Fixation instability, astigmatism, and lack of stereopsis as factors impeding recovery of binocular balance in amblyopia following binocular therapy

Author:

Bankó Éva M.,Barboni Mirella Telles Salgueiro,Markó Katalin,Körtvélyes Judit,Németh János,Nagy Zoltán Zs.,Vidnyánszky Zoltán

Abstract

AbstractDichoptic therapy is a promising method for improving vision in pediatric and adult patients with amblyopia. However, a systematic understanding about changes in specific visual functions and substantial variation of effect among patients is lacking. Utilizing a novel stereoscopic augmented-reality based training program, 24 pediatric and 18 adult patients were trained for 20 h along a three-month time course with a one-month post-training follow-up for pediatric patients. Changes in stereopsis, distance and near visual acuity, and contrast sensitivity for amblyopic and fellow eyes were measured, and interocular differences were analyzed. To reveal what contributes to successful dichoptic therapy, ANCOVA models were used to analyze progress, considering clinical baseline parameters as covariates that are potential requirements for amblyopic recovery. Significant and lasting improvements have been achieved in stereoacuity, interocular near visual acuity, and interocular contrast sensitivity. Importantly, astigmatism, fixation instability, and lack of stereopsis were major limiting factors for visual acuity, stereoacuity, and contrast sensitivity recovery, respectively. The results demonstrate the feasibility of treatment-efficacy prediction in certain aspects of dichoptic amblyopia therapy. Furthermore, our findings may aid in developing personalized therapeutic protocols, capable of considering individual clinical status, to help clinicians in tailoring therapy to patient profiles for better outcome.

Funder

Nemzeti Kutatási, Fejlesztési és Innovaciós Alap

János Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Hungarian Scientific Research Fund

National Bionics Program

Hungarian Brain Research Program

ELKH Research Centre for Natural Sciences

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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