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Research Paper

Does transient increase in axial length during accommodation attenuate with age?

, PhD MCOptom, , PhD MCOptom, , PhD MCOptom, , PhD & , PhD FCOptom FAAO
Pages 676-682 | Received 21 Sep 2016, Accepted 22 Dec 2016, Published online: 15 Apr 2021
 

Abstract

Background

The aim was to profile transient accommodative axial length changes from early adulthood to advanced presbyopia and to determine whether any differences exist between the responses of myopic and emmetropic individuals.

Methods

Ocular biometry was measured by the LenStar biometer (Haag‐Streit, Switzerland) in response to zero, 3.00 and 4.50 D accommodative stimuli in 35 emmetropes and 37 myopes, aged 18 to 60 years. All results were corrected to reduce errors arising from the increase in crystalline lens thickness with accommodation. Accommodative responses were measured sequentially by the WAM 5500 Auto Ref/Keratometer (Grand Seiko, Hiroshima, Japan).

Results

Axial length increased significantly with accommodation (p < 0.001), with a mean corrected increase in axial length of 2 ± 18 µm and 8 ± 16 µm observed at 3.00 and 4.50 D, respectively. The magnitude of accommodative change in axial length was not dependent on refractive error classification (p = 0.959); however, a significant reduction in the magnitude and variance of axial length change was evident after 43 to 44 years of age (p < 0.002).

Conclusion

The negative association between transient increase in axial length and age, in combination with reduced variance of data after age 43 to 44 years, is consistent with a significant increase in posterior ocular rigidity, which may be influential in the development of presbyopia.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Dr Deborah Laughton received funds from the College of Optometrists, UK. We would like to thank Richard Armstrong for his assistance with statistical analysis.