Abstract

The objective herein is to provide refraction data, myopia progression rate, prevalence, and 1st and 2nd generation correlations, relevant to whether myopia is random or inherited. First- and second-generation ocular refraction data are assembled from N=34 families, average of 2.8 children per family. From this group, data are available from N=165 subjects. Inter-generation regressions are performed on all the data sets, including correlation coefficient r, and myopia prevalence [%]. Prevalence of myopia is [M]=38.5%. Prevalence of high myopes with |R|>6 D is [M-]=20.5%. Average refraction is<R>=-1.84 D±3.22 (N=165). For the high myopes, |R|>6 D, prevalence for the parents is [M-]=25%, for the 2nd generation [M-]=16.5%. Average myopia level for the high myopes, both generations, is<S>=-7.52 D±1.31 D (N=33). Regression parameters are calculated for all the data sets, yielding correlation coefficients in the range r=0.48-0.72 for some groups of myopes and high myopes, fathers to daughters, and mothers to sons. Also of interest, some categories show essentially no correlation, -0.20<r<0.20, indicating that the refractive errors occur randomly. Time series results show myopia diopter rates=-0.50 D/year.

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