Environmental light and the preterm infant

Semin Perinatol. 2000 Aug;24(4):291-8. doi: 10.1053/sper.2000.8597.

Abstract

The lighting environment of the preterm baby is quite unlike that experienced at any other time of life. Physical and physiological factors control how much light reaches the retina of the preterm baby. With respect to the former, although many neonatal intensive care units are brightly and continuously lit, there is a trend to employ lower levels of illumination and to introduce cycling regimens. Physiological determinants of the retinal light dose include: eyelid opening and transmission, pupil diameter and the transmission characteristics of the ocular media. Early exposure to light does not significantly hasten or retard normal visual development, and it is not a factor in the development of retinopathy of prematurity. However, ambient neonatal intensive care unit illumination may be implicated in some of the more subtle visual pathway sequelae that cannot be attributed to other major complications of preterm birth including altered visual functions and arrested eye growth.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Eye / growth & development
  • Humans
  • Infant, Newborn
  • Infant, Premature / physiology*
  • Intensive Care, Neonatal
  • Light*
  • Retina / physiology
  • Retinopathy of Prematurity
  • Vision, Ocular