Although all three components of the programme improved compliance with occlusion therapy in children in low-SES areas, the educational cartoon had the strongest effect, as it explained without words to a 4- to 5-year-old child why it should wear the eye patch.
Eye-movement recordings of CSNB patients disclosed specific nystagmus characteristics, such as an oblique direction, superimposed waveforms and dysconjugate eye movements. These features may help to distinct nystagmus in CSNB from other forms of early infancy nystagmus, such as congenital idiopathic nystagmus, latent nystagmus and spasmus nutans. We found nystagmus in CSNB to be similar to the nystagmus reported in blue-cone monochromatism and rod monochromatism, and in patients with a severe sensory defect. The nystagmus characteristics described should prompt electroretinographic investigation in cases of uncertain diagnosis.
Purpose
To determine change in visual acuity (VA) in the population of a previous amblyopia treatment study (Loudon 2006) and assess risk factors for VA decrease.
Methods
Subjects treated between 2001 and 2003 were contacted between December 2015 and July 2017. Orthoptic examination was conducted under controlled circumstances and included subjective refraction, best corrected VA, reading acuity, binocular vision, retinal fixation, cover‐uncover and alternating cover test. As a measure for degree of amblyopia, InterOcular VA Difference (IOD) at the end of occlusion therapy was compared with IOD at the follow‐up examination using Wilcoxon’s signed‐rank test. Regression analysis was conducted to determine the influence of clinical and socio‐economic factors on changes in IOD.
Results
Out of 303 subjects from the original study, 208 were contacted successfully, 59 refused and 15 were excluded because of non‐amblyopic cause of visual impairment. Mean IOD at end of therapy (mean age 6.4 years) was 0.11 ± 0.16 logMAR, and IOD at follow‐up examination (mean age 18.3 years) was 0.09 ± 0.21 logMAR; this difference was not significant (p = 0.054). Degree of anisometropia (p = 0.008; univariable analysis), increasing anisometropia (p = 0.009; multivariable), eccentric fixation (p < 0.001; univariable and multivariable); large IOD (p < 0.001; univariable and multivariable) and non‐compliance during therapy (p = 0.028; univariable) were associated with IOD increase.
Conclusion
Long‐term results of occlusion therapy were good. High or increasing anisometropia, eccentric fixation and non‐compliance during occlusion therapy were associated with long‐term VA decrease. Subjects with poor initial VA had a larger increase despite little patching, but often showed long‐term VA decrease.
To our knowledge, this represents the first case of the syndrome of the trephined in which the neurological deficits map primarily to the brainstem and show rapid improvement following cranioplasty. We show that cranioplasty in patients with large skull defects is indicated for more then cosmetic reasons and should be considered even after longer periods following a trauma.
We found large differences in comfort of wear and mechanical properties. Therefore, when prescribing a certain brand of patch, the wide variety needs to be taken into account. Further study into these properties seems warranted; especially breathing capability requires improvement since children often wear the patch for a longer period of time. This could contribute to increasing satisfaction and consequently may improve compliance.
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