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Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes

A better understanding of visual performance with Multifocal Contact Lenses (MCLs) is essential, both in young eyes, where MCLs may be prescribed to control the progression of myopia wherein the MCLs optics interact with accommodation, and in presbyopes, where MCLs are increasingly used to compensat...

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Autores principales: Vedhakrishnan, Shrilekha, Vinas, Maria, Benedi-Garcia, Clara, Casado, Pilar, Marcos, Susana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8929584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35298476
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263659
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author Vedhakrishnan, Shrilekha
Vinas, Maria
Benedi-Garcia, Clara
Casado, Pilar
Marcos, Susana
author_facet Vedhakrishnan, Shrilekha
Vinas, Maria
Benedi-Garcia, Clara
Casado, Pilar
Marcos, Susana
author_sort Vedhakrishnan, Shrilekha
collection PubMed
description A better understanding of visual performance with Multifocal Contact Lenses (MCLs) is essential, both in young eyes, where MCLs may be prescribed to control the progression of myopia wherein the MCLs optics interact with accommodation, and in presbyopes, where MCLs are increasingly used to compensate the lack of accommodation. In this study, we evaluated the through focus visual acuity (TFVA) with center-near MCLs of three additions (low, medium and high) and without an addition (NoLens) in 10 young adults and 5 presbyopes. We studied the effect of accommodation, age and pupil diameter (in cyclopleged subjects) on visual performance. The MCLs produced a small but consistent degradation at far (by 0.925 logMAR, averaged across eyes and conditions) and a consistent benefit at near in young subjects with paralyzed accommodation (by 1.025 logMAR), and in presbyopes with both paralyzed and natural accommodation (by 1.071 logMAR, on average). TFVA in young adults with NoLens and all MCLs showed statistically significant differences (Wilcoxan, p<0.01) between natural and paralyzed accommodation, but not in presbyopes with MCLs. In young adults, VA improved with increasing pupil diameter with the HighAdd MCL (0.08 logMAR shift from 3 to 5-mm pupil size). Visual imbalance (standard deviation of VA across distances) was reduced with MCLs, and decreased significantly with increasing near add. The lowest imbalance occurred in young adults under natural accommodation and was further reduced by 13.33% with MCLs with respect to the NoLens condition. Overall, the visual performance with MCLs in young adults exceeds that in presbyopes at all distances, and was better than 0.00 logMAR over the dioptric range tested. In conclusion, the center-near lenses do not degrade the near high contrast visual acuity significantly but maintains the far vision in young adults, and produce some visual benefit at near in presbyopes.
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spelling pubmed-89295842022-03-18 Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes Vedhakrishnan, Shrilekha Vinas, Maria Benedi-Garcia, Clara Casado, Pilar Marcos, Susana PLoS One Research Article A better understanding of visual performance with Multifocal Contact Lenses (MCLs) is essential, both in young eyes, where MCLs may be prescribed to control the progression of myopia wherein the MCLs optics interact with accommodation, and in presbyopes, where MCLs are increasingly used to compensate the lack of accommodation. In this study, we evaluated the through focus visual acuity (TFVA) with center-near MCLs of three additions (low, medium and high) and without an addition (NoLens) in 10 young adults and 5 presbyopes. We studied the effect of accommodation, age and pupil diameter (in cyclopleged subjects) on visual performance. The MCLs produced a small but consistent degradation at far (by 0.925 logMAR, averaged across eyes and conditions) and a consistent benefit at near in young subjects with paralyzed accommodation (by 1.025 logMAR), and in presbyopes with both paralyzed and natural accommodation (by 1.071 logMAR, on average). TFVA in young adults with NoLens and all MCLs showed statistically significant differences (Wilcoxan, p<0.01) between natural and paralyzed accommodation, but not in presbyopes with MCLs. In young adults, VA improved with increasing pupil diameter with the HighAdd MCL (0.08 logMAR shift from 3 to 5-mm pupil size). Visual imbalance (standard deviation of VA across distances) was reduced with MCLs, and decreased significantly with increasing near add. The lowest imbalance occurred in young adults under natural accommodation and was further reduced by 13.33% with MCLs with respect to the NoLens condition. Overall, the visual performance with MCLs in young adults exceeds that in presbyopes at all distances, and was better than 0.00 logMAR over the dioptric range tested. In conclusion, the center-near lenses do not degrade the near high contrast visual acuity significantly but maintains the far vision in young adults, and produce some visual benefit at near in presbyopes. Public Library of Science 2022-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8929584/ /pubmed/35298476 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263659 Text en © 2022 Vedhakrishnan et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vedhakrishnan, Shrilekha
Vinas, Maria
Benedi-Garcia, Clara
Casado, Pilar
Marcos, Susana
Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes
title Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes
title_full Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes
title_fullStr Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes
title_full_unstemmed Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes
title_short Visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes
title_sort visual performance with multifocal lenses in young adults and presbyopes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8929584/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35298476
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0263659
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