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Evaluation of Paediatric Cataract. Dr Sunayana Bhat Consultant Paediatric Ophthalmology ,Strabismus and Neuro Ophthalmology. Vasan Eye Care , Mangalore Ex faculty , Father Muller Medical College chanyn9@gmail.com. Epidemiological Data.
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Evaluation of Paediatric Cataract Dr SunayanaBhat Consultant Paediatric Ophthalmology ,Strabismus and Neuro Ophthalmology. Vasan Eye Care , Mangalore Ex faculty , Father Muller Medical College chanyn9@gmail.com
Epidemiological Data • True prevalence of congenital cataracts is probably 2.5 - 3 per 10,000 live births • Although some sort of cataract is present in 1 in 250 newborns • Accounts for 10% of all visual loss in children worldwide
Quick Revision : Lens Embryology Thickened ectodermal layer : lens plate 28 th day Invaginates : lens vescicle 5 weeks post epithelium elongation 7 weeks (embryonic nucleus ) Ant / post Y sutures 12-14 weeks (fetal nucleus )
Evaluation • History • General physical exam • Ocular exam • Laboratory investigations • Screening
History • Laterality • Present since birth /acquired congenital and unilateral cataract : usually not associated with metabolic disease • H/O trauma : Postnatal • Noticed due to …. - Leucocoria … - Diminished vision …. - Squinting …. - Nystagmus ….
History • Family history : Trace atleast 3 generations
Birth History • Antenatal : TORCH infections Drug intake • Natal : Prematurity Birth asphyxia Neonatal hypoglycaemia • Postnatal : Systemic diseases Chromosomal disorders
Etiology Congenital infections • Congenital herpes simplex • Congenital syphilis • Cytomegalic inclusion disease • Rubella Others • Cysticercosis • Leprosy • Onchocerciasis • Toxoplasmosis Chromosomal disorders • Patau's syndrome • Schmid-Fraccaro syndrome • Trisomy 18 (Edward's syndrome) • Turner's syndrome Disease of the skin and mucous membranes • Atopic dermatitis • Basal-cell nevus syndrome • Ichthyosis • Pemphigus
Etiology Metabolic and nutrition diseases • Aminoaciduria(Lowe's syndrome • Diabetes mellitus • Fabry's disease • Galactosemia / Galactosemic Cataract • Homocystinuria • Hypervitaminosis D • Hyperparathyroidism • Hypothyroidism Other multisystem disorders • Alport's syndrome • Conradi's syndrome • Myotonic dystrophy • Mucopolysaccharidoses • Wilson's disease • Infectious diseases Toxic substances introduced systemically • Corticosteroids • Haloperidol • Miotics • Triparanol
Physical Evaluation • Physician / Paediatrician evaluation
Ophthalmic Evaluation Visual Significance : Concept of “ functional cataract ” • Assessment of red reflex ( before and after dilatation ) • Visual improvement after dilation
Ophthalmic Evaluation – EUA • Axial length for prognosis / IOL calculation • Keratometry • Morphological evaluation of cataract with slit lamp under EUA whenever possible • B scan to assess posterior segment
Zonular Cataract • Opacification of lens material • between clear nucleus • and cortex • Intrauterine insult • Bilateral • Progressive
Nuclear cataract • Opacification of nucleus • Bilateral • Dense • Associated with AS dysgenesis
Anterior Polar Cataract • Dense, usually circular and well-defined opacity on the anterior pole of the lens • Usually symmetric and bilateral but doesn't have to be • May protrude slightly into the anterior chamber like a small pyramid
Posterior Lenticonus • Dense, usually circular and • well-defined opacity on • the posterior pole of the lens • Usually symmetric; may be • misdiagnosed as posterior • subcapsular cataract • May protrude into the lens like a pyramid
Cerulean Cataract • Small, bluish punctate opacities • of the peripheral cortex • (anterior, posterior or both) • Often associated with • other cataract types • May exhibit sectoral • distribution but tends to • be symmetric OU
Coronary Cataract • Single or multiple • finger- or bowling pin-shaped • opacities that ring the • peripheral cortex • Often associated with • cerulean cataracts
Mittendorf Dot • Mittendorf's dot is an embryological • remnant of the hyaloid artery that is attached to the posterior surface of the lens • appears as a small punctate opacity • As shown in the cross-section diagram above, the lens may also have a • corkscrew "tail" of hyaloid artery • remnant attached to it.
Epicapsular stars • Small light brown or tan dots or star-shaped deposits on the anterior capsule • single or multiple • unilateral or bilateral • Are remnants of the tunica vasculosa lentis
Sutural Cataract • Dense opacity that "gloves" • the Y-suture • May involve the anterior • or posterior Y-suture or both; • however, the anterior is the • most common
Pulverulent Cataract • Hollow sphere of • punctate opacities involving • the fetal nucleus • Subtle "bull's eye" may be • noted with ophthalmoscope • retro-illumination • Usually bilateral
Total Cataract • Often indicate natural progression from other cataracts
Laboratory Evaluation • Urine - reducing substance - amino acids - microscopy - protein • RBC galactokinase • Antibody titres – TORCH , VDRL • Serum - calcium, phosphorus, alkaline phosphatase, ceruloplasmin
Management decisions • Age • Visual disability • Lateraliy • Prognostic indicators