Abstract

SummaryA number of previous studies have examined the effects of age and the development of presbyopia on either the accommodative convergence to accommodation (AC/A) or convergent accommodation to convergence (CA/C) ratios. However, changes in the interaction of these oculomotor crosslinks with increasing age have received relatively little attention, especially over a wide age distribution. Accordingly, the present study examined both crosslink ratios in 42 subjects ranging from 22 to 65 years of age. A dual haploscope‐optometer was used to measure accommodation and vergence. The response AC/A ratio showed a small but significant positive correlation with age in those subjects under 45 years of age, while no significant correlation was observed between the stimulus AC/A ratio and age for all subjects. The CA/C ratio exhibited a significant negative correlation with age for all subjects. Furthermore, a trend was observed for lower CA/C findings to be associated with higher response AC/A ratios. However, the two ratios were inversely but not reciprocally related, with the mean difference between the CA/C ratio and the reciprocal of the response AC/A ratio being significantly different from zero. These age‐related changes in the output of the oculomotor crosslinks provide further evidence of the continual oculomotor adaptation that occurs concurrent with the loss of accommodative responsivity.

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