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Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light

PURPOSE: Bright light has been shown a powerful inhibitor of myopia development in animal models. We studied which temporal patterns of bright light are the most potent in suppressing deprivation myopia in chickens. METHODS: Eight-day-old chickens wore diffusers over one eye to induce deprivation my...

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Autores principales: Lan, Weizhong, Feldkaemper, Marita, Schaeffel, Frank
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4216005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25360635
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110906
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author Lan, Weizhong
Feldkaemper, Marita
Schaeffel, Frank
author_facet Lan, Weizhong
Feldkaemper, Marita
Schaeffel, Frank
author_sort Lan, Weizhong
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Bright light has been shown a powerful inhibitor of myopia development in animal models. We studied which temporal patterns of bright light are the most potent in suppressing deprivation myopia in chickens. METHODS: Eight-day-old chickens wore diffusers over one eye to induce deprivation myopia. A reference group (n = 8) was kept under office-like illuminance (500 lux) at a 10∶14 light∶dark cycle. Episodes of bright light (15 000 lux) were super-imposed on this background as follows. Paradigm I: exposure to constant bright light for either 1 hour (n = 5), 2 hours (n = 5), 5 hours (n = 4) or 10 hours (n = 4). Paradigm II: exposure to repeated cycles of bright light with 50% duty cycle and either 60 minutes (n = 7), 30 minutes (n = 8), 15 minutes (n = 6), 7 minutes (n = 7) or 1 minute (n = 7) periods, provided for 10 hours. Refraction and axial length were measured prior to and immediately after the 5-day experiment. Relative changes were analyzed by paired t-tests, and differences among groups were tested by one-way ANOVA. RESULTS: Compared with the reference group, exposure to continuous bright light for 1 or 2 hours every day had no significant protective effect against deprivation myopia. Inhibition of myopia became significant after 5 hours of bright light exposure but extending the duration to 10 hours did not offer an additional benefit. In comparison, repeated cycles of 1∶1 or 7∶7 minutes of bright light enhanced the protective effect against myopia and could fully suppress its development. CONCLUSIONS: The protective effect of bright light depends on the exposure duration and, to the intermittent form, the frequency cycle. Compared to the saturation effect of continuous bright light, low frequency cycles of bright light (1∶1 min) provided the strongest inhibition effect. However, our quantitative results probably might not be directly translated into humans, but rather need further amendments in clinical studies.
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spelling pubmed-42160052014-11-05 Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light Lan, Weizhong Feldkaemper, Marita Schaeffel, Frank PLoS One Research Article PURPOSE: Bright light has been shown a powerful inhibitor of myopia development in animal models. We studied which temporal patterns of bright light are the most potent in suppressing deprivation myopia in chickens. METHODS: Eight-day-old chickens wore diffusers over one eye to induce deprivation myopia. A reference group (n = 8) was kept under office-like illuminance (500 lux) at a 10∶14 light∶dark cycle. Episodes of bright light (15 000 lux) were super-imposed on this background as follows. Paradigm I: exposure to constant bright light for either 1 hour (n = 5), 2 hours (n = 5), 5 hours (n = 4) or 10 hours (n = 4). Paradigm II: exposure to repeated cycles of bright light with 50% duty cycle and either 60 minutes (n = 7), 30 minutes (n = 8), 15 minutes (n = 6), 7 minutes (n = 7) or 1 minute (n = 7) periods, provided for 10 hours. Refraction and axial length were measured prior to and immediately after the 5-day experiment. Relative changes were analyzed by paired t-tests, and differences among groups were tested by one-way ANOVA. RESULTS: Compared with the reference group, exposure to continuous bright light for 1 or 2 hours every day had no significant protective effect against deprivation myopia. Inhibition of myopia became significant after 5 hours of bright light exposure but extending the duration to 10 hours did not offer an additional benefit. In comparison, repeated cycles of 1∶1 or 7∶7 minutes of bright light enhanced the protective effect against myopia and could fully suppress its development. CONCLUSIONS: The protective effect of bright light depends on the exposure duration and, to the intermittent form, the frequency cycle. Compared to the saturation effect of continuous bright light, low frequency cycles of bright light (1∶1 min) provided the strongest inhibition effect. However, our quantitative results probably might not be directly translated into humans, but rather need further amendments in clinical studies. Public Library of Science 2014-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC4216005/ /pubmed/25360635 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110906 Text en © 2014 Lan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lan, Weizhong
Feldkaemper, Marita
Schaeffel, Frank
Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light
title Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light
title_full Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light
title_fullStr Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light
title_full_unstemmed Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light
title_short Intermittent Episodes of Bright Light Suppress Myopia in the Chicken More than Continuous Bright Light
title_sort intermittent episodes of bright light suppress myopia in the chicken more than continuous bright light
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4216005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25360635
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110906
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