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Title

Congenital ocular and its adnexal anomalies among Indian pediatric age

 

Authors

Preethi Chava, MC Chaitra*, J Raveena & Amulya Padmini

 

Affiliation

Department of Ophthalmology, Sri Devaraj Urs Medical College, Tamaka, Kolar, India; *Corresponding author

 

Email

Preethi Chava - E-mail: Preethichava1234@gmail.com

MC Chaitra - E-mail: chaitramc@sduaher.ac.in & drchaitramc@gmail.com; Phone +91 8197226641

Raveena J - E-mail: ravee3829@gmail.com

Amulya Padmini - E-mail: Amulya005@gmail.com

 

Article Type

Research Article

 

Date

Received April 1, 2024; Revised April 30, 2024; Accepted April 30, 2024, Published April 30, 2024

 

Abstract

An analysis of the congenital etiologies of ocular morbidity in children of age 0-12 years is of interest. Hence, this study was conducted over a period of 2 years from Jan 2021- Dec 2023 at RL Jalappa Hospital and Research center that is attached to Sri Devaraj Urs Medical College, Tamaka, Kolar, Karnataka, India. Out of 56 patients, 57% were male and 43% were female children. 31 (55%) of mothers belonged to age group between 20-30 years and 24 (43%) between 31-40 years and 1(2%) between 41-50 years. Out of 56 patients, 14 (25%) of them had positive family history. 34 (61%) of them had consanguious marriage. 14 parents (41%) out of 34 are married to second degree consanguinity (brother/sister/grandparent/grandchild) and 20 (59%) belonged to third degree consanguinity (aunt/uncle/niece/nephew/great-grandparent/great-grandchild). Bilateral involvement was seen in 31 (55%). Nasolacrimal duct anomalies were found to be the most common (32%) followed by congenital esotropia (14%). Education, awareness, counseling about risks of consanguinity and other risk factors such as maternal age, infections, medications during pregnancy, vaccination must be a routine practice in healthcare set up. This can significantly reduce morbidity and prevent blindness.

 

Keywords

Congenital anomaly, nasolacrimal duct blockade, maternal risk factors, paediatric age, consanguinity

 

Citation

Chava et al. Bioinformation 20(4): 323-329 (2024)

 

Edited by

P Kangueane

 

ISSN

0973-2063

 

Publisher

Biomedical Informatics

 

License

This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. This is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.