Factors Influencing Physiological Hyperopia in Children
The trend of myopia in children and its low age is a major social and public health problem in China. More seriously, retinopathy associated with high myopia has become the number one cause of irreversible blinding eye disease in adults in some parts of China. Physiological hyperopia has a protective effect on preventi
| Condition(s) | Myopia Progression |
|---|---|
| Status | Recruiting |
| Study type | Observational |
| Summary | The trend of myopia in children and its low age is a major social and public health problem in China. More seriously, retinopathy associated with high myopia has become the number one cause of irreversible blinding eye disease in adults in some parts of China. Physiological hyperopia has a protective effect on preventing the onset of myopia, and is one of the strongest predictors of myopia on its own, which is significant in curbing myopia from occurring at a younger age and preventing the development of high myopia before adulthood. However, it is not yet known how the physiological hyperopia changes in childhood, the stage at which the critical inflection point occurs, which key factors lead to the rapid fading of the physiological hyperopia and progression to myopia, and the strength of |
| Who can participate | Inclusion Criteria: 1. Children aged 6-9 years old, male or female; 2. Good cooperation in examination; 3. Parents cooperate and sign the informed consent form; Exclusion Criteria: 1. Children with a history of drug allergy; 2. Pediatric patients with heart disease, cranial trauma or epilepsy, Down syndrome, or glaucoma will be excluded from the cohort. |
| Ages | 6 Years to 9 Years |
| Sex | All |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | Yes |
| Lead sponsor | Beijing Tongren Hospital |
| Locations | Beijing, Beijing Municipality, China |
| Start date | 2024-06-01 |
| NCT ID | NCT06498947 |
| Official listing | https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06498947 |