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Explore surprising links between childhood hyperopia and parental smoking in a study involving 142 participants aged 0-12. Discover how current maternal smoking impacts hyperopia odds. Discuss the need for a larger, unbiased study to confirm findings.
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An Unexpected Association between Childhood Hyperopia and Parental Smoking Dr Elaine YH Wong Ms Leanne Finch Dr Christine Chen Dr Lionel Kowal
Background • Effects of nicotinic antagonists on ocular growth and experimental myopia Stone RA, Sugimoto R, Gill AS, Liu J, Capehart C, Lindstrom JM Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2001 Mar;42(3):557-65 • 1-week old chicks, injected with nicotinic antagonists – Chlorisondamine & mecamylamine • Inhibition of ocular growth and shift of refraction towards hyperopia
Background • Childhood myopia and parental smoking. Saw SM, Chia KS, Lindstrom JM, Tan DT, Stone RA Br J Ophthalmol. 2004 Jul;88(7):934-7. • N=1334, 8-11 yo school children • Maternal smoking ? associated with hyperopic refraction in children (p=0.03; but only 1.7% of mothers smoked) • Paternal smoking is not associated with refractive error or axial length
Background • Associations between childhood refraction and parental smoking. Stone RA, Wilson LB, Ying GS, Liu C, Criss JS, Orlow J, Lindstrom JM, Quinn GE Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2006 Oct;47(10):4277-87. • N=323 from tertiary paediatric clinic • If one or both parents ever smoked, their children had a lower myopia prevalence (12.4% vs. 25.4%; P = 0.004) and more hyperopic mean refractions (1.83±0.24 vs 0.96±0.27 diopters; P =0.02) • Smoking by either parent during the mother’s pregnancy had a similar effect
Background Prevalence of hyperopia and associations with eye findings in 6- and 12-year-olds. Ip JM, Robaei D, Kifley A, Wang JJ, Rose KA, Mitchell P Ophthalmology. 2008 Apr;115(4):678-685. • N = 1765 (6 yo); N = 2353 (12yo) • Maternal smoking associated with moderate hyperopia in 6 yo but not 12 yo • Smoking during pregnancy – borderline significant with moderate hyperopia (p=0.055) • Not significant when controlled for ethnicity • Moderate hyperopia is significantly associated with amblyopia, strabismus, poor stereoacuity and abnormal convergence
The Pilot S tudy • Aim • To explore the relationship between hyperopia and parental smoking in a population who present to a subspecialty strabismus practice • Methods • Patients between the age of 0 -12 undergoing a cycloplegic retinoscopy were recruited • A short questionnaire was administered to the accompanying parent[s] • Information regarding parental smoking status, gestational smoking status, parental refractive error and ethnicity were collected
Results • N = 142 participants • Mild hyperopia (+0.25 - +1.75) = 59 • Moderate hyperopia (+2.00 - +5.75) = 59 • Severe hyperopia (>+6.00) = 15 • Myopia = 8 • Mean age = 5.29, SD = 2.99, range 0-12y • 52% female • 21% of mothers smoke; 16% smoked during pregnancy • 26% of fathers smoke; 32% smoked during pregnancy • 32% have either parent smoking now • 38% have a parent smoking during pregnancy
Results Adjusted for age & ethnicity
Discussion In this cohort… • Gestational smoking is NOT associated with hyperopia • Having a mother who is smoking now increases the odds of moderate to severe hyperopia (>+3 DS) by nearly 20 fold • Mother with myopia is protective of a child having > moderate hyperopia
Discussion • This is a biased population and a small sample • A larger study is required, hopefully from sources other than a private strabismus practice • Relationship of smoking, hyperopia and strabismus will need to be explored If anyone like to contribute patients, please contact Lionel Kowal (strabism@netspace.net.au) or Elaine Wong (e.wong@unimelb.edu.au)