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| Katie Baum |
Many people do not realize that a young child, even a newborn, can have cataracts, a condition more commonly associated with older people. Rob Baum knew because he had them back in 1966 when he was a toddler.
So when, at 2-and-a-half years old, his daughter Katie suddenly began holding her books close to her eyes and searching with her hands for food on her plate, he immediately suspected that the characteristic cloudiness of cataracts shrouded the lenses of her eyes.
Like father, like daughter
"Had I never had them myself at the exact same age, it would have never occurred to me that this could be a cataract," said Rob, who lives in Concord, Massachusetts. He also knew from experience that cataracts can lead to blindness in children if left alone and that Katie needed to be treated urgently.
As soon as he and his wife Sarah noticed Katie's unusual behavior, they brought her to her pediatrician, who couldn't see cataracts in either eye, but advised the family to see an ophthalmologist. Since it was three days after Christmas, they couldn't get an appointment.
Diagnosis at Children's
"So we called Children's Hospital Boston," said Rob, "and the person who took the call said that it sounded like cataracts and advised us to come to the eye clinic the next day."
At the clinic, pediatric ophthalmologists diagnosed the condition. Katie, in fact, had cataracts in both eyes. The condition developed recently in the right eye, which led to the obvious vision problems. The cataract in the left eye probably developed months before, but it wasn't noticeable because she could still see well through the right eye.
"In retrospect, we realized that she was having a problem with the left eye because we had noticed that it appeared to wander at times," he said.
Plans for cataract surgery
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