The intereye difference of cycloplegic refraction was determined in a cohort of 350 rural Japanese schoolchildren aged 6 to 11 years. The intereye spherical difference remained statistically unchanged throughout 5 years, with mean value ranging from 0.21 to 0.28 D, median from 0.15 to 0.20 D, and the 95th percentile from 0.58 to 0.85 D. The prevalence of 1.0 D or greater spherical anisometropia was up to 3.1%. Linear regression analyses of the longitudinal data from individual children revealed that 295 (84.3%) children and remained unchanged while 55 (15.7%) showed significant increase or decrease in the amount of anisometropia with increasing age. The intereye astigmatic difference was also statistically unchangeable, with mean value ranging from 0.28 to 0.36 D, median from 0.20 to 0.39 D, and the 95th percentile from 0.70 to 0.90 D. The prevalence of 1.0 D or greater astigmatic anisometropia was up to 4.3%. There was a significant correlation between the spherical and astigmatic anisometropia. The results show the current state of intereye refractive difference in Japanese schoolchildren, demonstrating that it remains unchanged and significant anisometropia is rare during school age.
SUMMARY A 20-year-old healthy man suffered rapid loss of bilateral central vision with placoid lesions at the level of the retinal pigment epithelium and choriocapillaris scattered in the posterior pole of the fundus. In addition, acute vasculitis of the retinal veins was remarkable and widespread throughout the posterior pole and midperiphery. These inflammatory signs subsided in several weeks and were succeeded by recovery of the normal visual acuity with residual pigment derangements in the deep retina. Sixteen months after the onset of the disease choroidal neovascular membranes developed in the macular region of the left eye, followed by haemorrhagic macular detachment and marked visual loss. Significant increases in the serum cold agglutinin titre occurred as isolated laboratory findings concurrently with the acute stage of the disease and the late macular complication, though no clinical or other laboratory sign suggested viral infection.
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