Title of article :
Myopia Progression in Low Birth Weight Infants: A Narrative Review
Author/Authors :
Ahmadzadeh Amiri, Amir Department of Pediatric - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran , Reza Sheikhrezaee, Majid Department of Ophthalmology - Clinical Research Development Unit - School of Medicine - Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari , Ahmadzadeh Amiri, Ahmad Department of Ophthalmology - Clinical Research Development Unit - School of Medicine - Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari
Abstract :
Context: Low birth weight infants are prone to an altered ocular development in childhood, resulting in refractive errors of the eye. Myopia (short-sightedness) is the most common refractive error of the eye that reduces vision.
Evidence Acquisition: A PubMed literature search was conducted using the following search terms: “low birth weight infant", “myopia", “prematurity", and “refractive error".
Results: The underlying cause of myopia is usually excessive growth of the eye, which is under the influence of early-life pressure on human growth. Children with low birth weight have significantly shallower anterior chamber depth and thicker lens. At the ages of 10-12 years, preterm children have an increased likelihood of all types of refractive errors. However, in low birth weight children, a 1 diopter of myopic change occurs over the first decade of life.
Conclusions: The progression of myopia is higher in children with low birth weight, suggesting that prematurity and low birth weight may simultaneously affect the development of optical components, leading to myopia.
Keywords :
Myopia , Refractive error , Low birth weight , Premature infant