The present invention is related to treatment of eye-length-related disorders, including myopia, to various therapeutic devices employed to treat patients with eye-length-related disorders, and to various methods and devices for generally controlling eye growth in biological organisms.
The eye is a remarkably complex and elegant optical sensor in which light from external sources is focused, by a lens, onto the surface of the retina, an array of wavelength-dependent photosensors. As with any lens-based optical device, each of the various shapes that the eye lens can adopt is associated with a focal length at which external light rays are optimally or near-optimally focused to produce inverted images on the surface of the retina that correspond to external objects observed by the eye. The eye lens, in each of the various shapes that the eye lens can adopt, optimally or near-optimally, focuses light emitted by, or reflected from, external objects that lie within a certain range of distances from the eye, and less optimally focuses, or fails to focus, objects that lie outside that range of distances.
In normal individuals, the axial length of the eye, or distance from the lens to the surface of the retina, corresponds to a focal length for near-optimal focusing of distant objects. The eyes of normal individuals focus distant objects without nervous input to muscles, which apply forces to alter the shape of the eye lens, a process referred to as “accommodation.” Closer, nearby objects are focused, by normal individuals, as a result of accommodation. Many people suffer from eye-length-related disorders, such as myopia, in which the axial length of the eye is longer than the axial length required to focus distant objects without accommodation. Myopic individuals view closer objects, within a range of distances less than typical distant objects, without accommodation, the particular range of distances depending on the axial length of their eyes, the shape of their eyes, overall dimensions of their eyes, and other factors. Myopic patients see distant objects with varying degrees of blurriness, again depending on the axial length of their eyes and other factors. While myopic patients are generally capable of accommodation, the average distance at which myopic individuals can focus objects is shorter than that for normal individuals. In addition to myopic individuals, there are hyperopic individuals who need to accommodate, or change the shape of their lenses, in order to focus distant objects.
In general, babies are hyperopic, with eye lengths shorter than needed for optimal or near-optimal focusing of distant objects without accommodation. During normal development of the eye, referred to as “emmetropization,” the axial length of the eye, relative to other dimensions of the eye, increases up to a length that provides near-optimal focusing of distant objects without accommodation. In normal individuals, biological processes maintain the near-optimal relative eye length to eye size as the eye grows to final, adult size. However, in myopic individuals, the relative axial length of the eye to overall eye size continues to increase during development, past a length that provides near-optimal focusing of distant objects, leading to increasingly pronounced myopia.
The rate of incidence of myopia is increasing at alarming rates in many regions of the world. Until recently, excessive reading during childhood was believed to be the only identifiable environmental or behavioral factor linked to the occurrence of myopia, although genetic factors were suspected. Limiting reading is the only practical technique for preventing excessive eye lengthening in children, and corrective lenses, including glasses and contact lenses, represent the primary means for ameliorating eye-length-related disorders, including myopia. The medical community and people with eye-length-related disorders continue to seek better understanding of eye-length-related disorders and methods for preventing, ameliorating, or reversing eye-length-related disorders.
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to therapeutic intervention in patients with eye-length-related disorders to prevent, ameliorate, or reverse the effects of the eye-length-related disorders. These embodiments of the present invention include methods for early recognition of patients with eye-length-related disorders, therapeutic methods for inhibiting further degradation of vision in patients with eye-length-related disorders, reversing, when possible, eye-length-related disorders, and preventing eye-length-related disorders, Additional embodiments of the present invention are directed to particular devices used in therapeutic intervention in patients with eye-length-related disorders.
where I is the intensity of light of wavelength λ that has passed through a sample, and I0 is the intensity of the incident light of wavelength λ. The horizontal axes, such as horizontal axis 518 in graph 510, represent the wavelength of the incident light. Graph 510 shows the absorbance spectrum for the S opsin, which features a maximum absorbance 520 for light of wavelength λ=420 mm. The S of “S opsin” stands for short-wavelength. Note that the shading-coding 524 for S photoreceptor neurons, which contain S opsin, is shown to the right of the graph. Graph 511 shows the absorbance spectrum for the M, or medium-wavelength, photoreceptor neuron, and graph 512 shows the absorbance spectrum for the L, or long-wavelength, photoreceptor neuron. The different types of opsin molecules in each of the three different types of photoreceptor neurons determine the different absorption characteristics of the three different types of photoreceptor neurons. The difference absorption characteristics of the three different types of photoreceptor neurons provides the three dimensions of human color vision.
The present inventors, through significant research efforts, have elucidated the mechanism by which the axial length of the eye is controlled during development.
As shown in the graph 920, in the lower portion of
As mentioned above, excessive reading by children is one cause of myopia. The human eye evolved for observing relatively distant scenes and objects, rather than for focusing on detailed, close-by objects, such as printed text. Continuous close focusing on printed text results in relatively high spatial frequency images input to the retina, overriding the blurriness introduced in distant scenes and objects due to eye lengthening.
In another embodiment of the present invention, artificial blurring is produced by light scattering induced by incorporation of particles smaller than the wavelength of the light transmitted through the lenses or produced by a film or coating applied to the surface of the lens. The amount of scatter produced by different regions of the lens can be varied to closely mimic the blur produced in a typical scene viewed through a near-accommodated emmetropic eye.
In yet another embodiment of the present invention, diffraction is used to provide the blurring, Opaque or semi-opaque light absorbing particles as large or larger than the wavelength of light transmitted through the therapeutic-device lenses are incorporated into the lenses, applied to the surface of the lenses, or added as a film or coating. In yet another embodiment of the present invention, diffusers can be used to impart blurring to the lens.
In alternative embodiments of the present invention, various types of progressive lenses are employed to introduce artificial blurring. Currently-available progressive lenses work to provide the most strongly negative correction in the upper part of the lens and provide a less negative correction at the bottom of the lens. These corrections facilitate focusing the visual field both for distant and up-close objects. An inverse progressive lens that provides a least negative correction at the top and a most negative correction at the bottom would provide an artificial blur over the entire visual field, and would thus constitute an additional embodiment of the present invention. Glasses or contact lenses that introduce blur by including higher-order aberration, including glasses or contact lenses that produce peripheral aberrations, leaving the center of vision in focus, represent still additional embodiments of the present invention.
Unfortunately, because the L and M genes are nearly identical in sequence, the alignment, or registering, of each pair of chromosomes across the plane, during meiosis, may be shifted, so that, as shown in
In individuals with eye-length-related disorders arising from variant photoreceptor-protein genes, the use of glasses, or contact lenses, that incorporate wavelength filters can restore the relative absorption characteristics of the different types of photoreceptor proteins, and thus remove the variant-photoreceptor-protein-induced increase in spatial frequency and thus force a transition from uninhibited eye lengthening, represented by state 934 in
where α is a dummy variable of integration.
Thus, using either the above integral or summation over discrete intervals, convolution of the absorbance spectrum of a filter and the absorbance spectrum of a photoreceptor protein provides a measure of the overlap of the absorbance filter and photoreceptor protein. Thus, an M-boosting metric can be computed from a given filter, with absorbance spectrum T(λ), by the ratio:
where AM(λ) and AL(λ) are the absorbance spectra of M opsin and L opsin, respectively.
Thus, using either the above integral or summation over discrete intervals, convolution of the absorbance spectrum of a filter and the absorbance spectrum of a photoreceptor protein provides a measure of the overlap of the absorbance filter and photoreceptor protein. Thus, an M-boosting metric can be computed from a given filter, with absorbance spectrum T(λ), by the ratio:
where AM(λ) and AL(λ) are the absorbance spectra of M opsin and L opsin, respectively.
Filters with M-boosting metrics significantly greater than 1 may be useful in correcting myopia in individuals with low-absorbing M-variant photoreceptor proteins, while filters with M-boosting metrics significantly below 1 may be useful in treating myopia in individuals with low-absorbing variant L-photoreceptor proteins. The M-boosting metric may be computed using summations over discrete wavelengths within the visible spectrum, rather than by integration. In general, various closed-form or numeric expressions for the absorption spectra of the L and M opsins may be used. The convolution operation becomes a multiplication for Fourier-transformed functions ƒ(x) and g(x), F(x) and G(x), respectively. It is generally more efficient to Fourier-transform ƒ(x) and g(x), compute the product of F(x) and G(x), and the apply an inverse Fourier transform to F(x)G(x) in order to produce ƒ(x)*g(x).
Therapeutic devices that represent embodiments of the present invention may include filters and well as blur-inducing coatings, inclusions, bumps, or depressions. The filter-based approach may be applied to a variety of different types of variants, including variants that show shifting of wavelength of maximum absorption, decreased absorption, and complex alteration of the absorbance curve, in order to restore the normal balance between the absorption characteristics of various types of opsin photoreceptor proteins. Many different techniques and materials can be employed to produce lens materials with particular, complex absorption characteristics.
Although the present invention has been described in terms of particular embodiments, it is not intended that the invention be limited to these embodiments. Modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For example, therapeutic inventions, in which artificial focusing, rather than artificial blurring, is employed may correct eye-length-related disorders in which the axial length of the eye is shorter than a normal length, and the eye has failed to grow in response to high spatial frequency. Blur-inducing glasses and contact lenses and wavelength-dependent filtering glasses and contact lenses are but two examples of a variety of different methods for inducing artificial blurriness in order to halt eye lengthening in myopic or myopia-disposed individuals, methods used to identify individuals with eye-lengthening disorders or individuals disposed to eye-lengthening-related disorders may include currently available vision-evaluation techniques used by ophthalmologists and optometrists, instrumentation for correctly measuring the axial length of the eye, genetic techniques for determining the precise opsin-photoreceptor-protein variance, or amino-acid sequences, in patients, and other techniques. It should be noted that all of the various therapeutic devices that can be devised, according to the present invention, may find useful application in each of the various types of eye-length-related disorders, whatever their underlying environmental, behavioral, or genetic causes. Wavelength filters incorporated into lenses, for example, may provide benefit to individuals in which myopia is induced by excessive reading, and not only to those individuals with low-absorbing photoreceptor-protein variants. While therapeutic devices worn by individuals are discussed, above, any therapy that induces artificial blurring, as also discussed above, that results in a transition of the eye from a state in which the eye is non-responsive to a negative feedback signal or continues to generate and/or respond to a positive eye-growth sign to a state in which eye lengthening is halted is a potential therapeutic embodiment of the present invention. For example, drugs, including muscarinic receptor agonists, which would cause the ciliary body to contract and therefore adjust the focus of the eye to a shorter focal length at which distance objects fail to completely focus, are candidate drug therapies for introducing artificial blurring according to the present invention. Most currently-available muscarinic receptor agonists also cause the pupil to contract, changing the depth of field. A particularly useful drug for therapeutic application, according to embodiments of the present invention, would not cause the pupil to contract or dilate. When the pupil remains at normal size for ambient lighting conditions, the depth of field remains sufficiently small, so that a relatively small amount of the visual field is well focused.
The foregoing description, for purposes of explanation, used specific nomenclature to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the specific details are not required in order to practice the invention. The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention are presented for purpose of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings. The embodiments are shown and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical applications, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various
This application is a continuation from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/008,167 filed on Aug. 31, 2020 and now published as US 2020/0393699, which is a continuation from the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/385,810 filed on Apr. 16, 2019 and now granted as U.S. Pat. No. 10,795,181, which is a continuation from the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/625,222 filed on Jun. 16, 2017 and now granted as U.S. Pat. No. 10,302,962, which in turn is a continuation from U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/141,161 filed on Sep. 12, 2011 and now granted as U.S. Pat. No. 9,720,253, which is a US national phase from the International Patent Application No. PCT/US2009/069078, filed on Dec. 21, 2009 and published as WO 2010/075319, which in turn claims priority from the U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/139,938 filed on Dec. 22, 2008. The disclosure of each of the above-identified applications is incorporated herein by reference.
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Parent | 16385810 | Apr 2019 | US |
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