"Lazy Eye" Treatment Shows Promise In Adults
Main Category: Eye Health / BlindnessAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience; Clinical Trials / Drug Trials
Article Date: 04 Mar 2008 - 0:00 PDT
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New evidence from a laboratory study and a pilot clinical trial confirms the promise of a simple treatment for amblyopia, or "lazy eye," according to researchers from the U.S. and China.
The treatment was effective on 20-year-old subjects. Amblyopia was considered mostly irreversible after age eight.
Many amblyopes, especially in developing countries, are diagnosed too late for conventional treatment with an eye patch. The disorder affects about nine million people in the U.S. alone.
Results from the laboratory study will be published online the week of Mar. 3 in PNAS Early Edition.
Patients seeking treatment will need to wait for eye doctors to adopt the non-surgical procedure in their clinics, said Zhong-Lin Lu, the University of Southern California neuroscientist who led the research group.
"I would be very happy to have some clinicians use the procedure to treat patients. It will take some time for them to be convinced," Lu said.
"We also have a lot of research to do to make the procedure better."
In a pilot clinical trial at a Beijing hospital in 2007, 28 out of 30 patients showed dramatic gains after a 10-day course of treatment, Lu said.
"After training, they start to use both eyes. Some people got to 20/20. By clinical standards, they're completely normal. They're not amblyopes anymore."
The gains averaged two to three lines on a standard eye chart. Previous studies by Lu's group found that the improvement is long-lasting, with 90 percent of vision gain retained after at least a year.
"This is a brilliant study that addresses a very important issue," said Dennis Levi, dean of optometry at the University of California, Berkeley. Levi was not involved in the study.
"The results have important implications for the treatment of amblyopia and possibly other clinical conditions."
The PNAS study shows that the benefit of the training protocol which involves a very simple visual task goes far beyond the task itself. Amblyopes trained on just one task improved their overall vision, Lu said.
The improvement was much greater for amblyopes than for normal subjects, Lu added.
"For amblyopes, the neural wiring is messed up. Any improvement you can give to the system may have much larger impacts on the system than for normals," he said.
The Lu group's findings also have major theoretical implications. The assumption of incurability for amblyopia rested on the notion of "critical period": that the visual system loses its plasticity and ability to change after a certain age.
The theory of critical period arose in part from experiments on the visual system of animals by David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel of Harvard Medical School, who shared the 1981 Nobel Prize in Medicine with Roger Sperry of Caltech.
"This is a challenge to the idea of critical period," Lu said. "The system is much more plastic than the idea of critical period implies. The fact that we can drastically change people's vision at age 20 says something."
A critical period still exists for certain functions, Lu added, but it might be more limited than previously thought.
"Amblyopia is a great model to re-examine the notion of critical period," Lu said.
The first study by Lu's group on the plasticity of amblyopic brains was published in the journal Vision Research in 2006 and attracted wide media attention.
Since then, Lu has received hundreds of emails from adult amblyopes who had assumed they were beyond help.
Berkeley's Levi cautioned that the clinical usefulness of perceptual learning, as Lu calls his treatment, remains a "sixty-four thousand dollar question."
"It's clear that perceptual learning in a lab setting is effective," Levi said. "However, ultimately it needs to be adopted by clinicians and that will probably require multi-center clinical trials."
Lu is collecting patients' names for possible future clinical trials.
The researchers are also working to develop a home-based treatment program.
For patients who can travel, the Chinese hospital that hosted the pilot trial may be able to provide treatment.
The other members of Lu's group are Chang-Bing Huang and Yifeng Zhou of the Vision Research Lab at the University of Science and Technology of China, in Hefei, Anhui province (Huang is currently a postdoc in Lu's lab at USC).
Funding for the research came from the Chinese National Natural Science Foundation and the U.S. National Eye Institute.
ABOUT AMBLYOPIA
Amblyopia affects about 3 percent of the population and cannot be rectified with glasses. People with the disorder suffer a range of symptoms: poor vision in one eye, poor depth perception, difficulty seeing three-dimensional objects, and poor motion sensitivity.
Also known as lazy eye, the disorder is caused by poor transmission of images from the eye to the brain during early childhood, leading to abnormal brain development. Lazy eye is actually a misnomer because in many cases the structure of the eye is normal.
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FDA Approved Amblyopia Treatment From RevitalVision
posted by Dennis Depenbusch on 21 Jun 2010 at 2:15 pmThe RevitalVision Amblyopia program uses perceptual learning to improve amblyopia and is the only existing treatment for amblyopia approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. It is approved for individuals over the age of 9 with best corrected vision of 20/100 or better who have minor strabismus of 8 prism diopters or less.
The RevitalVision program involves no surgery or drugs and is individualized to every patients visual ability. The patient takes the program on their home computer using applied perceptual learning techniques which improve neural performance. During neural training sessions, a series of visual tasks and repetitive images train the brain and improve viual processing. RevitalVision analyzes performance and continuously adjusts the individually customized training sessions to substantially improve vision.
Amblyopic patients', on average, improved their vision by more than two lines on an eye chart and increased their contrast sensitivity by more than 100% after completing the program. The program is 40 training sessions of 40 minutes each, on average. Once the training sessions are completed, since the program involves neural training, its effects are long lasting.
RevitalVision scientific research can be found on its website at http://www.revitalvision.com. Particular items of relevance are below:
FDA 510(k) #K012530
Polat, U., et. al., 'Improving Vision in Adult Amblyopia by Perceptual Learning', Page 6692, PNAS, April 27, 2004
Zhou, Y., et. al., Perceptual Learning Improves Contrast Sensitivity and Visual Acuity in Adults with Anisometropic Amblyopia', Vision Research 2005
treatment for lazy eye
posted by ved parkash on 23 Nov 2011 at 9:40 pmI am ved parkash from Jammum J & K. I am 41 years old and having problem of lazy eye. Can this be treated by any mode. Please help me. thanks.
Sincerely yours.
Ved. P
Amblyopia
posted by Steven on 13 Jan 2012 at 3:26 pmI am 53 years old and have had lazy eye for my entire adult life. I just saw your article and was wondering if would work for me. Thank you
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