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Dive into the research topics where Carly S. Y. Lam is active.

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Featured researches published by Carly S. Y. Lam.


Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics | 1994

Changes in refractive trends and optical components of Hong Kong Chinese aged 19-39 years

Winnie Sh Goh; Carly S. Y. Lam

The age trends of refractive errors, astigmatism and optical components were studied in 220 Chinese subjects aged over 40 years. Myopia did not dominate in this age group. With increasing age, the prevalence of hyperopia increases from 2% at age 40–45 years to 66% at age > 65 years. Against‐the‐rule astigmatism was more prevalent than the other types. Significant correlations were found between age and spherical equivalent power, age and vitreous depth and axial length. Sex differences were found among the optical components but not in the refractive error. Myopia appears to be more prevalent among the younger age groups than the older age groups of the Hong Kong Chinese population, and the importance of genetics in determination of refractive error is called into question by these findings.


Optometry and Vision Science | 2004

Prevalence of myopia in local and international schools in Hong Kong.

Carly S. Y. Lam; Ernst Goldschmidt; Marion H. Edwards

Purpose. This study aims to investigate genetic and environmental influences on physiological myopia by studying the difference in myopia prevalence between local schools and international schools in Hong Kong. Methods. Vision screening was carried out in local and international schools for students 13 to 15 years old. Types of refractive error were identified by visual acuity measurement, the presence of spectacles, a simple refraction, and the use of plus and minus ophthalmic lenses. Results. Three local schools and six international schools participated in the study. Two hundred eighty-nine students were from the local schools, and 789 students were from the international schools. Prevalence of myopia at the local schools ranged from 85 to 88%, whereas it ranged from 60 to 66% in the international schools. Students in the international schools were subdivided into Chinese origin, white, mixed Chinese, and Asian. Prevalence of myopia was highest in the Chinese group (82.8%) and lowest in the white group (40.5%). There was no age or gender difference in the prevalence of myopia. Conclusions. Hong Kong Chinese students had a higher prevalence of myopia regardless of whether they studied in local or international schools when compared with other ethnic groups, such as whites. This further supports a genetic input into myopia development.


Optometry and Vision Science | 1999

A 2-year longitudinal study of myopia progression and optical component changes among Hong Kong schoolchildren.

Carly S. Y. Lam; Marion H. Edwards; Michel Millodot; Winnie Shuk Han Goh

This study investigated refractive error and optical component changes in a group of 142 Hong Kong schoolchildren from age 6 to 17 years over a 2-year period between 1991 and 1993. Subjects were refracted subjectively and corneal curvatures and ocular dimensions were measured. At the end of the 2-year study, the mean spherical equivalent refraction (SER) was -1.86 D (SD 1.99 D) and 62% of the schoolchildren were myopic. The annual incidence of myopia was 11.8%. Children aged 10 years and under had a greater change in SER toward myopia than older children. The annual rate of myopia progression for the myopic children was -0.46 D (SD 0.40 D) and the rate of progression was greatest between age 6 and 10 years old. Vitreous depth/axial length elongation was the main component contributing to the progression of myopia. Hong Kong schoolchildren develop myopia as early as 6 years old and myopia progresses at a greater rate compared with children of European extraction.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011

The Role of Suppression in Amblyopia

Jingrong Li; Benjamin Thompson; Carly S. Y. Lam; Daming Deng; Lily Y.L. Chan; Goro Maehara; George C. Woo; Minbin Yu; Robert F. Hess

PURPOSE This study had three main goals: to assess the degree of suppression in patients with strabismic, anisometropic, and mixed amblyopia; to establish the relationship between suppression and the degree of amblyopia; and to compare the degree of suppression across the clinical subgroups within the sample. METHODS Using both standard measures of suppression (Bagolini lenses and neutral density [ND] filters, Worth 4-Dot test) and a new approach involving the measurement of dichoptic motion thresholds under conditions of variable interocular contrast, the degree of suppression in 43 amblyopic patients with strabismus, anisometropia, or a combination of both was quantified. RESULTS There was good agreement between the quantitative measures of suppression made with the new dichoptic motion threshold technique and measurements made with standard clinical techniques (Bagolini lenses and ND filters, Worth 4-Dot test). The degree of suppression was found to correlate directly with the degree of amblyopia within our clinical sample, whereby stronger suppression was associated with a greater difference in interocular acuity and poorer stereoacuity. Suppression was not related to the type or angle of strabismus when this was present or the previous treatment history. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that suppression may have a primary role in the amblyopia syndrome and therefore have implications for the treatment of amblyopia.


Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics | 2012

Prevalence of myopia among Hong Kong Chinese schoolchildren: changes over two decades

Carly S. Y. Lam; Chin-Hang Lam; Sam Chi-Kwan Cheng; Lily Yee-Lai Chan

Citation information: Lam CS‐Y, Lam C‐H, Cheng SC‐K & Chan LY‐L. Prevalence of myopia among Hong Kong Chinese schoolchildren: changes over two decades. Ophthalmic Physiol Opt 2012, 32, 17‐24. doi: 10.1111/j.1475‐1313.2011.00886.x


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2014

Defocus Incorporated Soft Contact (DISC) lens slows myopia progression in Hong Kong Chinese schoolchildren: a 2-year randomised clinical trial

Carly S. Y. Lam; Wing Chun Tang; Dennis Y. Tse; Ying Yung Tang; Chi Ho To

Aims To determine if ‘Defocus Incorporated Soft Contact’ (DISC) lens wear slows childhood myopia progression. Methods A 2-year double-blind randomised controlled trial was carried out in 221 children aged 8–13 years, with myopia between −1.00 and −5.00 Dioptres (D) and astigmatism ≤1.00 D. Subjects were randomly assigned to the DISC (n=111) or single vision (SV; n=110) contact lens group. DISC lenses incorporated concentric rings, which provided an addition of +2.50 D, alternating with the normal distance correction. Refractive error (cycloplegic autorefraction) and axial length were measured at 6-month intervals. Differences between groups were analysed using unpaired t test. Results In total, 128 children completed the study, n=65 in the DISC group and n=63 in the SV group. Myopia progressed 25% more slowly for children in the DISC group compared with those in the control group (0.30 D/year; 95% CI −0.71 to −0.47 vs 0.4 D/year; 95% CI −0.93 to −0.65, p=0.031). Likewise, there was less axial elongation for children in the DISC versus SV groups (0.13 mm/year; 95% CI 0.20 to 0.31 vs 0.18 mm/year; 95% CI 0.30 to 0.43, p=0.009). Treatment effect correlated positively with DISC lens wearing time (r=0.342; p=0.005). Indeed, myopia in children who wore the DISC lenses for five or more hours/day progressed 46% (mean difference=−0.382 D, p=0.001; 95% CI −0.59 to −0.17) less than those in the SV group. Conclusions The daily wearing of DISC lens significantly slowed myopia progression and axial elongation in Hong Kong schoolchildren. The findings demonstrated that simultaneous clear vision with constant myopic defocus can retard myopia progression.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2010

Quantifying Sensory Eye Dominance in the Normal Visual System: A New Technique and Insights into Variation across Traditional Tests

Jingrong Li; Carly S. Y. Lam; Minbin Yu; Robert F. Hess; Lily Y.L. Chan; Goro Maehara; George C. Woo; Benjamin Thompson

PURPOSE Although eye dominance assessment is used to assist clinical decision-making, current understanding is limited by inconsistencies across the range of available tests. A new psychophysical test of sensory eye dominance has been developed that objectively measures the relative contribution of each eye to a fused suprathreshold binocular percept. METHODS Six standard tests and the newly developed test were used to measure motor and sensory dominance in a group of 44 binocularly normal individuals (mean age, 29.5 ± 9.10 years). The new test required observers to perform a motion coherence task under dichoptic viewing conditions, wherein a population of moving, luminance-defined signal (coherently moving) and noise (randomly moving) dots were presented separately to each eye. The observers judged the motion direction of the signal dots. Motion coherence thresholds were measured by varying the ratio of signal-to-noise dots, in a staircase procedure. RESULTS The new dichoptic motion coherence threshold test revealed a clear bimodal distribution of sensory eye dominance strength, wherein the majority of the participants (61%) showed weak dominance, but a significant minority (39%) showed strong dominance. Subsequent analysis revealed that the strong-dominance group showed greater consistency across the range of traditional eye dominance tests used. CONCLUSIONS This new quantitative dichoptic motion coherence threshold technique suggests that there are two separate sensory eye dominance strength distributions among observers with normal binocular vision: weak and strong eye dominance. This finding may provide a basis for clinical decision-making by indicating whether eye dominance is likely to be an important consideration in a particular patient.


Optometry and Vision Science | 2002

The effect of myopic axial elongation and posture on the pulsatile ocular blood flow in young normal subjects.

Andrew K. C. Lam; Stephen Wong; Carly S. Y. Lam; Chi-ho To

Purpose. This study investigated the effect of myopic axial elongation on pulsatile ocular blood flow (POBF) in young normal subjects. A regression equation was derived to quantify the effect. The effect of posture in POBF for eyes with different axial lengths was studied to determine if axial myopia, with different ocular volumes, would result in a change in POBF with various postures. Methods. Seventy-nine normal subjects (38 males and 41 females) with different refractive errors were recruited. The mean age of the subjects was 22 years, and only the right eye was used for analysis. The axial length (AL) was measured, followed by Perkins intraocular pressure (IOP) and POBF with an OBF tonometer (OBF Labs [UK] Ltd) in a sitting posture. An “erected arm” blood pressure (BP) was measured with an automatic sphygmomanometer for the calculation of ocular perfusion pressure (OPP), using the formula: mean BP − IOP, where the mean BP was calculated as one third of the systolic blood pressure plus two thirds of the diastolic blood pressure. The measurements of IOP, POBF, and BP were repeated in a supine posture. Results. The POBF was negatively correlated with AL (r = −0.57, p < 0.01). The regression line was in the form of POBF (&mgr;l/min) = −78.5 × AL (mm) + 2655.7. There was a significant reduction (17%) in POBF in a supine posture (p < 0.01). The reduction was not significantly correlated with AL. The pulse amplitude also demonstrated a 10% reduction from postural variation (p < 0.01). The OPP increased significantly (33%) in the supine posture (p < 0.01). Conclusions. The POBF was significantly influenced by AL. Therefore, AL should be measured in determining the POBF, especially in young myopic subjects. The amount of postural variation in POBF was similar to previous studies with young subjects and was not affected by AL.


Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics | 2010

Retinal thickness in myopic and non‐myopic eyes*

Sam Ck Cheng; Carly S. Y. Lam; Maurice K. H. Yap

Purpose:  To investigate the retinal thickness profile in myopic and non‐myopic eyes.


Optometry and Vision Science | 2004

Prevalence of myopia in a group of Hong Kong microscopists.

Patrick W.K. Ting; Carly S. Y. Lam; Marion H. Edwards; Katrina L. Schmid

Purpose. To study the prevalence and magnitude of myopia in a group of Hong Kong Chinese microscopists and compare it with that observed in microscopists working in the United Kingdom. Methods. Forty-seven microscopists (36 women and 11 men) with a median age of 31 years and working in hospital laboratories throughout Hong Kong were recruited to the study. Information about past refractive corrections, microscopy work, and visual symptoms associated with microscope use were collected. All subjects had a comprehensive eye examination at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University Optometry Clinic, including measures of refractive error (both noncycloplegic and cycloplegic), binocular vision functions, and axial length. Results. The prevalence of myopia in this group of microscopists was 87%, the mean (±SD) refractive error was −4.45 ± 3.03 D and mean axial length was 25.13 ± 1.52 mm. No correlation was found between refractive error and years spent working as a microscopist or number of hours per day spent performing microscopy. Subjects reporting myopia progression (N = 22) did not differ from the refractively stable group (N = 19) in terms of their microscopy working history, working hours, tonic accommodation level, or near phoria. However, the AC/A ratio of the progressing group was significantly greater than that of the stable group (4.59 &Dgr;/D cf. 3.34 &Dgr;/D). Conclusion. The myopia prevalence of Hong Kong Chinese microscopists was higher than that of microscopists in the United Kingdom (87% cf. 71%), as well as the Hong Kong general population (87% cf. 70%). The average amount of myopia was also higher in the Hong Kong Chinese microscopists than the Hong Kong general population (−4.45 D cf. −3.00 D). We have confirmed that the microscopy task may slightly exacerbate myopia development in Chinese people.

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Chi-ho To

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Marion H. Edwards

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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George C. Woo

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Wing Chun Tang

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Dennis Y. Tse

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Peter C. K. Pang

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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Chi Ho To

Hong Kong Polytechnic University

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