A Randomized Trial of Prescribed Patching Regimens for Treatment of Severe Amblyopia in Children

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Abstract

Objective: To compare full-time patching (all hours or all but 1 hour per day) to 6 hours of patching per day, as prescribed treatments for severe amblyopia in children younger than 7 years. Design: Prospective, randomized multicenter clinical trial (32 sites). Participants: One hundred seventy-five children younger than 7 years with amblyopia in the range of 20/100 to 20/400. Intervention: Randomization either to full-time patching or to 6 hours of patching per day, each combined with at least 1 hour of near-visual activities during patching. Main Outcome Measure: Visual acuity in the amblyopic eye after 4 months. Results: Visual acuity in the amblyopic eye improved a similar amount in both groups. The improvement in the amblyopic eye acuity from baseline to 4 months averaged 4.8 lines in the 6-hour group and 4.7 lines in the full-time group (P = 0.45). Conclusion: Six hours of prescribed daily patching produces an improvement in visual acuity that is of similar magnitude to the improvement produced by prescribed full-time patching in treating severe amblyopia in children 3 to less than 7 years of age. © 2003 by the American Academy of Ophthalmology.

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Beck, R. W. (2003). A Randomized Trial of Prescribed Patching Regimens for Treatment of Severe Amblyopia in Children. Ophthalmology, 110(11), 2075–2087. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ophtha.2003.08.001

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