ARTICLE
TITLE

Pattern of blindness in a community based hospital of Nepal

SUMMARY

Introduction: Because of the availability of modern health facilities and moderately easy access to health services in the last 25 years, the blindness due to cataract and trachoma is expected to decline in Nepal. So it is felt that the causes of blindness need to be revised. Objective: To regroup the disease pattern leading to permanent blindness in patients attending a suburban multidisciplinary community-based hospital of Nepal. Materials and methods: A cross-sectional, descriptive study was conducted in patients attending Dhulikhel hospital over a period of 12 months, from March 2010. Only the patients with best corrected visual acuity of < 3/60 were enrolled in the study. A detailed ocular examination was carried out. Results: A total of 76 eyes of 58 patients were analyzed. Of all, 32 were male (55.2 %). The mean age of the patients was 43.03 ± 22.98, with a range of 7 years to 84 years. Retinal diseases had the higher prevalence (23, 39.7 %) followed by amblyopia (10, 17.2 %) and corneal diseases (9, 15.51 %). Anisometropic amblyopia (3.94 %) was the commonest type of amblyopia. Retinitis pigmentosa (9.21 %) and age-related macular degeneration (7.89 %) were common retinal diseases whereas anterior staphyloma (5.26 %) and leucoma (3.94 %) were common corneal diseases. Other important and rare causes of blindness included ethambutol-induced optic neuropathy and vitelliform dystrophy. Conclusion: Periodic collection of statistics on the relative frequency of the causes of blindness is important in socioeconomically developing nations like Nepal. This helps to revise the pattern of blinding diseases so that priorities can be redefined. Nepal J Ophthalmol 2013; 5(9):50-56 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/nepjoph.v5i1.7822

 Articles related

P Lavaju, SK Arya, B Khanal, R Amatya, S Patel    

Background: Corneal ulcer is one of the major causes of monocular blindness in developing countries. Objective: To determine demographic pattern, risk factors, microbiological pattern and treatment outcome of infective keratitis. Materials and methods: A... see more


Soeprono Soeprono    

Blindness, affecting multidimensionally the lives of the individual, his family and the society, has been known according to the 1980 Indonesian Population Census to prevail for 22.1% with children and for 77.9% with adults. Based on this fact, causative... see more


Smita Shrestha, Anu Manandhar    

Introduction: Endophthalmitis is a serious ocular infection that can result in blindness and therefore is a major ophthalmic concern. The study was conducted to find out the microbial etiology in clinically diagnosed cases of endophthalmitis and to deter... see more


Winarto Winarto    

Eye and adnexal infection has clinical range from mild infection without visual acuity disturbances up to severe infection in which an emergency cases could end with blindness. Antibiotics has a central role in treatment of eye infections, therefore shou... see more


Ajai Agrawal, Anupam Singh, Sanjeev Kumar Mittal    

Glaucoma is the third most common cause of global visual impairment. Bilateral blindness from glaucoma is projected to affect greater than 11 million individuals worldwide by the year 2020, with a disproportionately large number of the affected individua... see more