Clinical profile and treatment outcomes of amblyopia across age groups
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Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose is to study the clinical profile of amblyopia by age at diagnosis. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A retrospective chart review of 327 amblyopic patients over 7 years (September 2009-December 2016) was performed, divided by age at diagnosis into four groups: <3, 3-7, 8-15, and >15 years. Demographics, eye conditions and eye examination parameters including visual acuity (VA), refractive errors, and motility measurements were collected. RESULTS: Mean age at diagnosis and follow-up time was 6.2 ± 6.1 years standard deviation (SD) and 12.4 months ± 20.6 SD, respectively. The most common overall cause of amblyopia was strabismus (37%) followed by anisometropia (36%). The main causes by age at diagnosis were: strabismus at <3 years, anisometropia at 3-7 years, anisometropia at 8-15 years, and mixed at >15 years. Significant improvement in VA with treatment was noted with age between 3 and 15 years (3-7 years,P= 0.001 and 8-15 years,P= 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: Strabismus was the main cause of amblyopia at <3 years of age; anisometropia was more prevalent in older children (3-15 years). The fact that more than a quarter of our amblyopic patients were detected late (after the age of 8 years) underscores the need for expanded vision screening measures in young children. © 2019 Middle East African Journal of Ophthalmology.
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Keywords
Age groups, Amblyopia, Anisometropia, Strabismus, Adolescent, Child, Child, preschool, Female, Follow-up studies, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Refractive errors, Retrospective studies, Sensory deprivation, Therapeutic occlusion, Treatment outcome, Vision screening, Visual acuity, Atropine, Adult, Age distribution, Article, Childhood, Groups by age, Human, Major clinical study, Priority journal, Retrospective study, Artificial embolization, Complication, Follow up, Physiology, Preschool child, Procedures, Refraction error, Vision test