AI Article Synopsis

  • Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a common genetic blood disorder that can cause vision problems, specifically a condition called retinopathy, which can be caught early to prevent vision loss.
  • A study was done in India with children aged 7-18 who have SCD to check for retinopathy using a special eye scan called OCT, even if they didn't have any vision problems yet.
  • They found that while none of the kids had serious vision issues, some showed signs of early eye problems, meaning regular eye checks are important to catch these issues before they get worse.

Article Abstract

Background: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the commonest inherited blood disorder leading to complications occurring due to vaso-occlusion including sight-threatening retinopathy. Retinopathy can be managed if diagnosed early and vision loss can be prevented. Since, very less data are available from India, hence, this study was conducted in children (7-18 years) with SCD to diagnose retinopathy by using ocular coherence tomography (OCT) in subclinical stages.

Methods: This cross sectional single-center study was performed in 7-18 years age group children with SCD without any visual symptoms. Enrolled participants underwent complete ophthalmological examination including macula and optic disc thickness measurements using Cirrus HD-OCT and results were analyzed.

Results: Among 55 participants, none had visual impairment. Significant fundoscopy finding (nonproliferative sickle cell retinopathy/NPSR) was found in three patients (5.4%), thinning of central macula in four patients (7.27%), inner macula thinning in eight patients (14.5%), outer macula thinning in one patient (1.81%), retinal nerve fiber layer thinning in five patients (9%), ganglion cell layer to inner plexiform layer thinning in eight patients (14.54%). Overall NPSR was found in 5.4% patients detected with fundoscopy, whereas retinal layer thinning was found in 14 patients (25.4%) using OCT.

Conclusion: Despite of the significant prevalence of SCR, it is still underdiagnosed complication, leading to thinning of the retina from early ages; thus, its early diagnosis by regular screening using newer diagnostic methods can prevent progression to sight-threatening complications and provide better quality of life for these patients.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pbc.31021DOI Listing

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