Optometry360 Logo White
  • Conferences
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Quizzes
  • About
    • About Us – Mission
    • Content Awards
    • Media Partners
    • Business Team
    • Brand Ambassadors
    • Industry Council
    • Advisory Board

What are you looking for?

  • Anterior Segment
  • Cataract
  • Cornea and External Disease
  • Diabetic Macular Edema
  • Dry Eye
  • Early Onset Cataracts
  • Exclusives
  • General
  • Geographic Atrophy
  • Glaucoma
  • Industry News
  • Inherited Retinal Disease
  • IOLs
  • Neurotrophic Keratitis
  • Ocular Surface Disease
  • Oculoplastics
  • Optometry
  • Pediatrics
  • Practice Management
  • Presbyopia
  • Refractive Surgery/Vision Correction
  • Residents & Young Ophthalmologists
  • Retina
  • Retina Care 360
  • Retinopathy of Prematurity
  • Spotlight Series
  • The Interventional Glaucoma Project
  • The Ophthalmic Project
  • Trending Topics
Spotlight - The Future of Cryopreserved Amniotic Membrane in Oculoplastic Surgery
Optometry360 Logo White
  • Conferences
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Quizzes
  • About
    • About Us – Mission
    • Content Awards
    • Media Partners
    • Business Team
    • Brand Ambassadors
    • Industry Council
    • Advisory Board
Home > Myopia > Dietary patterns linked to myopia risk in children and adolescents
  • Myopia

Dietary patterns linked to myopia risk in children and adolescents

Ophthalmology 360

Key Takeaways

  1. Greater adherence to a nuts–tubers–vegetables dietary pattern was associated with a lower likelihood of myopia in children and adolescents.
  2. Greater adherence to a snacks-heavy dietary pattern was associated with a higher likelihood of myopia.

A large cross-sectional study suggests that dietary patterns may be associated with myopia risk in children and adolescents.

Researchers analyzed data from 24,797 participants enrolled in the Child and Adolescent Research of Eye study. Parents completed a food frequency questionnaire to report dietary intake, and principal component analysis was used to identify overall dietary patterns.

Two primary dietary patterns were identified. A nuts–tubers–vegetables pattern, marked by higher consumption of nuts, tubers, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, and aquatic products, was associated with a lower likelihood of myopia among participants with the highest adherence compared with those with the lowest adherence (P = 0.046).

In contrast, a snacks pattern, characterized by greater intake of fried and barbecued foods, fast foods, savory snacks, sugar-sweetened beverages, desserts, and processed meats, was associated with a higher likelihood of myopia in those with the greatest adherence (P = 0.021).

Reference

Li T, Yang J, Yan J, et al. Association Between Dietary Patterns and Myopia Among Children and Adolescents: A School-Based Cross-Sectional Study. J Ophthalmol. 2026;2026:3892394. doi: 10.1155/joph/3892394. PMID: 41727525; PMCID: PMC12921364.

Share

Related Content

  • Myopia

Switching myopia-control spectacles may temporarily slow progression in some children

  • Retina Care 360

Cost analysis shows greater losses for pediatric versus adult retinal detachment repairs

  • Glaucoma

PreserFlo MicroShunt shows short-term benefit in refractory childhood glaucoma

  • Inherited Retinal Disease

Low-dose atropine shows limited effect on myopia progression in children with IRDs

  • Conference Roundup

EVO ICL surgery now FDA-approved for older patients

  • Myopia

Efficacy of low-dose atropine for myopia varies by ethnicity, analysis finds

Share

Editor's Picks

  • Neurotrophic Keratitis

Topical insulin shows real-world benefit in neurotrophic keratopathy

  • Retina

GLP-1 RAs have protective effects against AMD

  • Retina

Four-month injection intervals appear safe for long-term stable nAMD

Advisory Board

Saad Ahmad, MD

Ahmad A. Aref, MD, MBA

Roomasa Channa, MD

David Chow, MD, FRCS(C)

Sally L. Baxter, MD, MSc

Neel R. Desai, MD

Nadia Haqqie, MD

Simon Fung, MD, FRCOphth

Sumit Garg, MD

Ross Lakhanpal, MD, FACS

Sanjai Jalaj, MD

Anton Kolomeyer, MD, PhD

Shan Lin, MD

Steven R. Sarkisian, Jr., MD

See All
Optometry360 Logo

Ophthalmology 360® is a dynamic digital platform dedicated to advancing the field of eye care.

Get to Know Us

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Media Partners
  • Advertising Policy
  • Our Advisory Board

Sign up for our Newsletter

Sign up for our Newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertising Policy
  • Medical Disclaimer
IHM Logo

2026 Ophthalmology 360 is a trademark of International Healthcare Media, LLC. All rights reserved

  • MedJournal360 Icon
  • RareDisease360 Icon
  • MyHero360 Icon
  • Optometry360 Icon
  • Ophtalmology360 Icon