Accommodative infacility
Accommodative infacility | |
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Specialty | Ophthalmology |
Accommodative infacility also known as accommodative inertia[1] is the inability to change the accommodation of the eye with enough speed and accuracy to achieve normal function. This can result in visual fatigue, headaches, and difficulty reading.[2] The delay in accurate accommodation also makes vision blurry for a moment when switching between distant and near objects. The duration and extent of this blurriness depends on the extent of the deficit.[3]
Signs and symptoms
[edit]Most common symptom of accommodative infacility is difficulty in changing focus from one distance to other.[1]
Treatment
[edit]Vision assessment and cycloplegic refraction should be done. If there is any refractive errors, it should be corrected before considering orthoptic treatments. The accommodative infacility is commonly treated with vision therapy/orthoptics; one study found that 12 weeks of treatment had a significant effect on visual accommodation.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ a b William J., Benjamin (2006). "Accommodation, the Pupil, and Presbyopia". Borish's clinical refraction (2nd ed.). St. Louis Mo.: Butterworth Heinemann/Elsevier. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-7506-7524-6.
- ^ Cacho-Martínez, Pilar; Cantó-Cerdán, Mario; Carbonell-Bonete, Stela; García-Muñoz, Ángel (2015-08-16). "Characterization of Visual Symptomatology Associated with Refractive, Accommodative, and Binocular Anomalies". Journal of Ophthalmology. 2015 (2015): 895803. doi:10.1155/2015/895803. PMC 4553196. PMID 26351575.
- ^ Hennessey, Daniel; Iosue, Richard A.; Rouse, Michael W. (1984). "Relation of Symptoms to Accommodative Infacility of School-Aged Children". Optometry and Vision Science. 61 (3): 177–183. doi:10.1097/00006324-198403000-00005. ISSN 1538-9235. PMID 6720863. S2CID 41568042.
- ^ Scheiman, Mitchell; Cotter, Susan; Kulp, Marjean Taylor; Mitchell, G. Lynn; Cooper, Jeffrey; Gallaway, Michael; Hopkins, Kristine B.; Bartuccio, Mary; Chung, Ida (2011). "Treatment of Accommodative Dysfunction in Children: Results from an Random Clinical Trial". Optometry and Vision Science. 88 (11): 1343–1352. doi:10.1097/OPX.0b013e31822f4d7c. ISSN 1040-5488. PMC 3204163. PMID 21873922.