Review Articles

Paediatric ophthalmology at primary healthcare level

Mpopi Lenake, Nagib du Toit
South African Family Practice | Vol 56, No 6 : November/December| a4074 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/20786190.2014.977017 | © 2014 | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 25 April 2014 | Published: 11 November 2014

About the author(s)

Mpopi Lenake, Division of Ophthalmology, Groote Schuur Hospital University of Cape Town, South Africa
Nagib du Toit, Division of Ophthalmology, Groote Schuur Hospital University of Cape Town, South Africa

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Abstract

Paediatric patients make up a significant portion of the patient load at primary care level. Children can present at the primary care physician with a wide range of eye problems, some of which are serious enough to impair the quality of the child’s life. The aim of this review article was to highlight serious paediatric visual disorders of which the primary care practitioner should be aware. The article includes a brief discussion of the features of amblyopia, strabismus, retinopathy of prematurity, allergic conjunctivitis, ophthalmia neonatorum and retinoblastoma. Causes of sight-threatening conditions are highlighted, and methods to detect them at primary care level described. Paediatric eye disorders are relatively common and need to be identified and managed as early as possible in order to prevent a potential lifetime of visual morbidity, blindness or worse.

Keywords

allergic conjunctivitis; amblyopia; ophthalmia neonatorum; paediatric ophthalmology; retinoblastoma; retinopathy

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