Congenital cataracts are lens opacities that are already present at birth or are developing in the first years of life. Treatment consists of the surgical removal of the lens. Bilateral cataract deeply impairs vision, preventing the development of physiological reflex fixation and causes the development of nystagmus about 3 months of age. This nystagmus persists even after the surgical removal of cataracts without allowing often >0,1 visual acuity despite adequate aperture correction. Intraocular lens implants in children under the age of 1 are subject to discussion. Presents the patient's current visual acuity, in which an artificial intraocular lens was not implanted after a congenital cataract removal, retinal detachment, high myopia, glaucoma and persistent nystagmus. The whole treatment and adaptation mechanisms of the patient allowed to obtain surprising visual acuity for near vision without additional eyeglass correction.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

visual acuity
16
bilateral cataract
8
surgical removal
8
intraocular lens
8
[assessment visual
4
acuity
4
acuity aphakia
4
aphakia patient
4
patient bilateral
4
cataract removal]
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!