Abstract:AIM:To evaluate the underlying aetiology and clinical characteristics of retinal detachment(RD)in school-age pediatric monocular RD.
METHODS:Patients with RD and contralateral blind(monocular RD)aged 7-14 years, from November 2015 to May 2021 in our hospital were retrospectively reviewed. Demographic characteristics and etiology of RD, clinical type, surgical modality, type of intraocular tamponade, pre-and postoperative visual and anatomical outcomes were recorded and evaluated.
RESULTS: There were 27 children(27 eyes)with monocular RD at least 6mo follow-up. The average age at presentation was 10.63±2.30 years. Familial exudative vitreoretinopathy(FEVR)(11/27, 41%), postoperative congenital glaucoma(6/27, 22%)and Stickler syndrome(3/27, 11%)were main underlying etiologies. Among them, rhegmatogenous retinal detachment(RRD)comprised 78%(21/27)of the patients, of which 81% patients(17/21)had proliferative vitreoretinopathy(PVR)C3 or worse. Pars plana vitrectomy(PPV)was done in 85%(23/27)of the patients, of which 83%(19/23)received silicone oil tamponade. Best corrected visual acuity(BCVA, LogMAR)worse than 1.7 was seen in 78%(21/27)of the patients at final visit, and 82%(22/27)had reattached retina, but 41%(11/27)of the patients remained status of silicone oil tamponade at last visit.
CONCLUSION:School-age pediatric monocular RD is often associated with underlying congenital or hereditary conditions, and often presented with severe RD and severe PVR reaction which needed vitrectomy combined with silicon oil tamponade, and with poor visual and anatomical short-term prognosis.