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الرحمن بسم ا الرحمن بسم ا الرحيم الرحيم
29

Glasses final6

Jul 16, 2015

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Health & Medicine

Mohamed Zaki
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Page 1: Glasses final6

الرحمن ا الرحمن بسم ا بسمالرحيمالرحيم

Page 2: Glasses final6

Pediatric Refraction Pediatric Refraction

when to prescribe ?when to prescribe ?

· Mohamed Zaki (M.Sc) · Tanta University

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· Child eye is not a small adult eye

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How often are glasses prescribed to normal preschool children

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1. Interfere with normal emmetropisation

2. Expense of spectacles3. Inconvenience to parents 4. Lack of perceived benefit to child

5- Prismatic effect and ↓ field of vision

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What is peculiar to children eyes?

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1- Refractive growth & emmetropization

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Emmetropisation is both an active and a passive process i.e. error stimulate the

eye to correct it

requires normal visual experience

Atkinson et al (2007)

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2-Risk of Amblyopia

Emmetropisation fails when refractive errors are outside normal range for age and the risk of amblyopia and

strabismus is increased

Glasses reduce the risk

· Atkinson et al (2007)

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Amblyopia

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3- Power of accommodation

· The mean accommodative amplitude is

14 diopters for 8 years old child.

Southall, 1937

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General RulesSmall errors usually don’t need correction

(stimulus of emmetropization)Large errors shouldn’t be fully corrected

(but converted to small errors)No emmetropization after 3 years.

(i.e. do full correction)Hypermetropia shouldn’t be fully corrected

(except …)

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If you prescribe .. follow up refraction after 3 months.

Cycloplegic refraction is routine.

A child with VA ( 6/6 ) and dry autorefraction (+0.00) may need glasses.

0.5% to 1.0% Cyclopentolate1 drop tid x 3 days

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When to prescribe ?

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Potentially Amblyogenic Refractive Errors

Isoametropia Anisometropia

Myopia > -8 to -10 > -3

Hyperopia > +5 > +1

Astigmatism > 2.5 > 1.5 (1 oblique)

As accomodation of both eyes is equal so it will correct the least hyperopic eye and the other remains not corrected ,,, so > 1D difference in hyperopia or hyperopic astigmatism should be corrected

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Normal

· Myopia , Astig, Aniso < 0.75D

· Hyperopia < 2 D

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Many guidelines …

Glasses prescription in children is a decision not just refraction

· Age ,

· History : child and family.

· Examination : ocular alignment , binocular vision.

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History· School performance· Medical history (e.g., CP or Down syndrome)· Family history (hyperopia, aniso, strab, ambly)· Previous SRx & compliance

Symptoms/Signs· Tearing / redness Asthenopia

Blinking· Blurred vision Difficulty with reading/near

work

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Myopia

< 3 years old:

partial correction of large error (>-3 to -4 D )

(subtract 1-2D)

>3-4 years old : full correction

Functional concern :

Vision / presence of XT

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Astigmatism

< 3 years old:

partial correction of large error (>2)

(subtract 1-2 D or 50%)

>3-4 years : Full correction

Oblique axis (>1D) and Stable with repeated measures

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Hyperopia why to treat ?

correcting hyperopia improves cognitive and visuo-perceptual abilities

(Rosner & Rosner 1987, Williams et al 2005,)

Atkinson prospective study

• Treated vs. untreated hyperopes

• If hyperopia > + 3.50

– 13x risk of strabismus or amblyopia

– Treatment decreases to 4 X

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Hyperopia

< 3 years old: partial correction of large error (>+3.5 – 4.5 D)

(Subtract 1-2 D)

3-4 years : partial correction of large error (>+2.5)

School children : Vision / Any child with any hyperopia have learning or

other difficulties

Functional concern :/ presence of ET/ family history of squint / / children with

special needs /

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Anisometropia

· > 1.00 D with hyperopia

· ≥2.00D of with myopia

·

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Aphakia or Pseudophakia

· Overcorrect by 2 to 3.00D because child’s world is near.

· After 2 to 3 years, distance correction with bifocal is better option

· Aphakia correction not > +13

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AAO guidelines 2012

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LASIK in children

· at least 4 D difference between the two eyes, but most of the time it is at least 6 D in the patients I treat. The second group includes patients with neurobehavioral disorders with severe anisometropia who just won't wear glasses despite the need,

· craniofacial abnormalities that make spectacle or contact lens wear impractical (e.g., Goldenhar's with microtia and/or limbal dermoids) and those with severe neck weakness (e.g., some children with cerebral palsy) whose spectacles fall down their nose.

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· LASEK or PRK e MMC is best use , not LASIK

· Age < 7 ys

· Intolerant to glasses and CL Poor compliance can be defined as wearing glasses for 25% or less of waking time (only one out of every four waking hours, a permissive

· boundary)

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· The prevalence of any amblyopia (defined as two or more optotype lines difference between the eyes) in preschool children who have greater than 1 D of anisometropia is 66%.