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Long-term visual pathology in children with significant perinatal complications. | LitMetric

Long-term visual pathology in children with significant perinatal complications.

Dev Med Child Neurol

Department of Psychology/Pediatrics, Memorial University, St John's, NF, Canada A1B 3X9.

Published: September 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • Eye research in infants with significant perinatal complications primarily focused on structural ocular disease and spatial vision, revealing a heightened risk for abnormal visual development.
  • A study utilized 17 vision tests on 76 affected children, comparing them with 61 age-matched controls to evaluate various visual functions such as visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, and color vision.
  • The findings indicated that children at risk exhibited more abnormal results and a higher occurrence of ocular disorders and refractive errors, suggesting potential long-term, though generally mild, visual deficits in this population.

Article Abstract

Eye research in infants who experience significant perinatal complications has been restricted to evaluation of structural ocular disease and spatial vision, and results show that these aspects of vision are at increased risk for abnormal or delayed development. To expand upon previous work, a battery of 17 vision tests was employed to assess, comprehensively, long-term outcome of functional vision. Seventy-six children (38 males, 38 females), between the corrected ages of 2 years 11 months and 10 years 2 months (mean 6y 6mo) with various significant complications (e.g. very preterm birth, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, intraventricular hemorrhage) were compared to normally developing, age-matched control children (n = 61; mean age 7y 1mo) on measures of visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, stereoacuity, peripheral vision, color vision, astigmatism, and binocular alignment. Results showed that at-risk children had more test results that fell within the suspect or abnormal range. At-risk children also had a slightly higher incidence of ocular disorders (e.g. strabismus) and refractive error. These data imply that children who experienced significant perinatal risk factors are at risk for long-term deficits of functional vision. However, most of these deficits appear to be relatively mild.

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