Welcome to PracticeUpdate! We hope you are enjoying access to a selection of our top-read and most recent articles. Please register today for a free account and gain full access to all of our expert-selected content.
Already Have An Account? Log in Now
Efficacy and Safety of Repeated Low-Level Red-Light Therapy in Patients With Myopia
abstract
This abstract is available on the publisher's site.
Access this abstract nowExposure to long-wavelength light has been proposed as a potential intervention to slow myopia progression in children. This article provides an evidence-based review of the safety and myopia control efficacy of red light and discusses the potential mechanisms by which red light may work to slow childhood myopia progression.The spectral composition of the ambient light in the visual environment has powerful effects on eye growth and refractive development. Studies in mammalian and primate animal models (macaque monkeys and tree shrews) have shown that daily exposure to long wavelength (red or amber) light promotes slower eye growth and hyperopia development and inhibits myopia induced by form deprivation or minus lens wear. Consistent with these results, several recent randomized controlled clinical trials in Chinese children have demonstrated that exposure to red light for three minutes twice a day significantly reduces myopia progression and axial elongation. These findings have collectively provided strong evidence for the potential of using red light as a myopia control intervention in clinical practice. However, several questions remain unanswered. In this article, we review the current evidence on the safety and efficacy of red light as a myopia control intervention, describe potential mechanisms, and discuss some key unresolved issues that require consideration before red light can be broadly translated into myopia control in children.
Additional Info
Repeated Low-level Red-light Therapy: The Next Wave in Myopia Management?
Optom Vis Sci 2023 Oct 25;[EPub Ahead of Print], AD Salzano, S Khanal, NL Cheung, KK Weise, EC Jenewein, DM Horn, DO Mutti, TJ GawneFrom MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.