4.1 Review

The effect of spatially-related environmental risk factors in visual scenes on myopia

Journal

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL OPTOMETRY
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 353-361

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08164622.2021.1983400

Keywords

Environment; myopia; refractive error; visual scene

Categories

Funding

  1. Innovation & Technology Fund CEVR
  2. Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region

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Myopia is a common refractive error that impacts over two billion people globally, with a higher prevalence among children in East Asian regions. In addition to genetic factors, environmental influences like near-work and outdoor activities play significant roles in myopia development. Visual cues from daily scenes, such as lighting and spatial frequency, are suggested to affect the progression of myopia.
Myopia, the most common refractive error, is estimated to affect over two billion people worldwide, especially children from East Asian regions. Children with early onset myopia have an increased risk of developing sight threatening complications in later life. In addition to the contribution of genetic factors, of which expression is controversially suggested to be subject to environmental regulation, various environmental factors, such as near-work, outdoor, and living environment, have also been determined to play significant roles in the development of refractive error, especially juvenile myopia. Cues from daily visual scenes, including lighting, spatial frequency, and optical defocus over the field of visual stimuli, are suggested to influence emmetropisation, thereby affecting myopia development and progression. These risk factors in visual scenes of the everyday life may explain the relationship between urbanicity and myopia prevalence. This review first summarises the previously reported associations between myopia development and everyday-life environments, including schooling, urban settings, and outdoors. Then, there is a discussion of the mechanisms hypothesised in the literature about the cues from different visual scenes of urbanicity in relation to myopia development.

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