- ALLERGY, RESPIRATORY
- Molecule in Skin May Link Eczema and Asthma
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- Air Quality Better in Northeast, Midwest
- ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
- Yoga May Bring Calm to Breast Cancer Treatment
- U.S. Spends Billions On Alternative Medicine
- Ginger Can Ease Nausea From Chemotherapy Treatments
- ANIMAL CARE
- Animals Respond to Acupuncture's Healing Touch
- Safe Toys for Dogs
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- A Little Drink May Be Good for Your Bones
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- U.S. Reported 25,000 Cases of HPV-Related Cancers Annually
- Papaya Could Be a Cancer Fighter
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- More Than 60,000 Patients Risked Hepatitis Infections
- Caregivers Face Multiple Strains Tending Older Parents
- Birthmark or Blood Vessel Problem?
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- Laughter Can Boost Heart Health
- Anemia Rates Down for U.S. Women and Children
- Walk 100 Steps a Minute for 'Moderate' Exercise
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- Wrinkle Fillers Need Better Label Warnings: FDA Panel
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- Americans Consuming More Sugary Beverages
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- DIET, NUTRITION
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- ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
- Vitamin D Deficit May Trigger MS Risk Gene
- Pesticides on Produce Tied to ADHD in Children
- Smog Standards Need Tightening, Activists Say
- EYE CARE, VISION
- Retinal Gene Is Linked to Childhood Blindness
- Decorative Halloween Eye Lenses May Pose Serious Risks
- Glaucoma Treatment Can Prevent Blindness
- FITNESS
- MRSA Infections Can Bug Fitness Buffs
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- GASTROINTESTINAL PROBLEMS
- HRT Use Raises Risk of Stomach Trouble
- Bowel Prep Harder on Women Than Men
- Olive Oil May Protect Against Bowel Disease
- GENERAL HEALTH
- Swine Flu Now Reported in All 50 States
- Coffee Cuts Liver Scarring in Hepatitis C
- Kids With Vitamin D Deficiency Linked to Heart Trouble
- HEAD & NECK
- Ski Helmets Encouraged for All
- Many Children Will Outgrow Headaches
- Zen May Thicken Brain, Thwart Pain
- HEALTH & TECHNOLOGY
- Imaging Sheds Light on How Acupuncture Works
- The Internet Is Becoming One-Stop Shopping for Health Help
- Save Your Aging Brain, Try Surfing The Web
- HEART & CARDIOVASCULAR
- Obese People Seem to Do Better With Heart Disease
- Ginkgo Won't Prevent Heart Attack, Stroke in Elderly
- Risk Factor for Stroke More Common Among Whites
- INFECTIOUS DISEASE
- Bacterial Infections May Succumb to Honey
- Swine Flu Now Reported in All 50 States
- Older Adults May Have Some Immunity to Swine Flu
- KID'S HEALTH
- Guard Kids' Eyes Against Long-Term Sun Damage
- Music May Temper Pain in Preemies
- Heart Defects in Newborns Linked to Antidepressants
- MEN'S HEALTH
- Drinking Green Tea May Slow Prostate Cancer
- Soy Linked to Low Sperm Count
- Eating Fast Until Full Triples Overweight Risk
- MENTAL HEALTH
- Memory Loss Help from Brain Supplement Prevagen
- Love Hormone May Ease Discussion of Painful Topics
- Common Social Groups and Race, Seem to Help People Relate
- PREGNANCY
- Sugary Colas Tied to Gestational Diabetes
- Breast-Feeding Benefits Moms and Babies
- Heart Defects in Newborns Linked to Antidepressants
- SENIORS
- Exercise Helps Reduce Falls in Young and Old
- Mediterranean Diet Plus Exercise Lowers Alzheimer's Risk
- Protein Deposits May Show Up Before Memory Problems Occur, Study Says
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Vision Test for Young Children Called Unreliable
By eHolistic.com Published: 10/03/2008
By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter
FRIDAY, Oct. 3 (HealthDay News) -- The standard test for checking the vision of young children cannot be completely trusted, Johns Hopkins University researchers report.
The test, called fixation preference test (FPT), is used to evaluate visual acuity, which is the ability of the eyes to focus images on the macula, the part of the eye that handles detailed vision.
"Current methods of testing vision in very young children need to be re-assessed," said lead researcher Dr. David S. Friedman, an associate professor of ophthalmology and international health at Johns Hopkins Wilmer Eye Institute.
The report was published in the October issue of Ophthalmology.
For the study, Friedman's team evaluated visual acuity in 1,504 children aged 30 to 71 months. The researchers used a series of tests including FPT and the Amblyopia Treatment Study test (ATS).
For the FPT, each eye is covered and then uncovered, which determines how well the eyes maintain fixation. The test is designed to measure visual acuity in the best eye. The purpose of the ATS test is to measure visual acuity in children aged 30 months and older.
The researchers found that the FPT, which is considered the standard for testing vision in young children and the only test available to most eye specialists, did not accurately identify problems in visual acuity.
The inaccuracy of the FPT was apparent, when the researchers compared test results between FPT and ATS among children who were able to take both tests.
Dr. Sandra Block, a professor of optometry at the Illinois College of Optometry in Chicago, isn't surprised that the FPT isn't foolproof.
"What we want to find out in children that are preschool age is a decrease in vision due to amblyopia such as nearsightedness, farsightedness or a significant astigmatism, which leads to 'lazy eye,'" Block said. "One test that looks at visual acuity in the good seeing eye does not give a full picture. We may be missing some of the amblyopia."
"It's very important in screening that we look at each eye individually, otherwise, we are going to miss some of those kids," Block said.
In another report in the same journal, the same research team noted a slight difference between visual acuity in black and white children among the same children tested in the first study.
"About 1 percent of preschool children who could have vision tested were found to have decreased vision," Friedman said. "Half of these could benefit from wearing glasses."
The researchers found that the prevalence of decreased visual acuity was relatively low, affecting 1.2 percent of white children and 1.8 percent of black children. The difference between the two groups was not statistically significant, the researchers noted.
The most common causes of decreased visual acuity were nearsightedness, farsightedness and/or astigmatism. Only one child was legally blind.
Unidentified vision loss in preschool children is uncommon, Friedman said. "Increased efforts to identify children with vision loss at such a young age are probably not necessary," he said.
Block agrees vision problems among preschoolers are relatively rare, but parents should still have their children's eyes tested.
"The chances of vision problems in the preschool population are low, but they do exist," Block said. "The screenings are an important piece of the child's early evaluation and are usually done by a pediatrician as part of routine health care."
If a child appears to have a vision problem, he or she should be seen by a specialist, Block said. "Vision is an issue, and the best time to address it is early on, before it develops into true problems that cannot be corrected."
More information
For more on eye tests for children, visit Prevent Blindness America.
SOURCES: David S. Friedman, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor, ophthalmology and international health, Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore; Sandra Block, O.D., professor, optometry, Illinois College of Optometry, Chicago; October 2008, Ophthalmology
Last Updated: Oct. 03, 2008
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