Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

IMI—Management and Investigation of High Myopia in Infants and Young Children

Ian Flitcroft, John Ainsworth, Audrey Chia, Susan A. Cotter, Elise Harb, Zi‐Bing Jin, Caroline C. W. Klaver, Anthony T. Moore, Ken K. Nischal, Kyoko Ohno‐Matsui, Evelyn A. Paysse, Michael X. Repka, Irina Yurievna Smirnova, Martin P. Snead, Virginie J. M. Verhoeven, Pavan K. Verkicharla

Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science · 2023

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Summary

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the epidemiology, etiology, clinical assessment, investigation, management, and visual consequences of high myopia (≤-6 diopters [D]) in infants and young children. Findings: High myopia is rare in pre-school children with a prevalence less than 1%. The etiology of myopia in such children is different than in older children, with a high rate of secondary myopia associated with prematurity or genetic causes. The priority following the diagnosis of high myopia in childhood is to determine whether there is an associated medical diagnosis that may be of greater overall importance to the health of the child through a clinical evaluation that targets the commonest features associated with syndromic forms of myopia. Biometric evaluation (includin

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1167/iovs.64.6.3
Catalogue ID
SNmojad31l-py00ex
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