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ROPARD A PARENT'S GUIDE TO THEIR PREMATURE BABY EYES
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Overview
More than 80% of premature babies who weigh less than 1000 grams
(2.2 lbs) will develop ROP. Most will resolve without treatment.
Those who require treatment much receive it in a timely manner
in order to obtain the best possible outcome. This may occur
after discharge from the hospital. For this reason,
it is critical that premature babies be examined according to
the schedule that will be communicated to you at discharge.
There is risk of retinal detachment from the active form of ROP
until about ten weeks after the babies due date (50 weeks after
conception.)
Vision is a highly complex act which requires the functioning
of the visual pathways in the brain. Even with timely screening
and proper treatment, other factors may lead to less than normal
vision in premature infants. Modern treatment has reduced the
devastating effects of ROP on the eye, yet worldwide it remains
the leading cause of pediatric retinal blindness. With or
without ROP, there can be profound vision loss due to amblyopia
(lazy eye,) eye misalignment or the need for glasses. For this
reason, every premature infant deserves the lifelong attention
of an ophthalmologist.
What is ROP?
Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) is
a potentially blinding disease which in the United States
affects several thousand premature infants each year. It was
unknown prior to 1942 because premature infants did not survive
long enough to show the effects of ROP. With improvements in
the medical care of the smallest premature infants, the rate and
severity of ROP have increased. The diagnosis of ROP is made by
an ophthalmologist who examines the inside of the eye.
Premature infants qualify for eye examinations based on their
birthweight. Although the majority of examined babies will show
some degree of ROP, most will not require surgery.
Nevertheless, premature babies require lifelong follow-up by an
ophthalmologist because of their increased risk for eye
misalignment, amblyopia and the need for glasses to develop
normal vision.
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How the Eye
Works
The eye functions
much like a camera. The front of the eye
contains the structures which focus the image
and regulate the amount of light that enters the
eye, similar to the lens and shutter of a
camera. The inside of the eye is filled with a
gel-like substance called vitreous. In the back
of the eye is the retina which functions like
the film in a camera. Without film a camera
cannot take a picture and without the retina,
the eye cannot see. A normal full term infant
has a nearly fully formed retina. Blood vessels
which provide nutrition to the retina grow from
the back of the eye to the front, with this
process completed just after birth.
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The
Premature Eye
When a baby is born prematurely, the retina is
only partially formed. The blood vessels have
grown into the retina at the very back of the
retina at the very back of the eye but not into
the rest of the retina. The amount of abnormal
underdeveloped retina proportional to the
severity of prematurity. The closer that a
premature baby is to full term, the more
normally developed is the retina. The greater
the prematurity, the greater is the amount of
undeveloped retina. |
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FULL TERM EYE, RETINA FULLY
DEVELOPED |
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PREMATURE EYE WITH DEVELOPED
RETINA (BLOOD VESSELS ON ORANGE-COLORED SURFACE)
AND UNDEVELOPED RETINA (NO BLOOD VESSELS IN
PEACH-COLORED PERIPHERAL RETINA. |
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Zones
of Involvement
Two factors influence
vision loss from ROP: the amount of retina that is
undeveloped at the time of birth and the severity of
the disease. The retina is divided into Zones 1, 2
and 3 and the severity of ROP is graded as Stage 1,
2, 3, 4 or 5.
HIS DIAGRAM SHOWS THE ZONES OF
THE PREMATURE RETINA. AS THE PREMATURE BLOOD VESSELS
GROW FROM THE BACK TO THE FRONT OF THE EYE, THE
AMOUNT OF PREMATURE RETINA DECREASES. AT FULL TERM,
THE BLOOD VESSELS EXTEND TO NEARLY THE ENTIRE
RETINA. |
ROP-Stages and Treatment
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The first
stage of ROP is when the blood vessels stop growing and
form a line that separates normal from premature
retina. |
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In the
second stage, the line of separation takes on substance
as an elevated ridge of tissue. |
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As the ROP
advances fragile new abnormal blood vessels grow toward
the center of the eye (Stage 3). At this point, the eye
is still capable of repairing itself. |
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As Stage 3
advances the normal vessels dilate, indicating that the
ROP may not go away on its own. This is known as "plus
disease." |
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If enough
retina has Stage 3 and so-called "plus disease," then
treatment is indicated. Laser treatment using light
energy is shown. Eyes can also be treated with cryo-therapy
(freezing). |
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In
favorable cases, treatment results in disappearance of
the abnormal vessels with potentially good vision.
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In some
cases, the ROP continues to progress and the retina
detaches. A partial detachment is Stage 4A. If the
center of vision is involved, it is 4B. |
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Left
untreated, the retina can become totally detached, Stage
5. These eyes have very poor visual outcomes. |
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Removal of
the vitreous tissue that fills the eye can relieve the
traction which pulls the retina away from the wall of
the eye. |
If the retina detaches, removal of the vitreous (vitrectomy)
and lens may be needed. Rarely, a band of silicone may be
placed around the eye (a scleral buckling operation). |
A PARENT'S GUIDE TO THEIR PREMATURE BABY'S
EYES
(Packages of 100)
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