Reappraisal of the historical myopia epidemic in native Arctic communities.

IF 2.4
Jos J Rozema, Charles Boulet, Yuval Cohen, William K Stell, Luciano Iribarren, Ger H M B van Rens, Rafael Iribarren
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Purpose: This study was developed to explain the extraordinary rise in myopia prevalence beginning after 1950 in Indigenous Arctic communities considering recent findings about the risk factors for school myopia development. Myopia prevalence changed drastically from a historical low of less than 3% to more than 50% in new generations of young adults following the Second World War. At that time, this increase was attributed to concurrent alterations in the environment and way of life which occurred in an aggressive programme of de-culturalization and re-acculturation through residential school programmes that introduced mental, emotional and physical stressors. However, the predominant idea that myopia was genetic in nature won the discussion of the day, and research in the area of environmental changes was dismissed. There may have also been an association between myopia progression and the introduction of extreme mental, emotional and physical stressors at the time.

Recent findings: Since 1978, animal models of myopia have demonstrated that myopiagenesis has a strong environmental component. Furthermore, multiple studies in human populations have shown since 2005 how myopia could be produced by a combination of limited exposure to the outdoors and heavy emphasis on academic subjects associated with intense reading habits. This new knowledge was applied in the present study to unravel the causes of the historical myopia epidemics in Inuit communities.

Summary: After reviewing the available published data on myopia prevalence in circumpolar Inuit populations in the 20th century, the most likely causes for the Inuit myopia epidemic were the combination of increased near work (from almost none to daily reading) and the move from a mostly outdoor to a much more indoor way of life, exacerbated by fewer hours of sunshine during waking hours, the lower illuminance in the Arctic and the extreme psychophysical stress due to the conditions in the Residential Schools.

对北极土著社区历史上近视流行病的重新评价。
目的:考虑到最近关于学校近视发展危险因素的发现,本研究旨在解释1950年后北极土著社区近视患病率的异常上升。第二次世界大战后,新一代年轻人的近视发病率从不到3%的历史低点急剧上升到50%以上。当时,这种增加是由于环境和生活方式同时发生变化,这种变化发生在通过引入精神、情感和身体压力的寄宿学校方案进行的积极的去文化化和重新适应方案中。然而,主流观点认为近视是遗传的,这赢得了当时的讨论,而在环境变化领域的研究被驳回。近视的发展也可能与当时极端的精神、情绪和身体压力源的引入有关。最近的研究发现:自1978年以来,近视的动物模型表明,近视形成具有很强的环境成分。此外,自2005年以来,多项针对人类的研究表明,近视是如何由有限的户外接触和与高强度阅读习惯相关的过分强调学术科目相结合而产生的。这一新知识应用于本研究,以揭示因纽特人社区历史近视流行的原因。简介:在回顾了20世纪环极地因纽特人近视患病率的现有公开数据后,因纽特人近视流行的最可能原因是工作附近的增加(从几乎没有到每天阅读)和从主要在室外的生活方式向更多在室内的生活方式的转变,加上醒着的时候日照时间的减少,加剧了这种情况。北极地区较低的照度,以及寄宿学校条件造成的极端心理生理压力。
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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