Pediatric Eye Checkup

Introduction

One crucial aspect often overlooked is pediatric eye health. Regular eye checkups are essential for children, as undetected vision problems can hinder their learning, development, and overall quality of life. In this guide, we'll explore the significance of pediatric eye checkups and why they should be a priority for every parent.

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Total Pediatric (Children) Eye Care

The treatments provided in this clinic include squint correction, treatment for lazy eyes, treatment for nystagmus, squint exercises, treatment for a variety of pediatric eye diseases, such as childhood cataract surgery, correction of children's watering of the eyes, treatment for children's glaucoma, correction of children's drooping of the eyes/ptosis, treatment for children's progressive myopia, etc.

Why Pediatric Eye Checkups Matter

Early Detection of Vision Problems :

  • Children may not always express or realize they have vision issues. Regular eye checkups can detect problems early, allowing for timely intervention.
  • Common vision problems in children include nearsightedness, farsightedness, astigmatism, and amblyopia (lazy eye). Early detection and treatment significantly improve outcomes for these conditions.

Academic Performance :

  • Good vision is crucial for academic success. Undetected vision problems can lead to difficulties in reading, writing, and comprehension.
  • Children with untreated vision issues may struggle in school, leading to frustration and a lack of confidence in their academic abilities.

Developmental Milestones :

  • Vision plays a vital role in a child's overall development, including motor skills, hand-eye coordination, and depth perception.
  • Addressing vision problems early can support proper developmental milestones and ensure children reach their full potential.

Preventing Long-Term Complications :

  • Some vision problems, if left untreated, can lead to more severe complications later in life.
  • Regular eye checkups help identify issues promptly, preventing potential long-term consequences and preserving eye health into adulthood.

Common Pediatric Eye Conditions

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Vision Screening Detects Eye Diseases in Kids

While many eye problems happen in adulthood, a child’s vision—without screening by your doctor or eye care professional— is also vulnerable to eye disease. By finding and treating problems early, healthy vision can develop. Learn about childhood eye conditions and screen your child regularly to protect their vision.

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Left Untreated, Poor Eyesight Can Lead to Lazy Eye

Refractive errors cause blurry vision. A child can have trouble seeing at near distances, far distances, or both. But often blurry vision goes unnoticed, because the child seems to see fine using both eyes. And refractive errors—if left uncorrected—can lead to “lazy eye” and vision loss. Be sure to screen your child’s vision so refractive errors are detected and corrected with prescription glasses.

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Amblyopia (Lazy Eye)

Amblyopia is poor vision in an eye that did not develop vision normally in childhood. It’s also called “lazy eye.”

A child can get amblyopia when they do not get treated for problems like refractive errors, strabismus (misaligned eyes), droopy eyelids or cataracts.

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Strabismus (Crossed Eyes)

Strabismus (misaligned or crossed eyes) happens in about 4 percent (4 out of 100) children. One eye may look straight ahead while the other turns in, out, up or down. Strabismus needs to be treated as soon as possible.

Without strabismus treatment, the brain may ignore the crossed eye to avoid double vision.

A child with strabismus. The off-center light reflection seen during an eye exam is a common sign of misaligned eyes.

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Ptosis (Droopy Eyelid)

Ptosis is a droopy eyelid that can block vision. If the eyelid droops very low, your child may need surgery to raise it. The raised eyelid helps preserve vision in that eye.

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"Cloudy" Eyes May Mean Cataracts

A child’s eyes can appear cloudy if they have a cataract. This is when the normally clear lens inside the eye gets cloudy. Older people mostly get cataracts, but some children are born with them or get them from an injury. Most children need surgery to remove a cataract and see clearly again.

Very rarely, a cloudy eye can be a sign of retinoblastoma (cancer of the retina, or back wall of the eye). Your child’s doctor checks for this at each exam.

A child with an abnormal "white-eye reflex" seen in flash photography—this can be a sign of retinoblastoma or other eye disease in rare cases.

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Cellulitis

Cellulitis is an infection of the eyelid or the eye socket. Symptoms include :

  • painful swelling or bulging of the eye
  • fever
  • blurry vision
  • problems with eye movement

The infection can spread quickly to other parts of the body and needs immediate treatment.

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Conjunctivitis (Pink Eye)

Conjunctivitis is irritation of the white part of the eye from infection or allergy. Pink eye can be viral or bacterial (both are contagious or very easily spread) or due to allergies (not contagious).

A child’s eyes may be red, itchy, teary or have a sticky discharge. Keep your child home from school if they have contagious pink eye. Pink eye usually goes away on its own in a week. You can usually control symptoms at home, but sometimes a doctor prescribes antibiotic eye drops.

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Stye and Chalazion

A stye is a red, sore lump at the edge of the eyelid. It is caused by a bacterial infection. Warm compresses are used to treat styes with an antibiotic in some cases.

A chalazion is a swollen lump on the eyelid caused by a clogged oil gland. It is not caused by infection. You can usually use warm compresses at home to treat a chalazion.

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Blocked Tear Duct

Twenty percent of babies (2 out of 10) are born with a blocked tear duct. Tears do not drain normally, which causes a watery, irritated or infected eye.

Your doctor may show you a special massage technique to help open the tear duct. If massage doesn’t help after a few months, your ophthalmologist may use an instrument to open the duct.

Remember, a child might not tell you their vision is blurry, and symptoms can go unnoticed by parents or teachers. Protect your child’s vision with regular screening and eye exams.

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