Fine Motor Skills, Reading Speed, and Self-Reported Quality of Life in Adults With Amblyopia and/or Strabismus.

IF 5 2区 医学 Q1 OPHTHALMOLOGY
Archayeeta Rakshit, Debasmita Majhi, Katrina L Schmid, Vivek Warkad, David A Atchison, Ann L Webber
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Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to assess fine motor skills and reading proficiency in adults with amblyopia and/or strabismus, and to determine how these relate to clinical measures of vision and self-reported vision-related quality of life.

Methods: Fine motor skills (Manual dexterity - Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency [BOT-2]) and reading performance (International Reading Speed Texts [IReST]) were assessed in 23 adults with non-strabismic amblyopia, 20 with non-amblyopic strabismus, 52 with both amblyopia and strabismus, and 19 with normal visual development. Visual acuity and binocular function score (BFS), obtained from stereoacuity and presence/absence of suppression, were also determined. Vision-related quality of life was assessed with the Amblyopia and Strabismus Questionnaire (A&SQ) in those with amblyopia and/or strabismus. Statistical analysis included ANOVA and multiple regression models.

Results: Participants with amblyopia and/or strabismus exhibited poorer performance in all five manual dexterity sub-items and the overall standardized score (P < 0.05). The reading rate was significantly slower across all amblyopia/strabismus groups (P < 0.05). Poorer fine motor skills and slower reading performance were associated with each other (R = 0.29). Clinical visual characteristics (visual acuity [VA], BFS, and presence of strabismus) explained 39% of the variance in fine motor skills score (R2 = 0.39), however, these explained only 6% of the variance in reading speed (R2 = 0.06). Self-report of functional ability related most to BFS, whereas psychosocial impact related to the presence of strabismus. The clinical and functional characteristics predicted 4% of the variance in functional impact score (R2 = 0.038) and explained 16% of the variance in psychosocial impact score (R2 = 0.16).

Conclusions: The functional and psychosocial effects of amblyopia and strabismus are common and persist into adulthood, with outcomes inadequately accounted for by clinical measures of vision.

弱视和/或斜视成人的精细运动技能、阅读速度和自评生活质量。
目的:本研究旨在评估患有弱视和/或斜视的成年人的精细动作技能和阅读能力,并确定这些技能和能力与视力的临床测量以及自我报告的视力相关生活质量之间的关系:方法:对 23 名非斜视性弱视成人、20 名非斜视性斜视成人、52 名弱视和斜视成人以及 19 名视力发育正常的成人的精细动作技能(手动灵活性 - Bruininks-Oseretsky 运动能力测试 [BOT-2])和阅读能力(国际阅读速度文本 [IReST])进行评估。此外,还测定了视敏度和双眼功能评分(BFS),该评分根据立体视敏锐度和是否存在抑制而得出。弱视和/或斜视患者的视力相关生活质量通过弱视和斜视问卷(A&SQ)进行评估。统计分析包括方差分析和多元回归模型:结果:弱视和/或斜视患者在所有五个徒手灵活性分项和总体标准化得分中的表现均较差(P < 0.05)。所有弱视/斜视组的阅读速度都明显较慢(P < 0.05)。精细运动技能较差与阅读速度较慢相互关联(R = 0.29)。临床视觉特征(视力[VA]、BFS和是否存在斜视)解释了精细动作技能得分变异的39%(R2 = 0.39),但这些特征仅解释了阅读速度变异的6%(R2 = 0.06)。功能能力的自我报告与 BFS 的关系最大,而社会心理影响则与斜视的存在有关。临床和功能特征预测了4%的功能影响得分差异(R2 = 0.038),解释了16%的社会心理影响得分差异(R2 = 0.16):结论:弱视和斜视对功能和社会心理的影响很常见,并且会持续到成年,而视力的临床测量结果不足以解释这些影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
4.50%
发文量
339
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science (IOVS), published as ready online, is a peer-reviewed academic journal of the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO). IOVS features original research, mostly pertaining to clinical and laboratory ophthalmology and vision research in general.
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