Literature DB >> 23889849

'Congenital' nystagmus may hide various ophthalmic diagnoses.

Gerd Holmström1, Marie-Louise Bondeson, Urban Eriksson, Hanna Åkerblom, Eva Larsson.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate whether patients registered at a low-vision centre with 'nystagmus' had any underlying, but so far unknown, ophthalmic diagnosis.
METHODS: All patients registered at the low-vision centre of Uppsala county with nystagmus as their major diagnosis were identified. Their medical records were studied to exclude those with other general diagnoses that could explain the nystagmus. The remaining group of patients underwent an ophthalmic examination, refraction and optical coherence tomography (OCT). Electroretinogram and genetic analyses were performed when indicated.
RESULTS: Sixty-two patients with nystagmus as their main diagnosis were registered at the low-vision centre, Uppsala, and 43 of them had a major diagnosis other than nystagmus. Nystagmus was the major diagnosis in 19 patients, 15 of whom, aged 6-76 years, participated in the study. Two of the patients had foveal hypoplasia and albinism, four a seemingly isolated foveal hypoplasia, three achromatopsia, one rod-cone dystrophy, one degenerative high myopia, and two could not be evaluated. Only two patients appeared to have 'congenital' nystagmus. Eleven of the patients underwent a comprehensive genetic investigation of the PAX 6 gene. In addition, four of the patients were analysed for mutations in FOXC1 and PITX2 and one in FRMD7. No mutations were found in any of the patients analysed.
CONCLUSION: The study illustrates that many patients in our study group with nystagmus had underlying ophthalmic diagnoses. Early diagnosis is important to facilitate habilitation and to provide genetic counselling and, in the future, possibly also gene therapy.
© 2013 Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica Foundation. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  achromatopsia; congenital nystagmus; foveal hypoplasia; nystagmus

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23889849     DOI: 10.1111/aos.12250

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Ophthalmol        ISSN: 1755-375X            Impact factor:   3.761


  4 in total

Review 1.  The clinical evaluation of infantile nystagmus: What to do first and why.

Authors:  Morgan Bertsch; Michael Floyd; Taylor Kehoe; Wanda Pfeifer; Arlene V Drack
Journal:  Ophthalmic Genet       Date:  2017 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.803

2.  An automated segmentation approach to calibrating infantile nystagmus waveforms.

Authors:  Matt J Dunn; Christopher M Harris; Fergal A Ennis; Tom H Margrain; J Margaret Woodhouse; Lee McIlreavy; Jonathan T Erichsen
Journal:  Behav Res Methods       Date:  2019-10

Review 3.  Nystagmus in pediatric patients: interventions and patient-focused perspectives.

Authors:  Kimberly Penix; Mark W Swanson; Dawn K DeCarlo
Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol       Date:  2015-08-21

4.  Identification of a novel idiopathic congenital nystagmus‑causing missense mutation, p.G296C, in the FRMD7 gene.

Authors:  Yanghui Xiu; Yihua Yao; Tanchu Yang; Meihua Pan; Hui Yang; Weifang Fang; Feng Gu; Junzhao Zhao; Yihua Zhu
Journal:  Mol Med Rep       Date:  2018-07-09       Impact factor: 2.952

  4 in total

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