVA, P < 0.001; Tukey post hoc test, all P
0.02).
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| Discussion |
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Although all four visual manipulations in the present study produced astigmatism of similar characteristics, the magnitude of astigmatism at the end of the treatment period was significantly higher in chicks treated with form deprivation than in those treated with spherical defocus or constant light. Unlike birds treated by spherical defocus and constant light, which showed a tendency to decrease in the magnitude of astigmatism toward the end of the treatment period, form-deprived chicks appeared to maintain high degrees of astigmatism throughout the treatment period (Fig. 2F) . Furthermore, compared with the other three treatment groups at the end of the treatment period, the distribution of the magnitudes of astigmatism was more widely spread (Fig. 3A) , and the refractive J45 component appeared to differ under certain conditions in the form-deprived birds. Although it has been suggested that spherical defocus and form deprivation regulate refractive development through different neural feedback conditions,62 63 64 our results provide further evidence that form deprivation also produces a larger impact on ocular toricity compared with both hyperopic and myopic defocus, at least after a week of visual manipulation. Our data showed that refractive astigmatism correlated moderately but significantly with corneal astigmatism, but the fact that form deprivation did not produce significantly different corneal astigmatism compared with other visual manipulations suggests that other factors may have contributed to the higher ocular toricity in form-deprived eyes. However, because +10- and –10-D spherical lenses were the only powers that we tested, we cannot rule out the possibility that spherical lenses of different powers would lead to higher magnitudes of astigmatism within the same time frame.
Altered visual experience has consistently been shown to produce spherical equivalent refractive errors in a variety of animal species,65 but its effect on ocular toricity has been noted in only a few studies. In chicks, Schmid and Wildsoet54 have reported that the magnitude of natural against-the-rule astigmatism significantly decreased after hatching (8.2 D) and stabilized by approximately 3 weeks of age (0.6 D). In addition, form deprivation for 2 weeks produced astigmatism that had different axis orientation from those of the fellow untreated eyes (0.3-D with-the-rule astigmatism vs. 2.7-D against-the-rule astigmatism); rearing chicks in constant light led to a developmental increase, rather than a natural decrease, in the magnitude of against-the-rule astigmatism.54 The effects of high-power spherical defocus on the genesis of astigmatism were noted by Irving et al.56 and more recently by Kisilak et al. (IOVS 2006;47;ARVO E-Abstract 1799). The high-power spherical defocus was created by either switching to spherical lenses of equal power (10 D) but opposite sign in the middle of a 2-week treatment period (e.g., +10 D replaced by –10 D56 ) or imposing –30-D spherical defocus (Kisilak ML et al. IOVS 2006;47;ARVO E-Abstract 1799). In both cases, significant amounts of astigmatism (2–4 D56 ; Kisilak et al.: 1.5 D of J45) were found in association with a change in spherical ametropia. Last, several investigators have reported that imposing astigmatism with astigmatic lenses resulted in higher than normal amounts of astigmatism,54 57 66 although two studies, published as abstracts, found no significant effects of imposed astigmatism on ocular astigmatism (Thibos LN et al. IOVS 2001;42:ARVO Abstract 324, and Laskowski FH et al. IOVS 1996;37:ARVO Abstract 3140). Although differences in experimental design (e.g., strain of birds, the onset and duration of treatment regimens) preclude further comparison with previous studies, our results provide strong evidence that the four visual manipulations commonly used in experimental eye research can promote the development of astigmatism, at least in the strain of birds that we used.67 The presence of significant amounts of astigmatism during ametropic eye growth underscores the importance of identifying and characterizing the astigmatic components when using this common animal model in refractive development research.
The characteristics of astigmatism associated with experimentally induced myopia or hyperopia found in this study are similar to those reported in infant monkeys.30 First, the astigmatism found in both species was largely corneal in origin. Second, the dynamic changes in the magnitude of astigmatism (i.e., an initial transient increase followed by a decrease toward the end of treatment period; Fig. 2 ), were frequently found in both species.29 30 Third, the astigmatic axes in the two eyes appeared to be mirror symmetric, although the average astigmatic axes in both eyes were slightly more obliquely oriented in monkeys30 than those in chickens. These three similarities in the characteristics of astigmatism were found in both species treated by form deprivation or spherical defocus. Furthermore, the yoking effects of visual manipulations on the fellow eyes astigmatism found in this study have also been reported in monkeys that were treated with cylindrical lenses.29 However, in contrast to chicks, monkeys did not develop a significant amount of astigmatism under constant light,30 neither did monkeys exhibit dramatic changes in ocular components caused by constant light, as previously reported in chicks.68 69 70 71 Although it has been speculated that monkeys may be shielded from the constant light effect by a thicker skull and/or by their covering their heads with their arms,70 71 it is unclear at this point what is responsible for the different effects of constant light on eye growth between these two species. Nevertheless, the key point is that the presence of significant astigmatism is associated with abnormal axial eye growth in both species.
The natural and experimentally induced astigmatism found in chickens is qualitatively similar to those reported in humans. First, similar to what we found in chicks, human astigmatism is primarily corneal.1 25 26 28 72 73 74 75 Second, many studies26 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 have shown that the prevalence of significant amounts of astigmatism (>1.0 D) is high in human infants immediately after birth, but decreases to the adult level by school age (for a summary figure, see Ref. 84 ). This natural decrease in the magnitude of infantile astigmatism was also noted in this study (Fig. 2E) and in a previous study54 using chicks. Third, as observed in our birds, the astigmatic axes reported in clinical studies85 86 87 (see Ref. 88 for contradictory findings) tends to be more obliquely oriented in myopic populations. In our treated birds, the average refractive astigmatic axes were 109.9° and 72.3° for the right and left treated eyes, respectively. These findings are supported by the results of a 3-year longitudinal study of the relation between myopic progression and astigmatic axis in 238 myopic children from third to fifth grades of primary school.51 Specifically, comparing the data collected at the onset and end of study, Parssinen51 noted that the percentage of astigmatic axes within the range of 91° to 149° in right eyes increased from 14.3% to 20.2%, and axes within the range of 31° to 89° in left eyes increased from 11.3% to 18.5%. Likewise, Fulton et al.89 have shown that myopic children with oblique astigmatism were, on average, more myopic than those without oblique astigmatism (i.e., against- or with-the-rule astigmatism). Fourth, similar to our finding in chicks, the magnitude of refractive astigmatism has been shown to correlate significantly with the magnitude of the spherical power of the principal meridian,39 although the coefficients were low for both species. Another study on chicks also reported a correlation between experimentally induced astigmatism and spherical ametropia, although moderate levels of astigmatism, like those found in our study, were associated with much more myopic refractions (1.5 D of J45 with 29 D of myopia; Kisilak ML et al. IOVS 2006;47;ARVO E-Abstract 1799). Nevertheless, the many similarities of astigmatism between chickens and humans suggest that visual experience that alters axial eye growth may contribute to the genesis of astigmatism in humans.
In summary, we have demonstrated that four visual manipulations, all known to alter axial eye growth, promote the development of astigmatism in an animal model commonly used for refractive development. Because none of the four treatment regimens imposed astigmatic errors, the induced astigmatism cannot be considered as an active, direct compensatory ocular response. On the other hand, since all four visual manipulations produced astigmatism with very similar characteristics, it is possible that the induced astigmatism is a byproduct of abnormal axial eye growth. Although it is unclear how and to what extent abnormal visual experience alters ocular toricity, the availability of chickens as an animal model provides great opportunities to elucidate the regulatory mechanisms underlying astigmatism.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported by National Eye Institute Grants R01 EY013636 and EY014817 and a New England College of Optometry Institutional Research Grant.
Submitted for publication November 14, 2006; revised March 1, May 22, August 21, and November 14, 2007; accepted January 28, 2008.
Disclosure: C. Kee, None; L. Deng, None
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. This article must therefore be marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Chea-su Kee, School of Optometry, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong; sokee{at}inet.polyu.edu.hk.
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