|
|
(6 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) |
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
|
| |
|
| |
| __NOTOC__ | | __NOTOC__ |
| {{Myopia}} | | {{Myopia}} |
| Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It's easy! Click [[Help:How_to_Edit_a_Page|here]] to learn about editing. | | Please help WikiDoc by adding content here. It's easy! Click [[Help:How_to_Edit_a_Page|here]] to learn about editing. |
|
| |
|
| {{CMG}} {{AE}} {{SME}}
| | ==Overview== |
| | |
| ==Causes== | | ==Causes== |
| Because in the most common, "simple" myopia, the eye length is too long, any [[etiologic]] explanation must account for such axial elongation. To date, no single [[theory]]has been able to satisfactorily explain this elongation.
| | *Drug side effect: [[Ethosuximide]], [[Hydrochlorothiazide]] |
| *In the early [[1900s]], [[William Bates]] controversially asserted that myopia, as with all refractive errors, resulted from a particular type of "eyestrain" that was itself a result of "mental strain".<ref>[http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch10.html "Chapter X: Strain."]</ref> He stated that the shape of the eyeball responded instantaneously to the action of the [[extraocular muscles]] upon it<ref>[http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch7.html "Chapter VII: The Variability of the Refraction of the Eye."]</ref> and that myopia was produced due to contraction of the [[inferior oblique muscle|inferior oblique]] and [[superior oblique muscle]]s which lengthened the eye.<ref>[http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch4.html Chapter IV : The Truth about Accommodation as Demonstrated by Experiments on the Eye Muscles of Fish, Cats, Dogs, Rabbits and Other Animals."]</ref> According to Bates, myopia was associated with a "strain" to see distance objects rather than near work.<ref>[http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch1.html "Chapter I: Introductory."]</ref> Bates theories were rejected by mainstream ophthalmologists of his time and remain so today. <ref name="Bradley">{{cite news | |
| | author=Robyn E. Bradley
| |
| | title=ADVOCATES SEE ONLY BENEFITS FROM EYE EXERCISES
| |
| | publisher=The Boston Globe (MA)
| |
| |date=September 23, 2003
| |
| | url=http://visioneducators.com/articles/advocates_see_only_benefits_from_eye_exercises.pdf }}</ref><ref name="Rawstron">{{cite journal
| |
| | author=Rawstron JA, Burley CD, Elder MJ
| |
| | journal=J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus
| |
| | year=2005
| |
| | volume=42
| |
| | issue=2
| |
| | pages=82-8
| |
| | title=A systematic review of the applicability and efficacy of eye exercises.
| |
| | url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=15825744&query_hl=13&itool=pubmed_DocSum}}</ref>
| |
| *In the mid-1900s, mainstream ophthalmologists and optometrists believed myopia to be primarily hereditary; the influence of near work in its development seemed "incidental" and the increased prevalence of the condition with increasing age was viewed as a "statistical curiosity".<ref name="Borish"/><ref name="Duke-Elder"/><ref name="Mutti">Mutti D. [http://www.revoptom.com/index.asp?ArticleType=SiteSpec&page=osc/apr01/lesson_0401.htm "Can We Conquer Myopia?"] ''Review of Optomery.'' Optometric Study Center: April, 2001.</ref>
| |
| *Among mainstream researchers and [[eye care professional]]s, myopia is now thought to be a combination of genetic and environmental factors.<ref name="AOA"/><ref name="Morgan 1"/>
| |
|
| |
|
| ==References== | | ==References== |
| {{Reflist|2}} | | {{Reflist|2}} |
| | {{WikiDoc Help Menu}} |
| | {{WikiDoc Sources}} |
| | |
| [[Category:Ophthalmology]] | | [[Category:Ophthalmology]] |
| [[Category:Optometry]] | | [[Category:Optometry]] |
| [[Category:Vision]] | | [[Category:Vision]] |
| [[Category:Primary care]]
| |
| [[Category:Disease]] | | [[Category:Disease]] |
|
| |
| [[Category:Needs overview]]
| |
|
| |
| [[Category:Needs content]] | | [[Category:Needs content]] |
|
| |
| {{WikiDoc Help Menu}}
| |
| {{WikiDoc Sources}}
| |