Background: Functional visual disorders in children and adolescents are an important but challenging differential diagnosis. What is characteristic is the discrepancy between the symptomatology and the objective findings. The aim of our work was to analyse the data of those patients who were cared for at our clinic with the diagnosis "functional visual disorders".
Patients And Methods: A retrospective data analysis was performed: age < 18 years, with diagnosis "functional visual disorder" 2011 to 2020. Historical and clinical data were extracted from the patient's file. In addition, parents or patients were contacted using a questionnaire about current symptoms. The study was approved by the cantonal ethics committee of Zürich (KEK Nr. 2020-01268).
Results: A total of 92 patients were identified, and analysis could be performed in 53% (49/92; 32 female, 17 male) with available consent. The age ranged from 3 to 18 years (median 10.5 years) with a follow-up of 1 to 58 months (median 7 months). The most common symptoms were bilateral visual loss (55%) and/or blurred vision (18%) with headache (35%), motility pain (14%), photophobia (4%), dizziness (4%), and malaise (2%). A reduction in distant (22/49 bilateral, 9/49 unilateral) and near (24/49 bilateral, 3/49 unilateral) visual acuity was documented. Subjective visual acuity reduction was no longer detectable in 20% of patients at testing. Psychological distress was documented in 13/49 patients. Moisturising eye drops (18/49), eyeglass prescription (15/49), or no therapy (20/49) was recommended. Subjective and/or objective improvement was documented at follow-up in 49% (24/49). The questionnaire was answered in 86%: no complete remission of visual symptoms (10/42), remission within 1 week (14/41), 1 month (3/41), 2 - 6 months (8/41), 1 year (6/41). There was no correlation between duration of visual symptoms and age at onset or gender. The consultation at our clinic was reported as "supportive and helpful" in 31/42 patients.
Conclusion: Despite a low incidence during the history, the psychosocial and psychological component should not be neglected.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/a-1778-4693 | DOI Listing |
Br Ir Orthopt J
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Care for people with idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) needs improving and I think orthoptists are in a perfect position to help. People with fulminant IIH are still losing sight due to delayed diagnosis or mismanagement.People with IIH often have a poor quality of life due to disabling chronic headaches and poor mental health.
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Department of Ophthalmology (Brady) and Department of Neurology, Section on Statistical Planning and Analysis (Hernandez, Salter), University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas; independent researcher, Dallas (Truong-Le).
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!