1. Final versus referral diagnosis of childhood visual impairment in an Italian tertiary low vision rehabilitation centre.
- Author
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Longhin E, Segalina S, Pilotto E, Convento E, Midena E, and Bini S
- Subjects
- Blindness, Cortical diagnosis, Child, Child, Preschool, Eye Diseases diagnosis, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Italy, Male, Referral and Consultation, Rehabilitation Centers, Retrospective Studies, Tertiary Care Centers, Visual Acuity, Vision, Low diagnosis, Vision, Low rehabilitation, Visually Impaired Persons rehabilitation
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare the final diagnosis of the causes of low vision in children attending a tertiary rehabilitation centre for visually impaired children versus referral diagnosis., Methods: Retrospective review of clinical charts of all children referred to the Robert Hollman Foundation, a tertiary centre for visually impaired children, between January 2010 and June 2011. The following clinical data were analysed: entry diagnosis made by the referral ophthalmologist and final diagnosis made at Robert Hollman Foundation based on a complete ophthalmic evaluation., Results: Ninety-two consecutive children (mean age = 2.37 ± 1.98 years, range = 0-9) were included. A referral diagnosis was retrieved in 76 cases (82.6%), including cerebral visual impairment (14.1%), retinopathy of prematurity (14.1%), hereditary retinal diseases (10.9%), nystagmus (8.7%) and other rarer diseases (34.8%). In the remaining 16 children (17.4%), a precise referral diagnosis was unavailable. Final clinical diagnosis made at Robert Hollman Foundation was normal visual function in 8.7%, cerebral visual impairment in 30.4%, retinopathy of prematurity in 10.9%, hereditary retinal disease in 9.8% and other in 40.2%. In 17 cases (18.5%), the diagnosis made at the Robert Hollman Foundation did not confirm the entry diagnosis. Among patients where measurement of visual acuity was possible (84), 66.7% were blind or seriously visual impaired, and the main causes were cerebral visual impairment (32.1%) and retinopathy of prematurity (16.1%)., Conclusion: The most frequent diseases were cerebral visual impairment, retinopathy of prematurity and hereditary retinal diseases. Approximately one-third of referred children had not a correct diagnosis at baseline. The activity of an ophthalmic tertiary centre is essential to offer a precise diagnosis to visually impaired (sometimes with other deficits) children.
- Published
- 2020
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