Factors affecting pupil size after dilatation: the Twin Eye Study

BACKGROUND/AIMS Well dilated pupils make eye surgery easier. A classic twin study was established to examine the relative importance of genes and environment in the variance of pupil size after mydriasis, and to examine the effects of other factors such as age, iris colour, and refractive error. METHODS 506 twin pairs, 226 monozygotic (MZ) and 280 dizygotic (DZ), aged 49–79 (mean age 62.2 years, SD 5.7) were examined. Dilated pupil size was measured using a standardised grid superimposed over digital retroillumination images taken 50–70 minutes after mydriasis using tropicamide 1% and phenylephrine 10%. Univariate maximum likelihood model fitting was used to estimate genetic and environmental variance components. RESULTS Dilated pupil size was more highly correlated in MZ compared with DZ twins (intraclass correlation coefficients 0.82 and 0.39 respectively). A model specifying additive genetic and unique environmental factors showed the best fit to the data, yielding a heritability of 78–80%. Individual environmental factors explained 18–19% of the variance in this population. Age only accounted for 2–3% of the variance and refractive error and iris colour did not significantly contribute to the variance. CONCLUSIONS Pupil size after mydriasis is largely genetically determined, with a heritability of up to 80%.

[1]  D. Boomsma,et al.  Twin registers in Europe: an overview , 1998, Twin Research.

[2]  N. Martin,et al.  A twin-pronged attack on complex traits , 1997, Nature Genetics.

[3]  E. D. de Geus,et al.  Heritability of respiratory sinus arrhythmia: dependency on task and respiration rate. , 1997, Psychophysiology.

[4]  A. Thapar,et al.  Methodology for Genetic Studies of Twins and Families , 1993 .

[5]  Hongshun Wang,et al.  Phacoemulsification with poorly dilated pupils , 1993, Journal of cataract and refractive surgery.

[6]  S. Smith,et al.  Effect of cataract extraction on the pupil response to mydriatics. , 1989, The British journal of ophthalmology.

[7]  A. Henrick,et al.  Pupillary dilatation with single eyedrop mydriatic combinations. , 1980, American journal of ophthalmology.

[8]  L. Levine Effective Degree of Mydriasis with Phenylephrine and Tropicamide* , 1976, American journal of optometry and physiological optics.

[9]  N. Martin,et al.  The inheritance of scholastic abilities in a sample of twins I. Ascertainment of the sample and diagnosis of zygosity , 1975, Annals of human genetics.

[10]  N. G. Martin The inheritance of scholastic abilities in a sample of twins: II. Genetical analysis of examination results , 1975, Annals of human genetics.

[11]  V. P. Emiru Response to mydriatics in the African. , 1971, The British journal of ophthalmology.

[12]  S. E. Smith,et al.  Genetic influences in drug responses of the eye and the heart. , 1971, Clinical science.

[13]  K. Kyvik Generalisability and assumptions of twin studies , 2000 .

[14]  H. Maclean Reproducibility of mydriasis. , 1992, Ophthalmic research.