- Vision therapy yields faster recovery from concussion-related eye condition
- Doctors of optometry ‘critical’ to helping patients with mental illness
- Optometry’s essential role in concussion recovery
- When to consider referring for low-vision rehabilitation
- The role of sex hormones and aging in dry eye disease
- 3 reasons to read AOA’s newest clinical practice guideline
- Identifying reading difficulties in children
- Mobilizing against myopia
- New AOA clinical guideline puts focus on elevating care of glaucoma patients
- Tips for reinforcing optometry’s role in the broader health care system
- Vision loss makes list of 14 risk factors for dementia
- The ‘gatekeepers of primary eye care’
- Myopia report calls for disease classification, new federal policies
- High-tech solutions for low vision
- Optometrists play an integral role in assessing and treating patients with traumatic brain injuries.
- Primary care of the stroke patient
- Research on eye aberrations not abstract to award-winning scientists
- AOA, CooperVision mobilize to ‘disrupt the status quo,’ advance new standard of care for children with myopia
- What do the experts say on genetic testing for IRDs?
- Pediatric keratoconus prevalence higher than believed, may change care approach
- Making blurry vision clear
- Unblurring the lines
- Appreciating optometry’s value to patients with diabetes and their primary care physicians
- 9 benefits of introducing laser procedures into your practice
- 5 considerations if you’re thinking about adding laser procedures to your practice
- Optometrist-performed YAG capsulotomies shown effective, safe and beneficial for patients
- Proof not positive yet on low-dose atropine for myopia in children
- For 128 million U.S. presbyopes, doctors of optometry can provide treatment options
- What’s up, doc? Can a dietary supplement reverse patient cataracts?
- Legal blindness in America
- AOA webinar addresses concerns about myopia management
- AOA serving patients through research in optometry
- Marijuana sensibilities changing fast: Are you ready for patients’ questions?
- Buzz builds for AOA virtual ePosters event
- New AOA adult eye guideline
- New technology for the advanced AMD patient
- Interprofessional communication for diabetic eye care
- Contact lens experts weigh in on gaps in consumer knowledge
- Align your team on binocular vision disorders
- How to better manage dry eye disease
- eyes the brain and learning
- Can vision intervention slow onset of dementia
- New independent task force recommendation on glaucoma screening underwhelms
- Gene therapy vision rehabilitation for IRDs
- 2022 contact lens controversies
- The latest research from AOA members
- Caring for patients with special needs
- New discoveries aid understanding of the visual system
- Don’t let the pressure get to you or your patients
- How technology has changed recommendations for visually impaired children
- 12 ways to provide better care for patients with prediabetes and diabetes
- Alzheimers and eyes
- Level up your diabetes care with specialists, services collaboration
- Behind the lens
- Contact lens developments regarding keratoconus
- Managing the care of patients with contact lens-related dry eye
- Lens-based strategies to address reading issues due to mild, disease-related vision loss
- Study shines light on optogenetics in retinitis pigmentosa
- surgical procedures courses
- Genetic Testing and Gene Therapy
- low vision in your practice
- Low percentage of patients with diabetes adhere to key self-care practices
- EBO to produce new glaucoma clinical practice guideline
- details of visual functions immediately following marijuana use
- Understanding Photophobia in mTBI
- New myopia management guidance released
- The challenges of maintaining a healthy tear film
- Integrating models of diabetic eye care
- Dry Eye and Productivity
- Contact lens innovation delivers opportunity
- How face masks affect the eyes
- Marijuana dispensaries still blow smoke over glaucoma effects
- Conjunctival Lymphangiectasia and Fabry
- Techniques to enhance contrast
- Americans remain at high risk for vision loss
- Stimulating eye and vision research
- Allergic conjunctivitis in a COVID-19 world
- Atropine in myopia control
- sleep patients ocular health
- CDC US coronavirus spread expected
- Demystifying dizziness
- Optometry and Glaucoma patients
- 5 reasons why doctors should use AOA diabetes guideline
- Growing epidemic of adolescents and young adults with prediabetes
- Improving scanning efficiency of individuals with homonymous hemianopia
- second edition of diabetes clinical practice guideline
- Pupil patterns in youth a phenomenon
- Study high school sports concussions underscores optometry role in care
- Prototype imager of tear film sublayers opens eyes on dry eye
- Retinal measurements hold clues to Alzheimers disease
- reversing prediabetes to normoglycemia can lessen microvascular complication risk
- Detecting the signs of autism at earlier age using visual cues
- Eye disorder CRISPR technology
- Addressing elderly vision impairment
- The AMD aspirin balancing act
- Study looks at what patients understand about their glaucoma diagnoses
- Vision Rehabilitation Clinical Pearls Lens Rx Prescribing for the Patient with Traumatic Brain Injury
- Real partners in diabetes care
- Amblyopia More than meets the eye
- New mild TBI guideline for children provides opportunity for doctors of optometry
- Reading corneal signs
- Eyes on Alzheimers disease
- Study looks at potential of suppressing ocular cancer in children
- Doctors of optometry are members of post-concussion team
- Glaucoma & Exercise
- The ABCs of MGD
- When T-cells go bad
- Study opens eyes to Alzheimers disease risk
- Understanding MGD
- Sjogren’s dry eye disease and depression
- Oranges may allay AMD risk Pulp fact or fiction
- myopiatech
- Cognitive Decline
- Myopia Genes Discovered
- Link between diabetes and MGD
- alzheimers clues could be found using eye scan
- Genetic markers may help predict elevated IOP
- Ebola vector-borne diseases rear ugly heads again
- Blue lights link to prostate and breast cancers
- Can dyed contact lenses help color perception in CVD patients
- Omega 3 and Dry Eyes
- Glaucoma-Cannabinoid NP Drop
- Genetic Testing for AMD
- Premature Babies Low Birthweight Eyes
- ASD & Accommodative Function
- Stem Cells and Wet AMD
- Sjogren Awareness
- Brain Injury Awareness
- Sleep apneas interplay with corneal hysteresis
- New blood pressure guideline
- Low vision patient future
- Retinoblastoma-detecting ocular cancer in children
- Winter Dry Eye
- Low Vision and Blindness to Double
- New guidelines detecting retinoblastoma in children
- Glaucoma protein biomarker
- Risk for normal-tension glaucoma rises
- Peripheral reaction time faster in deaf adults
- New therapeutic target could reduce diabetic retinopathy
- diabetes on the rise among the young
- Trabeculoplasty Commentary
- Seniors near vision loss dementia risk linked
- Can frequent anti VEGF injections increase glaucoma surgery risk
- Study stresses stress test in treating patients with AMD
- Contact lens helps predict speed of glaucoma progression
- Unique retinal cell dysfunction triggers myopia
- Preeclampsia years later still takes toll
- How tilted optic discs may affect myopic eyes
- New eye test is early detector of diabetes
- Anti VEGF injections may not work for allglaucoma sooner
- New technique could diagnose glaucoma sooner
- Myopia incidence piques control efforts initiatives
- Study links visual impairment to physical and cognitive function declines
- Benefits unfamiliarity proves barrier to diabetes care
- Eyes on Alzheimers
- Association found between TBI and neurodegenerative conditions
- Spotting the link between vision problems and ADHD
- Treating the digital eye
- Statins show continued potential as treatment for dry AMD
- How doctors of optometry can diagnose a rare disorder
- Could eye drops be an alternative treatment to cataract surgery
- Researchers zero in on potential dry AMD treatment
- Ranibizumab proves effective to treat proliferative diabetic retinopathy
- Study shows some drivers with glaucoma naturally adapt
- Doctors of optometry a crucial component in cataract care
- Be part of the national dialogue about diabetes
- Under pressure addressing hypertension
- Gene therapy successful in treating rare retinal disorder
- The lowdown on treating low vision patients
- New study calls attention to importance of carotenoids
- 5 things doctors of optometry should know about concussions
- Can a supplement fight diabetic retinopathy
- Outdoor activity may reduce risk for myopia in children
- 3 reasons comprehensive exams matter for diabetes
- Diabetes and Prediabetes
- Vitamin C may slow progress of cataracts
- Multifocal contact lens effective at treating myopia in kids
- New tool educates and motivates patients with diabetes related eye disease
- Myopia Its in your genes too
- Out of the box thinking leads to potential glaucoma treatment
- Doctors of optometry have big role in catching giant cell arteritis before blindness
- Cataract surgery lessens death risk
- Novel glaucoma therapy One ring to help them all
- Common glaucoma drugs may affect IOP measurements
- Gene mutation uncovers potential treatment for rare form of pediatric glaucoma
- How astigmatism affects reading fluency
- FDA approves first corneal cross linking system for treatment
- Cataracts and UV exposure in driver-side windows
- Virtual model aids diabetic retinopathy progression understanding
- doctors of optometry AMD assessments comparable to ophthalmologistsoutcomes
- Parkinsons detectable through eye exam
- Are sleep apnea and asthma linked to keratoconus
- Not a dry eye
- Eye on head injuries
- Risk for macular degeneration linked to low levels of vitamin D
- Tears now fears Zika persists in eyes
- Myopia Controlling the heretofore uncontrollable
- advancing keratoconus care
- visual dysfunction after brain injury
- Study detects early biomarkers for risk of developing diabetic retinopathy
- Prevalence of Undiagnosed AMD
- Daily use of steroid drops increases risk for ocular hypertension
- Zikababy
- New study dry eye disease
- Encyclopedia of dry eye disease released
- Clinical Pearls for Seasonal Allergies
- Doctors of optometry less likely to prescribe seldom needed antibiotics for conjunctivitis
- T cells hold promise of treatment for preemies born with eye condition
- Youth Concussions
- New imaging techniques detect earlystage Alzheimer’s disease
Are patches the answer to amblyopia?
July 24, 2018
New study challenges effectiveness of patch treatment.
In cases of amblyopia, patching over the problem may no longer be the best option, a new study suggests.
That common treatment, putting an adhesive patch over the good or dominant eye in order to strengthen the lazy or weaker eye, is challenged in a new study, "Distinct Circuits for Recovery of Eye Dominance and Acuity in Murine Amblyopia" published June 18 in Current Biology. The researchers also underscore the need for early and comprehensive eye exams to diagnosis disorders when the plasticity of eye dominance is more receptive to being restored. The "critical period" is puberty, they say.
The nogo-66 receptor 1 (also known as ngr1), a protein in humans that may play a role in axonal regeneration and plasticity in the adult central nervous system, allows the treatment or restoration window to remain open, say the researchers at Children's Hospital Los Angeles, the University of Southern California, the University of Arizona, Shantou University and the University of Louisville.
In their study, researchers deleted the gene (ngr1) from animal models with amblyopia. Among their key findings:
- Separate areas of the brain control eye dominance (primary visual cortex) and acuity (thalamus).
- That eye dominance can be addressed independently without correcting acuity and vice versa.
"We unexpectedly discovered that they aren't related," lead researcher Aaron McGee, Ph.D., assistant professor in the University of Louisville Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology, says in a university news release.
"They're independent," Dr. McGee says. "It may not be necessary to instill normal eye dominance to correct visual acuity."
Amblyopia is one of the most common eye conditions among children, affecting an estimated 2 or 3 individuals out of 100, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Game changer?
Mary Gregory, O.D., who practices in Monticello, Minnesota, called the study's findings "exciting" for building on doctors' knowledge base and reinforcing findings in past studies. Dr. Gregory, who received the 2014 Dr. W. David Sullins Jr. InfantSEE® Award for outstanding public service, operates a clinic where she provides vision rehabilitation for adults and children.
"The more knowledge we have like this new research, the easier it is to work with our patients using the most efficient methods," Dr. Gregory says. "In the past, amblyopia treatment was thought to be most effective by hindering or blocking the vision of the dominant eye via a patch. This was thought to create stronger visual pathways and a subsequent improvement in vision in the nondominant eye."
But new research is changing how doctors of optometry look at caring for patients with amblyopia.
"More recently, the accepted model of vision relies more on binocular acuity development instead of focusing on monocular acuity improvement," she adds. "In this more recent scenario, we are trying to increase visual acuity and reduce exaggerated dominance between the two eyes to increase stereopsis development. This newer method does not rely on patching the dominant eye but instead uses visual rehabilitation to enhance binocular acuity and decrease inhibition in the nondominant eye, while developing stereopsis at the same time. This research provides more insight into why eye dominance and visual acuity do not always seem to correlate."
Dr. Gregory said she would continue to follow this research. It won't necessarily immediately change treatment plans for amblyopia patients, but its results are promising and the study may have implications for adult patients whose amblyopia wasn't diagnosed earlier.
"This could be a game changer for amblyopic patients who were not treated early in life either due to lack of treatment or lack of detection," says Dr. Gregory who noted the research may also have implications for patients with brain injuries. "While more treatment options will be an asset, prevention and the early detection of amblyopia risk factors remain the best treatment. This research continues to impress upon the medical community how complex and prevalent vision is throughout the brain."
The AOA follows all research and new technology closely, including potential new amblyopia treatments. Although interesting, more research is needed regarding this development's influence on visual health. For more information or help for better vision, please visit the AOA website.
AOA recommendations
Learn more about children's eye care in the AOA's Evidence-Based Clinical Practice Guideline: Comprehensive Pediatric Eye and Vision Examination or a guideline brief. The AOA recommends:
- Infants receive a comprehensive, baseline eye exam between the ages of 6 and 12 months, immediately after the critical period when the eye undergoes rapid and profound changes and is therefore most vulnerable to interference with normal development.
- Preschoolers receive at least one in-person, comprehensive eye exam between the ages of 3 and 5 to prevent or diagnose any condition that may have long-term effects.
- School-age children (6 to 18 years) should receive a comprehensive exam prior to entering the first grade and annually thereafter.