Ronald V. Keech
University of Iowa
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Journal of Aapos | 1999
Eric A. Packwood; Oscar A. Cruz; Paul J. Rychwalski; Ronald V. Keech
PURPOSEnThe purpose of this study was to assess the psychosocial effects of growing up with and living with amblyopia and to determine whether patients with amblyopia but without strabismus encounter psychosocial problems similar to those encountered by individuals with strabismus.nnnMETHODSnA 20-question survey focusing on medical background, education, self-image, history of amblyopia, treatment of amblyopia, and effects of amblyopia on work, school, friendships, and self-esteem was provided to patients with amblyopia but not strabismus at Saint Louis University Eye Institute and at the University of Iowa Department of Ophthalmology. In addition, patients were evaluated in terms of somatization, obsession-compulsion, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, and anxiety. Results for patients with amblyopia were compared with those of strabismic, normative, and psychopathologic groups using the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSC).nnnRESULTSnTwenty-five patients with amblyopia but without strabismus or previous surgery responded. A significant number of patients felt that amblyopia interfered with school (52%) and work (48%) to some degree and were generally affected in their lifestyle (50%). Fewer were affected in their play of sports (40%) or were influenced as to their job choice (36%). Patients with amblyopia as a whole had a greater degree of somatization, obsessive-compulsive behavior, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, and anxiety than patients with strabismus and HSC control subjects. Differences between patients with amblyopia and those with strabismus were not statistically significant (P > .05), but differences between patients with amblyopia and HSC control subjects were significant (P < .05) in each category. Patients with amblyopia, however, were less symptomatic in these areas than HSC Anxious and HSC Depressed groups.nnnCONCLUSIONnPsychosocial difficulties related to amblyopia affect individuals self-image, work, school, and friendships. Amblyopia has a significant effect on psychosocial functioning and warrants aggressive screening, prevention and treatment during the amblyogenic years.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1990
Mariannette J. Miller-Meeks; Stephen R. Bennett; Ronald V. Keech; Christopher F. Blodi
Six of 11 children developed myopia in one eye after vitreous hemorrhage. None had retinopathy of prematurity, glaucoma, aphakia, or scleral buckling. In seven children developing vitreous hemorrhage before 1 year of age, six exhibited a myopic anisometropia in the affected eye of 1.37 to 12.00 diopters (mean, -4.7 diopters; S.D., 4.0). The degree of myopia correlated with the age of onset and duration of media opacification. In the child without myopia, the hemorrhage did not obscure the posterior pole. None of the four children whose hemorrhage occurred after 2 1/2 years of age showed myopic anisometropia (mean, +0.16 diopters; S.D., 0.24). We conclude that vitreous hemorrhage occurring in infancy is strongly associated with the development of myopia in the affected eye.
Journal of Aapos | 1997
Mayumi Mori; Ronald V. Keech; William E. Scott
BACKGROUNDnThe pathogenesis of open-angle glaucoma and ocular hypertension in patients who have undergone surgical correction of their congenital cataracts remains undetermined. This study examines the prevalence of glaucoma and ocular hypertension in a population of patients who did not undergo surgical correction of their pediatric cataracts.nnnMETHODSnFifty-eight eyes of 41 patients had cataracts before 2.5 years of age and were followed up until at least 5 years of age without operative correction. The patients were studied for the following parameters: age at diagnosis, type of cataract, etiology, bilaterality, optic nerve head cup-to-disc ratio, intraocular pressures, and reason why the patient did not undergo an operation. Glaucoma was defined as the presence of glaucomatous optic nerve head cupping with intraocular pressures of greater than 22 mm Hg. Ocular hypertension was defined as intraocular pressures greater than 22 mm Hg with no optic nerve changes.nnnRESULTSnNine of the 58 eyes had cataracts caused by persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous. The average age to the last intraocular pressure measurement was 19 years (range 5 to 48 years). Closed-angle glaucoma developed in two patients with persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous. Neither open-angle glaucoma nor ocular hypertension developed in any patients.nnnCONCLUSIONnPediatric cataracts not of the persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous type were not associated with ocular hypertension or glaucoma in the absence of surgical cataract correction. In eyes with persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous cataracts, spontaneous closed-angle glaucoma developed in two of nine patients and open-angle glaucoma developed in none. Surgical cataract correction, or the aphakic state that follows such operations, may be responsible for pediatric aphakic glaucoma.
Ophthalmology | 2002
Ronald V. Keech; Wanda L. Ottar; Linna Zhang
OBJECTIVEnTo determine whether the traditional regimen of three intervals of full-time occlusion (FTO) for amblyopia without any measurable improvement in visual acuity constitutes an adequate trial.nnnDESIGNnRetrospective, noncomparative, interventional case series.nnnPARTICIPANTSnSixty-four children younger than 10 years of age with unilateral amblyopia.nnnMETHODSnThe medical records of patients treated for amblyopia in a university outpatient clinic were reviewed. Patients who underwent one FTO interval without an improvement in visual acuity followed by at least one additional FTO interval were included in the study.nnnMAIN OUTCOME MEASURESnImprovement in visual acuity.nnnRESULTSnSixty-four patients underwent 81 occlusion trials consisting of one FTO interval without improvement followed by one or more FTO intervals. Visual acuity improved after the second FTO interval in 25 (31%) of the trials. Of the 44 occlusion trials consisting of two FTO intervals without improvement, visual acuity improved after the third FTO interval in 12 (27%) of the trials. Of the 11 occlusion trials consisting of three FTO intervals without improvement followed by one or more additional FTO intervals, acuity did not improve with any of the trials.nnnCONCLUSIONSnA minimum of three intervals of FTO is necessary to determine whether an amblyopia patient will be unresponsive to occlusion therapy. After three FTO intervals without improvement, additional FTO is unlikely to result in an improvement in visual acuity.
Ophthalmology | 1992
Peter Gloor; Ronald V. Keech; Jay H. Krachmer
Sixteen penetrating keratoplasties performed in patients younger than 2 years of age were reviewed to determine which factors were associated with high postoperative refractive errors. When tissue from donors younger than 2 years was used, the mean postoperative spherical equivalent was -13.7 diopters, compared with +2.0 diopters when tissue from donors older than 2 years was used (P = 0.001). Analysis of variance suggests that the use of a 0.5-mm oversized transplant, as opposed to a 0- to 0.3-mm oversized transplant, contributed to the production of high myopia when tissue from donors younger than 2 years was used (P = 0.009). The high myopia appears to have resulted from steep transplant curvatures. Based on these results, we recommend against the combined use of corneal transplant tissue from very young donors and 0.5-mm oversized transplants for infant penetrating keratoplasties.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1990
Ronald V. Keech; Pamela J. Kutschke
A new technique, the gradient filter test, was developed for evaluating changes in the visual acuity of preverbal children undergoing treatment for amblyopia. The gradient filter test consists of a series of calibrated photographic fog filter and prism lenses. The combined prism-filter lenses are placed in front of the normal fixing eye. The greatest density (fogging value) filter that causes a switch in fixation from the amblyopic to the normal eye is noted. In both normal eyes of 20 nonamblyopic patients and the fellow (non-amblyopic) eyes of 20 amblyopic patients, visual acuity decreased as the density of the prism-filter lens increased. The gradient filter test accurately detected an improvement in visual acuity when compared with optotype measurements in eight patients undergoing occlusion therapy. The gradient filter test is a useful clinical tool that can assess changes in visual acuity in preverbal children who are being treated for amblyopia.
Pediatrics | 1997
Rhonda R. Wright; Daniel Johnson; Mark Neumann; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Pierre Rollin; Ronald V. Keech; Daniel J. Bonthius; Patrick W. Hitchon; Charles Grose; William E. Bell; James F. Bale
Journal of Aapos | 2005
William E. Scott; Pamela J. Kutschke; Ronald V. Keech; Wanda Pfeifer; Brian Nichols; Linna Zhang
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 1992
Arlene V. Drack; John P. Burke; Jose S. Pulido; Ronald V. Keech
Journal of Aapos | 2003
Scott A. Larson; Ronald V. Keech; Randall E. Verdick