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Title: Reduction of asthenopia related to accommodative relaxation by means of far point stimuli. Author: Iwasaki T, Tawara A, Miyake N. Journal: Acta Ophthalmol Scand; 2005 Feb; 83(1):81-8. PubMed ID: 15715563. Abstract: PURPOSE: To conduct an experimental investigation of the effect of accommodative relaxation using far point shift stimuli for the reduction of asthenopia. METHODS: Twenty-two female students accommodated to a far point shift stimuli during a 2-min period immediately after a 15-min sustained task on a three-dimensional display. Before and after the trial, their accommodative step response and symptoms were assessed. The far point shift stimuli in the optical system, which were presented on a refractometer, were created by moving the target scenery images from far to near, lineally centred about the far point position of each eye. During 2 min of fixating on the far point shift stimuli, changes in refraction were recorded in the same eye. RESULTS: While looking at the far point shift stimuli, 10 of 22 subjects had changes in refraction that showed a hypermetropic shift, and the other 12 subjects had changes in refraction that showed a myopic shift. The time taken for the accommodative step response from far to near post-trial in the myopic shift group was markedly prolonged, and the accommodative lag at the far target in the optometer was significantly increased. In the myopic shift group, the symptoms of "eye fatigue", "eye pain", "eye heaviness", and "eye dryness" also increased after the trial. In the hyperopic shift group, however, only the symptom of "eye dryness" increased, with no reduction of accommodation function. CONCLUSIONS: We suggest that accommodative relaxation by accommodative far point shift stimuli is effective in the reduction of asthenopia.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]