BACKGROUND: after stroke, visual impairment may exacerbate the impact of other impairments on overall disability and negatively influence rehabilitation. OBJECTIVE: to examine the visual status of patients after stroke and determine whether this can be improved by simple interventions. DESIGN: prospective study. SETTINGS: stroke rehabilitation unit in a Belfast teaching hospital. SUBJECTS: 77 consecutive patients admitted for rehabilitation after acute stroke. METHODS: full optometric and ophthalmic assessment within 2 weeks of admission. RESULTS: of 70 patients with glasses, 19 did not have their glasses in hospital before prompting and 18 had glasses in unacceptable condition. Twenty patients had impaired visual acuity (6/12 or worse) with existing glasses (if helpful); 11 of these improved to better than 6/12 with refractive correction. CONCLUSIONS: stroke professionals need to enquire about patients' spectacles and assess their condition. Patients with reduced visual acuity in the absence of significant non-refractive disease should be referred to an optometrist: in this series 14% of patients had visual impairment which benefited from refractive correction.
BACKGROUND: after stroke, visual impairment may exacerbate the impact of other impairments on overall disability and negatively influence rehabilitation. OBJECTIVE: to examine the visual status of patients after stroke and determine whether this can be improved by simple interventions. DESIGN: prospective study. SETTINGS: stroke rehabilitation unit in a Belfast teaching hospital. SUBJECTS: 77 consecutive patients admitted for rehabilitation after acute stroke. METHODS: full optometric and ophthalmic assessment within 2 weeks of admission. RESULTS: of 70 patients with glasses, 19 did not have their glasses in hospital before prompting and 18 had glasses in unacceptable condition. Twenty patients had impaired visual acuity (6/12 or worse) with existing glasses (if helpful); 11 of these improved to better than 6/12 with refractive correction. CONCLUSIONS:stroke professionals need to enquire about patients' spectacles and assess their condition. Patients with reduced visual acuity in the absence of significant non-refractive disease should be referred to an optometrist: in this series 14% of patients had visual impairment which benefited from refractive correction.
Authors: Gerasimos Fergadiotis; William D Hula; Alexander M Swiderski; Chia-Ming Lei; Stacey Kellough Journal: J Speech Lang Hear Res Date: 2019-06-03 Impact factor: 2.297
Authors: William D Hula; Gerasimos Fergadiotis; Alexander M Swiderski; JoAnn P Silkes; Stacey Kellough Journal: J Speech Lang Hear Res Date: 2019-12-18 Impact factor: 2.297
Authors: Noe Garin; Beatriz Olaya; Elvira Lara; Maria Victoria Moneta; Marta Miret; Jose Luis Ayuso-Mateos; Josep Maria Haro Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2014-08-08 Impact factor: 3.295