Expand this Topic clickable element to expand a topic
Skip to content
Optica Publishing Group

Aging Changes in the Human Accommodative Process

Not Accessible

Your library or personal account may give you access

Abstract

Accommodation, the process by which the human eye focuses on near objects, takes place through carefully controlled changes of the crystalline lens in shape, thickness, and anterior surface location relative to the cornea. These changes, which involve an elastic recovery of the lens upon accommodation from the maximally stressed and flattened non-accommodated lens shape, are coupled with the contraction of the ciliary muscle, which itself changes in shape and location relative to fixed points within the globe. The refractive range over which accommodation can occur is age-dependent. In youthful eyes, the range can be as great as 15 diopters, but the near point recedes steadily with increasing age in the adult eye until, by about 50 yr, it closely approaches the far point. This diminution in accommodative range is accompanied by other aging changes in the lens, ciliary muscle, and anterior segment geometry.

© 1997 Optical Society of America

PDF Article
More Like This
Preliminary Modeling of Human Crystalline Lens Deformation During Accommodation as a Function of Age

Jane F. Koretz, Christopher A. Cook, and George H. Handelman
SaC.1 Vision Science and its Applications (VSIA) 1996

Development and Aging of Human Visual Focusing Mechanisms

Jane F. Koretz
NW7 Vision Science and its Applications (VSIA) 2000

Preliminary Characterization of Human Crystalline Lens Geometry as a Function of Accommodation and Age

Jane F. Koretz, Anne M. Bertasso, Michael W. Neider, Paul L. Kaufman, and Patrick A. Goeckner
WD3 Noninvasive Assessment of the Visual System (NAVS) 1988

Select as filters


Select Topics Cancel
© Copyright 2024 | Optica Publishing Group. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies.