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Visual axis deprivation amblyopia.pdf

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Visual axis deprivation amblyopia.pdf

  1. 1. Visual Axis Deprivation Amblyopia By:- Dr. Bamania
  2. 2. 01 02 03 04 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Clinical Characteristics Treatment Epidemiology and statistics
  3. 3. Introduction 01
  4. 4. AMBLYOPIA refers to a partial reversible loss of vision in one or both eyes, for which no cause can be found by physical examination of the eye, i.e., there is absence of any organic disease of ocular media, retina and visual pathway.
  5. 5. results from prolonged uniocular suppression in children with unilateral constant squint who fixate with normal eye develops when one eye is totally excluded from seeing early in life as, in congenital or traumatic cataract, complete ptosis and dense central corneal opacity a occurs in an eye having higher degree of refractive error than the fellow eye bilateral amblyopia occurring in children with bilateral uncorrected high refractive error occurs in children with uncorrected astigmatic refractive error Strabismic Stimulus Deprivation Anisometropic Isometropic Meridional TYPES
  6. 6. AMBLYOGENIC FACTORS occurs in anisometropia due to congenital cataract in strabismus Visual deprivation Light deprivation Abnormal binocular interaction
  7. 7. VISUAL AXIS DEPRIVATION AMBLYOPIA
  8. 8. ● Amblyopia ex anopsia disuse amblyopia ● Least common but most damaging ● Cause when the visual axis is obstructed ● Monocular congenital or traumatic cataract, example ptosis, corneal opacity and prolonged patching of the normal eye for treatment of amblyopia ● Less than 6 years - severe amblyopia ● After 6 years - less harmful ●
  9. 9. ● Visual loss resulting from unilateral deprivation is worse than that produced by bilateral deprivation of similar degree
  10. 10. DIAGNOSIS AND CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS 02
  11. 11. ● Visual acuity is reduced. Recognition acuity is more affected than resolution acuity. ● Effect of neutral density filter. Visual acuity when tested through neutral density filter improves by one or two lines in amblyopia and decreases in patients with organic lesions. ● Crowding phenomenon is present in amblyopics i.e., visual acuity is less when tested with multiple letter charts (e.g., Snellen’s chart) than when tested with single charts (optotype). ● Fixation pattern may be central or eccentric. Degree of amblyopia in eccentric fixation is proportionate to the distance of the eccentric point from the fovea. ● Colour vision is usually normal, may be affected in deep amblyopia with vision below 6/36.
  12. 12. A PICTURE IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS
  13. 13. TREATMENT 03
  14. 14. TREATMENT Treatment of amblyopia involves following steps:- ● 1) eliminate any obstacles to vision, such as cataract. ● 2) correct any significant error. ● 3) force use of the poorer eye by limiting use of the better eye.
  15. 15. ● Removal of cataract ● Refractive correction ● Occlusion therapy ● Penalisation METHODS ● Drugtherapy ● Pleoptics ● Cam stimulator ● Surgery to treat the cause of amblyopia
  16. 16. CATARACT REMOVAL ● Removal of congenital lens opacity- first 4 -6 week of life. ● If symmetrical b/1 cases- interval b/wast & and eye should not be not more than 1-2 weeks. ● Developing severe traumatic cataract in children less than 6 yrs removed within few weeks of injury.
  17. 17. OCCLUSION THERAPY ● Occlusion of the sound eye is the most effective treatment for amblyopia treatment ● When fixation is central, simple & effective. ● When fixation is eccentric, <7yrs central fixation will be recovered. ● Older the child harder to regain central fixation. ● Success rate 30-92% ● MOA-prevent fixating eye taking part in act of vision and removes inhibitory stimulus that arises from stimulation from fixating eye
  18. 18. EPIDEMIOLOGY AND STATISTICS 04
  19. 19. EPIDERMIOLOGY ● In developed countries 1-5% of the population ● In india affects 1-4% of children ● Goel et al. found the incidence to be 0.7% in rural schools than in urban schools 0.5% ● Onset is birth to 7 yrs of age ● SE Factors does not significantly influence the age of presentation of amblyopia ● Earlier the onset greater the defecit
  20. 20. THIS IS A GRAPH Follow the link in the graph to modify its data and then paste the new one here. For more info, click here Therapies Despite being red, Mars is a cold place Retina Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun Donors Jupiter is the biggest planet of them all Cells Venus is the second planet from the Sun 28% 25% 33% 14%
  21. 21. 2%-3% POPULATION IS AFFECTED BY AMBLYOPIA
  22. 22. CREDITS: This presentation template was created by Slidesgo, including icons by Flaticon and infographics & images by Freepik THANKS!

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