Presbyopia occurs after 40 years of age in humans with a progressive loss of accommodation. Accommodation depends on the contraction of the ciliary muscle and iris, lens changes and convergence. The parasympathetic system regulates the degree of ciliary muscle and iris contraction necessary to modify the shape and position of the lens and its stimulation is effective through the activation of muscarinic receptors that are present in both structures. The hypothesis proposed here suggests the correction of accommodation in emmetropic presbyopic patients using a pharmacological treatment that includes a cholinergic agent combined with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). This drug combination can restore near vision without affecti...
Purpose: Our purpose was to determine the changes in anterior chamber depth (ACD) and central lens ...
PURPOSE. The purposes of the present study were to assess the effect of a sympathetic inhibitory pha...
Presbyopia has been a complicated problem for clinicians and researchers for centuries. Defining wh...
Background: Presbyopia is the normal progressive waning of accommodation with loss of the visual abi...
Pharmacological treatment of presbyopia may be an alternative for those who want a spectacle-free sc...
PurposeProstaglandin analogues (PG) reduce intra-ocular pressure by enhancing uveoscleral flow at th...
PURPOSE:Prostaglandin analogues (PG) reduce intra-ocular pressure by enhancing uveoscleral flow at t...
The primary aim of this thesis was to investigate in-vivo changes to ocular morphology during ocular...
Accommodation is a dioptric change in power of the eye that occurs to allow near objects to be focus...
Introduction: The aim of this case series was to examine the association between unaided binocular v...
Presbyopia is a global problem affecting over a billion people worldwide. The prevalence of unmanage...
We demonstrate that changes in the behaviour of the contractile ciliary muscle accompanied by augmen...
<p><b>Article full text</b></p> <p><br></p> <p>The full text of this article can be found here<b>....
Ocular accommodation is not just a mechanism for altering curvature of the crystalline lens of the e...
Atropine has been used for more than a century to arrest myopia progression. Compelling evidence of ...
Purpose: Our purpose was to determine the changes in anterior chamber depth (ACD) and central lens ...
PURPOSE. The purposes of the present study were to assess the effect of a sympathetic inhibitory pha...
Presbyopia has been a complicated problem for clinicians and researchers for centuries. Defining wh...
Background: Presbyopia is the normal progressive waning of accommodation with loss of the visual abi...
Pharmacological treatment of presbyopia may be an alternative for those who want a spectacle-free sc...
PurposeProstaglandin analogues (PG) reduce intra-ocular pressure by enhancing uveoscleral flow at th...
PURPOSE:Prostaglandin analogues (PG) reduce intra-ocular pressure by enhancing uveoscleral flow at t...
The primary aim of this thesis was to investigate in-vivo changes to ocular morphology during ocular...
Accommodation is a dioptric change in power of the eye that occurs to allow near objects to be focus...
Introduction: The aim of this case series was to examine the association between unaided binocular v...
Presbyopia is a global problem affecting over a billion people worldwide. The prevalence of unmanage...
We demonstrate that changes in the behaviour of the contractile ciliary muscle accompanied by augmen...
<p><b>Article full text</b></p> <p><br></p> <p>The full text of this article can be found here<b>....
Ocular accommodation is not just a mechanism for altering curvature of the crystalline lens of the e...
Atropine has been used for more than a century to arrest myopia progression. Compelling evidence of ...
Purpose: Our purpose was to determine the changes in anterior chamber depth (ACD) and central lens ...
PURPOSE. The purposes of the present study were to assess the effect of a sympathetic inhibitory pha...
Presbyopia has been a complicated problem for clinicians and researchers for centuries. Defining wh...