Aging of Non-Visual Spectral Sensitivity to Light in Humans: Compensatory Mechanisms?

Jan 28, 2014PloS one

Changes in how aging affects light sensitivity outside of vision and possible compensation in humans

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Abstract

Aged participants showed a peak of non-visual sensitivity to light at 494 nm, compared to 484 nm in young participants.

  • Lens transmittance was decreased for short wavelength light in older individuals.
  • , a measure of sensitivity to light, did not decrease with age.
  • Increased lens filtering in older adults may not correspond to reduced non-visual sensitivity.
  • Adaptive mechanisms may be involved in maintaining non-visual sensitivity to light in the elderly.

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Key numbers

16.2%
Decrease in lens transmittance
Overall attenuation of lens transmittance between young and older groups.
10 nm
Peak sensitivity shift
Difference in peak sensitivity to light between age groups.
42.3%
Transmittance decrease at 480 nm
Comparison of lens transmittance at 480 nm between young and older participants.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates how aging affects non-visual sensitivity to light, particularly in relation to .
  • It examines the relationship between changes and light sensitivity in older adults compared to younger individuals.
  • The findings suggest that increased lens filtering with age does not lead to decreased non-visual sensitivity, indicating potential compensatory mechanisms.

Essence

  • Aging leads to increased and altered light sensitivity, but non-visual sensitivity to light remains stable. The peak sensitivity shifts from 484 nm in young to 494 nm in older adults, despite decreased lens transmittance.

Key takeaways

  • In older adults, significantly increases, reducing light transmittance by 16.2% across the visible spectrum. This change is more pronounced in the short wavelength range (400–500 nm), where transmittance decreases by 53.4%.
  • remains similar between young and older subjects despite the increased lens filtering. Peak sensitivity to light shifts to longer wavelengths in older participants, indicating an adaptation in non-visual sensitivity.
  • The study suggests that compensatory mechanisms may help maintain non-visual sensitivity to light in aging individuals, despite physiological changes in the eye.

Caveats

  • The study's sample size is relatively small, with only 5 young and 8 older participants, which may limit the statistical power of the findings.
  • Exclusion of subjects with cataracts may not represent the general elderly population, as those with cataracts could show different sensitivity to light.

Definitions

  • melatonin suppression: The reduction of melatonin levels in response to light exposure, indicating non-visual sensitivity to light.
  • lens density: The degree of opacity or filtering ability of the ocular lens, which increases with age and affects light transmittance.

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