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Blueberry Effects on Dark Vision and Glare Recovery

Sponsored by Atlantic Food and Horticulture Research Center

About this trial

Last updated 12 years ago

Study ID

Blueberries and Vision

Status

Completed

Type

Interventional

Phase

N/A

Placebo

No

Accepting

18-75 Years
35 to 65 Years
All
All

Trial Timing

Ended 19 years ago

What is this trial about?

Clinical evidence for effects of plant anthocyanins on vision, and particularly night vision is controversial. Two clinical trials were conducted to investigate whether blueberry juice consumption affected visual dark adaptation, functional night vision, and recovery after photo-bleaching of the retina. One trial (S2) employed a 3 week intervention and washout period, and two doses of blueberries plus a placebo. The other trial (L1) employed a 12 week intervention plus an 8 week washout and tested one blueberry juice dose against a juice placebo.

What are the participation requirements?

Yes

Inclusion Criteria

- visual acuity better than 6/7.5 on EDTRS acuity chart at 2.5m

- visual contrast sensitivity within normal range at 2.5m as tested on Visteck 3000

- stereo acuity better than 80 seconds of arc on Frisby stereoacuity test

- no ocular history other than refractive glasses

- no family history of eye disease

No

Exclusion Criteria

- family history of retinal degeneration, glaucoma, diabetes, hypertension, cataract, or amblyopia (dimness in vision).

- evidence in subject (upon examination) of amblyopia (dimness in vision), manifest strabismus (unable to focus both eyes on one spot), or anisotropia (non-uniform responsiveness between both eyes).

- intraocular pressure above 21mmHG from an average of three measures using Mentor tonopen-XL