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Characterising the refractive error in paediatric patients with congenital stationary night blindness: a multicentre study.

Austin D IgelmanElizabeth WhiteAlaa TayyibLesley A EverettAjoy VincentElise HeonChristina ZeitzMichel MichaelidesOmar A MahrooMohamed KattaAndrew WebsterMarkus PreisingBirgit LorenzSamer KhatebEyal BaninDror SharonShahar LuskiFilip Van Den BroeckBart Peter LeroyElfride De BaereSophie WalraedtKatarina StinglLaura KuehleweinSusanne KohlMilda ReithAnne FultonAparna RaghuramIsabelle MeunierHélène DollfusTomas S AlemanEmma C BedoukianErin C O'NeilEmily KraussAndrea L VincentCharlotte JordanAlessandro IannacconeParveen SenSrilekha SundaramurthySoumittra NagasamyIrina BalikovaIngele CasteelsShyamanga BorooahShaden YassinAaron NagielHillary SchwartzXavier ZanlonghiIrene GottlobRebecca J McLeanFrancis L MunierAndrew StephensonRobert SiskRobert KoenekoopLorri B WilsonDouglas FredrickDongseok ChoiPaul YangMark Edward Pennesi
Published in: The British journal of ophthalmology (2024)
Patients with CSNB tend to be myopic from an early age and progress to become more myopic with age. Patients may benefit from long-term myopia slowing treatment in the future and further studies are indicated. Additionally, CSNB should be considered in the differential diagnosis for early-onset myopia.
Keyphrases
  • early onset
  • end stage renal disease
  • late onset
  • ejection fraction
  • newly diagnosed
  • chronic kidney disease
  • prognostic factors
  • patient reported outcomes
  • sleep quality
  • optic nerve
  • smoking cessation