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The new screening instrument, known as the Pediatric Vision Scanner, is designed to be easy for pediatricians and pediatric nurses to use. It looks like a hand-held camera and displays a visual target: a blinking light inside a bull's eye. As the child looks at this target, the device scans the eyes' retinas with a low-power laser to take a series of five readings of the eyes' alignment and ability of both eyes to focus on the target simultaneously. An overall score below 60 percent (fewer than three successes in five attempts) indicates that the child should be referred to a pediatric ophthalmologist for further examination.
In their study, Hunter and colleagues evaluated 77 children, aged two to 18, who were patients at Children's ophthalmology clinic or their siblings. All subjects underwent a complete "gold standard" examination by an orthoptist or pediatric ophthalmologist to identify risk factors for amblyopia: 37 children were diagnosed with strabismus, three with anisometropia and 37 had neither condition and served as controls. Each child was also tested with the Pediatric Vision Screener by an investigator who was unaware of the "gold standard" findings.
The device reliably identified all 37 children with strabismus and could detect very fine degrees of eye misalignment. It also identified all three children with anisometropia. One quarter of the children with strabismus and all three children with anisometropia were between the ages of two and four. All 37 children in the control group passed the exam.
Hunter's group has since tested 50 more children, with similar results. He hopes to increase pediatricians' awareness of amblyopia and persuade health insurers and government agencies to support routine amblyopia screening for preschool-age children. While a number of states have mandated a full eye exam by eye specialists before entry to school, this is too late to treat amblyopia successfully, Hunter says, adding that an early screening eye exam in the pediatrician's office would be less expensive and likely to reach more children than a full eye exam. He is now refining his device, with plans to begin field-testing it in pediatricians' offices within one to two years.
This study excluded children under age two from analysis because they weren't interested enough in the target to consistently look at it. The new prototype under development is hoped to extend amblyopia screening to as early as 12 months of age, by using a more appealing target that combines a flashing white light and a beeping tone.
Funding for the study was provided by the Research to Prevent Blindness, the Massachusetts Lion's Eye Research Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and the Helena Rubenstein Foundation.
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