Frontiers in Neurology (Jul 2020)

The Need to Look for Visual Deficit After Stroke in Children

  • Judith Luckman,
  • Sylvie Chokron,
  • Shalom Michowiz,
  • Eugenia Belenky,
  • Helen Toledano,
  • Alon Zahavi,
  • Alon Zahavi,
  • Alon Zahavi,
  • Nitza Goldenberg-Cohen,
  • Nitza Goldenberg-Cohen,
  • Nitza Goldenberg-Cohen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2020.00617
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Purpose: To evaluate the role of the ophthalmologist in the management of children with arterial stroke, at presentation and during follow-up.Methods: This retrospective case series comprised children with arterial stroke who were followed for at least 12 months in a tertiary pediatric medical center in 2005–2016. Demographic data and findings on radiological neuroimaging and ophthalmological and neurological examination were retrieved from the medical files.Results: The cohort included 26 children with stroke. Underlying disorders included metabolic syndrome (n = 5, 19.2%), cardiac anomaly or Fontan repair (n = 3 each, 11.5%), vascular anomaly (n = 3, 11.5%), head trauma with traumatic dissection (n = 3, 11.5%), and hypercoagulability (n = 1, 3.8%); in eight patients (30.8%), no apparent cause was found. Eleven patients (42.3%) had a non-ophthalmological neurological deficit as a result of the stroke. Eye examination was performed in nine patients (34.6%) during follow-up. Ophthalmological manifestations included hemianopic visual field defect in seven patients (7.7%) and complete blindness and poor visual acuity in one patient each (3.8%). At the last visit, no change in visual function was detected.Conclusion: The variable etiology and presentation of pediatric stroke may mask specific visual signs. Children with arterial stroke should be referred for early ophthalmological evaluation and visual rehabilitation.

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