Diagnostics (Dec 2021)

Association of Corneal Biomechanics Properties with Myopia in a Child and a Parent Cohort: Hong Kong Children Eye Study

  • Shu-Min Tang,
  • Xiu-Juan Zhang,
  • Marco Yu,
  • Yu-Meng Wang,
  • Carol Y. Cheung,
  • Ka-Wai Kam,
  • Alvin L. Young,
  • Li-Jia Chen,
  • Clement C. Tham,
  • Chi-Pui Pang,
  • Jason C. Yam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11122357
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 12
p. 2357

Abstract

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Associations between corneal biomechanics, axial elongation and myopia are important but previous results are conflicting. Our population-based study aimed to investigate factors associated with corneal biomechanics, and their relationships with myopia in children and adults. Data from 3643 children and 1994 parents showed that children had smaller deformation amplitudes (DA) than parents (p p p < 0.001) resulting from its correlation with AL and corneal curvature. In conclusion, the cornea is more deformable in adults than in children, whereas corneal deformation amplitude increases faster with age in children than that in adults, along with AL elongation. Longer AL, steeper corneal curvature, older age and smaller IOP correspond to a more deformable cornea. The association between corneal deformation amplitude and refraction was mediated via AL and corneal curvature.

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