Abstract

To investigate the effects of short-term orthokeratology (OK) on accommodation and binocular visual function in young adults. Twenty-four myopes (18 to 38 years) were fitted with OK lenses in both eyes. Best corrected distance visual acuity (VA), subjective and objective refractions, corneal topography and a series of binocular vision tests were measured at baseline (BL) before lens wear and then repeated after 28 nights of OK. Data from 15 subjects who demonstrated successful OK lens fit are reported. Corneal flattening and hyperopic shifts in spherical equivalent refractive error (all p < 0.001) after 28 nights of OK indicated myopic correction. Improvement in best corrected distance VA was measured after OK (right eye p = 0.021; left eye p = 0.014). Although there was no significant change in mean distance and near phorias and stereoacuity scores after OK compared to BL, there was a significant reduction in standard deviation (SD) and range of data (distance p = 0.01; near p = 0.02; stereoacuity p < 0.001). While there appeared to be an improvement in distance accommodative facility after OK, this failed to reach statistical significance (p = 0.053). Furthermore, there was no change in AC/A gradients with ±1 D and ±2 D lenses after OK compared to BL. Binocular vision remained unchanged after OK, although variability of phoria and stereoacuity measures reduced. This suggests that OK improves or maintains accommodative and binocular vision function in young adult myopes who achieve good vision with OK. Myopes with phorias outside normal ranges and/or poor distance accommodative facility may benefit most with OK, in binocular and accommodative function.

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