Division on Visual Impairments

DVI Quarterly Volume 58(1)

A quarterly newsletter from the Council for Exceptional Children's Division on Visual Impairments containing practitioner tips for Teachers of Students with Visual Impairments, Certified Orientation and Mobility Specialists, and other professionals.

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Prognosis All of the current treatment methods unfortunately sacrifice some degree of peripheral vision in order to preserve central vision. Central vision is the most critical vision used in daily tasks such as reading, discerning colors, and focusing straight ahead (Vanderbilt Children's Hospital, 2009). In some cases, despite timely treatment, advanced ROP develops causing retinal detachment and severe vision loss or blindness. It is not fully understood why this occurs. Shastry suggests that there may be a genetic factor involved in the development of stage 4 and 5 ROP despite treatment. ROP is similar to familial exudative vitreoretinopathy (FEVR) which also presents as the cessation of normal blood vessel growth followed by abnormal growth. FEVR is a genetic disorder which is definitively linked to specific genetic mutations. Three of the four mutated genes causing FEVR are also found to be mutated in advanced ROP. Therefore, it is theorized that advanced ROP may, in fact, be FEVR with early preterm birth presenting as one environmental factor of FEVR speeding up the advancement of this disease. This possibility opens the door to future genetic therapies (Shastry, 2010). 47

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