Cargando…

Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study

Associations between corneal biomechanics, axial elongation and myopia are important but previous results are conflicting. Our population-based study aimed to investigate factors associated with corneal biomechanics, and their relationships with myopia in children and adults. Data from 3643 children...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tang, Shu-Min, Zhang, Xiu-Juan, Yu, Marco, Wang, Yu-Meng, Cheung, Carol Y., Kam, Ka-Wai, Young, Alvin L., Chen, Li-Jia, Tham, Clement C., Pang, Chi-Pui, Yam, Jason C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8700309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943594
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11122357
_version_ 1784620725950218240
author Tang, Shu-Min
Zhang, Xiu-Juan
Yu, Marco
Wang, Yu-Meng
Cheung, Carol Y.
Kam, Ka-Wai
Young, Alvin L.
Chen, Li-Jia
Tham, Clement C.
Pang, Chi-Pui
Yam, Jason C.
author_facet Tang, Shu-Min
Zhang, Xiu-Juan
Yu, Marco
Wang, Yu-Meng
Cheung, Carol Y.
Kam, Ka-Wai
Young, Alvin L.
Chen, Li-Jia
Tham, Clement C.
Pang, Chi-Pui
Yam, Jason C.
author_sort Tang, Shu-Min
collection PubMed
description Associations between corneal biomechanics, axial elongation and myopia are important but previous results are conflicting. Our population-based study aimed to investigate factors associated with corneal biomechanics, and their relationships with myopia in children and adults. Data from 3643 children and 1994 parents showed that children had smaller deformation amplitudes (DA) than parents (p < 0.001). A larger DA was significantly associated with elongated axial length (AL; children: ß = 0.011; adults: ß = 0.0013), higher corneal curvature (children: ß = 0.0086; adults: ß = 0.0096), older age (children: ß = 0.010; adults: ß = 0.0013), and lower intraocular pressure (IOP; children: ß = −0.029; adults: ß = −0.031) in both cohorts. The coefficient of age for DA in children was larger than in adults (p < 0.001), indicating that the DA change with age in children is faster than in adults. DA was significantly associated with spherical equivalent (p < 0.001) resulting from its correlation with AL and corneal curvature. In conclusion, the cornea is more deformable in adults than in children, whereas corneal deformation amplitude increases faster with age in children than that in adults, along with AL elongation. Longer AL, steeper corneal curvature, older age and smaller IOP correspond to a more deformable cornea. The association between corneal deformation amplitude and refraction was mediated via AL and corneal curvature.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8700309
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87003092021-12-24 Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study Tang, Shu-Min Zhang, Xiu-Juan Yu, Marco Wang, Yu-Meng Cheung, Carol Y. Kam, Ka-Wai Young, Alvin L. Chen, Li-Jia Tham, Clement C. Pang, Chi-Pui Yam, Jason C. Diagnostics (Basel) Article Associations between corneal biomechanics, axial elongation and myopia are important but previous results are conflicting. Our population-based study aimed to investigate factors associated with corneal biomechanics, and their relationships with myopia in children and adults. Data from 3643 children and 1994 parents showed that children had smaller deformation amplitudes (DA) than parents (p < 0.001). A larger DA was significantly associated with elongated axial length (AL; children: ß = 0.011; adults: ß = 0.0013), higher corneal curvature (children: ß = 0.0086; adults: ß = 0.0096), older age (children: ß = 0.010; adults: ß = 0.0013), and lower intraocular pressure (IOP; children: ß = −0.029; adults: ß = −0.031) in both cohorts. The coefficient of age for DA in children was larger than in adults (p < 0.001), indicating that the DA change with age in children is faster than in adults. DA was significantly associated with spherical equivalent (p < 0.001) resulting from its correlation with AL and corneal curvature. In conclusion, the cornea is more deformable in adults than in children, whereas corneal deformation amplitude increases faster with age in children than that in adults, along with AL elongation. Longer AL, steeper corneal curvature, older age and smaller IOP correspond to a more deformable cornea. The association between corneal deformation amplitude and refraction was mediated via AL and corneal curvature. MDPI 2021-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8700309/ /pubmed/34943594 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11122357 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Tang, Shu-Min
Zhang, Xiu-Juan
Yu, Marco
Wang, Yu-Meng
Cheung, Carol Y.
Kam, Ka-Wai
Young, Alvin L.
Chen, Li-Jia
Tham, Clement C.
Pang, Chi-Pui
Yam, Jason C.
Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study
title Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study
title_full Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study
title_fullStr Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study
title_full_unstemmed Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study
title_short Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study
title_sort association of corneal biomechanics properties with myopia in a child and a parent cohort: hong kong children eye study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8700309/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943594
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11122357
work_keys_str_mv AT tangshumin associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT zhangxiujuan associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT yumarco associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT wangyumeng associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT cheungcaroly associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT kamkawai associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT youngalvinl associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT chenlijia associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT thamclementc associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT pangchipui associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy
AT yamjasonc associationofcornealbiomechanicspropertieswithmyopiainachildandaparentcohorthongkongchildreneyestudy