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Maximum angle of ocular duction during visual fixation as a function of age. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess how the maximum angle of eye movement (ocular duction) varies with age among healthy individuals.
  • Researchers tested 204 volunteers by displaying visual targets to measure their eye movement limits while controlling head movement and using specific measurement techniques.
  • Results showed a significant decline in eye movement angles starting in middle age, with older participants (80-95 years) having nearly double the reduction compared to younger ones (14-19 years), highlighting the importance of establishing baseline data for age-related changes.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To measure and compare the maximum angle of ocular duction in healthy individuals as a function of age.

Methods: A calibrated arc perimeter was modified to display one of six randomly presented targets (high contrast Snellen equivalent letters), in both vertical (supra/infraduction) and horizontal (ab/adduction) gaze to the dominant eye of 204 healthy volunteers with best-corrected visual acuity. A bite-bar and headrest were employed to prevent head movement. Using a modified method of limits for discrimination threshold, a maximum mean angle of ocular duction was determined by stepping a target out in 5 degrees steps until an error was reported and thereafter bracketing around the limits of the target identification in 1 degrees steps. A mean threshold value was determined as the angle at which a subject obtained a correct response 75% of the time in two and as many as the trails in each of the four randomly presented directions of gaze (abduction, adduction, supraduction and infraduction).

Results: A decrease in mean maximum duction angle was found over all age groups in al four directions (p < 0.001), with a step decline beginning in the sixth decade and almost doubling in the oldest age group tested (80-95 years-olds). The percent change in mean maximum angle of duction due to age from the 14-19 to the 80-95 year-olds was: abduction 21%, adduction 24%, supraduction 35%, infraduction 26%.

Conclusion: Baseline data are useful to differentiate normal changes occurring with age from early signs of disease. AdditIonally, disease progression and effects of treatment can be monitored.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09273970590901810DOI Listing

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