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Ocular Findings and Visual Function in Children Examined during the Zika Health Brigade in the US Virgin Islands, March 2018.

S Grace PrakalapakornLucas BonafedeLinda LawrenceDaniel LattinNicola KimRichard D HouseBraeanna HillmanLeah de WildeCosme HarrisonNicole FehrenbachShana Godfred-CatoMegan R ReynoldsEsther M Ellis
Published in: Tropical medicine and infectious disease (2021)
Among children born with laboratory-confirmed Zika virus (ZIKV) infection, visual impairment (VI) can occur despite normal ocular structure. The objective of this report is to describe ocular findings and visual function among children examined during the Department of Health Zika Health Brigade (ZHB) in the United States Virgin Islands in March 2018. This analysis is based on a retrospective chart review of children eligible to participate in the ZHB (i.e., part of the US Zika Pregnancy and Infant Registry) and who were examined by ophthalmologists. Eighty-eight children attended the ZHB. This report includes 81 children [48 (59.3%) males] whose charts were located [average gestational age = 37.6 weeks (range: 27.6-41.3) and average adjusted age at examination = 9.1 months (range: 0.9-21.9)]. Of those examined, 5/81 (6.2%) had microcephaly at birth, 2/81 (2.5%) had a structural eye abnormality, and 19/72 (26.4%) had VI. Among children with normal ocular structure and neurologic examination, 13/51 (25.5%) had VI. Despite a low incidence of abnormal ocular structure and microcephaly, about a quarter of children examined had VI. Our findings emphasize that ophthalmological examinations should be performed in all children with suspicion for antenatal ZIKV infection, even children with normal ocular structure and neurologic examination.
Keyphrases
  • zika virus
  • young adults
  • healthcare
  • gestational age
  • mental health
  • dengue virus
  • preterm birth
  • risk factors
  • climate change
  • tertiary care
  • birth weight
  • low birth weight
  • data analysis