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Cognition, ocular accommodation, and cardiovascular function in emmetropes and late-onset myopes. | LitMetric

Cognition, ocular accommodation, and cardiovascular function in emmetropes and late-onset myopes.

Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci

Neurosciences Research Institute, School of Life and Health Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham B4 7ET, UK.

Published: May 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore how cognitive demand affects the autonomic control of cardiovascular and ocular responses in both emmetropic and late-onset myopic individuals.
  • Sixteen participants (8 emmetropes and 8 with late-onset myopia) engaged in a visual task with varying cognitive difficulties while their eye accommodation and heart rate were monitored.
  • Results indicated that higher cognitive demand significantly decreased accommodative responses in all subjects, while myopes showed relatively higher sympathetic activity, hinting at different autonomic responses between the groups.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To investigate objectively and noninvasively the role of cognitive demand on autonomic control of systemic cardiovascular and ocular accommodative responses in emmetropes and myopes of late-onset.

Methods: Sixteen subjects (10 men, 6 women) aged between 18 and 34 years (mean +/- SD: 22.6 +/- 4.4 years), eight emmetropes (EMMs; mean spherical equivalent [MSE] refractive error +/- SD: 0.05 +/- 0.24 D) and eight with late-onset myopia (LOMs; MSE +/- SD: -3.66 +/- 2.31 D) participated in the study. Subjects viewed stationary numerical digits monocularly within a Badal optical system (at both 0.0 and -3.0 D) while performing a two-alternative, forced-choice paradigm that matched cognitive loading across subjects. Five individually matched cognitive levels of increasing difficulty were used in random order for each subject. Five 20-second, continuous-objective recordings of the accommodative response measured with an open-view infrared autorefractor were obtained for each cognitive level, whereas simultaneous measurement of heart rate was continuously recorded with a finger-mounted piezoelectric pulse transducer for 5 minutes. Fast Fourier transformation of cardiovascular function allowed the relative power of the autonomic components to be assessed in the frequency domain, whereas heart period gave an indication of the time-domain response.

Results: Increasing the cognitive demand led to a significant reduction in the accommodative response in all subjects (0.0 D: by -0.35 +/- 0.33 D; -3.0 D: by -0.31 +/- 0.40 D, P < 0.001). The greater lag of LOMs compared with EMMs was not significant (P = 0.07) at both distance (0.38 +/- 0.35 D) and near (0.14 +/- 0.42 D). Mean heart period reduced with increasing levels of workload (P < 0.0005). LOMs exhibited a relative elevation in sympathetic system activity compared to EMMs. Within refractive groups, however, accommodative shifts with increasing cognition correlated with parasympathetic activity (r = 0.99, P < 0.001), more than with sympathetic activity (r = 0.62, P > 0.05).

Conclusions: In an equivalent workload paradigm, increasing cognitive demand caused a reduction in accommodative response that was attributable principally to a concurrent reduction in the relative power of the parasympathetic component of the autonomic nervous system (ANS). The disparity in accommodative response between EMMs and LOMs, however, appears to be augmented by changes in the sympathetic nervous component of the systemic ANS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/iovs.04-0986DOI Listing

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