AL Webber, J Wood - Clinical and experimental optometry, 2005 - Taylor & Francis
Amblyopia, defined as poor vision due to abnormal visual experience early in life, affects approximately three per cent of the population and carries a projected lifetime risk of visual …
Objective To evaluate the effectiveness of treatment of amblyopia in children aged 7 to 17 years. Methods At 49 clinical sites, 507 patients with amblyopic eye visual acuity ranging …
K Simons - Survey of ophthalmology, 2005 - Elsevier
Amblyopia has a 1.6–3.6% prevalence, higher in the medically underserved. It is more complex than simply visual acuity loss and the better eye has sub-clinical deficits. Functional …
Importance One of the most important causes of vision abnormalities in children is amblyopia (also known as “lazy eye”). Amblyopia is an alteration in the visual neural …
E Papageorgiou, I Asproudis, G Maconachie… - Graefe's Archive for …, 2019 - Springer
Purpose The purpose of this review is to provide an update on current management and recent research for amblyopia treatment. Part I will review patching, atropine penalization …
This review aims to disentangle cause and effect in the relationship between anisometropia and amblyopia. Specifically, we examine the literature for evidence to support different …
purpose. Amblyopia is the commonest visual disorder of childhood. Yet the contributions of the two principal treatments (spectacle wear and occlusion) to outcome are unknown. This …
ASI Pai, KA Rose, JF Leone, S Sharbini, G Burlutsky… - Ophthalmology, 2012 - Elsevier
PURPOSE: To determine the prevalence of and factors associated with amblyopia in a sample of Australian preschool children. DESIGN: Population-based, cross-sectional study …
Now in a fully up-to-date 6th Edition, Pickwell's Binocular Vision Anomalies provides a practical introduction to binocular vision, offering comprehensive theory, how-to clinical …