WEDNESDAY, Feb. 13 (HealthDay News) -- Preschoolers with poor
vision significantly improved their test scores within six weeks of
consistently wearing prescription glasses, a new study shows.
"It has been theorized that when young children have early
vision problems that are undiagnosed and uncorrected, their
development and performance in school are impacted," Stuart I.
Brown, chairman of ophthalmology and director of the Shiley Eye
Center University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine,
said in a prepared statement. "This study shows that children with
vision impairment do perform below the norm in visual-motor
coordination tests, and that they catch up quickly once they are
given corrective [lenses]."
The study, published in the February issue of the
Archives of Ophthalmology, followed 70 children, aged 3 to
5, about half of whom had normal vision, and half were diagnosed
with ametropia -- abnormal refractive eye conditions leading to
poor vision, such as astigmatism. The children took two
standardized tests that relate directly to future school
performance: the Beery-Buktenica Developmental Test of Visual-Motor
Integration (VMI) and the Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of
Intelligence-Revised (WPPSI-R).
Before being given glasses, the vision-impaired children scored
significantly lower on both tests, demonstrating reduced ability of
the brain to coordinate the eyes with the hands, the researchers
said.
That changed after the vision-impaired children were provided
with prescription glasses and monitored with the assistance of
their families over six weeks to ensure that they wore their
glasses consistently.
Upon retesting, the VMI scores of the children with vision
problems were at the same level as the scores of the children with
normal eyesight. The WPPSI-R scores did not show the same dramatic
improvement, but the researchers speculated that the test might not
be as sensitive to changes in visual-motor integration skills
tested by the VMI tool. The researchers are following the children
to test whether the WPPSI-R scores change further over time.
"Amazingly, this is the first controlled study of preschool
children to show the cognitive disadvantage preschool children have
when they are farsighted and/or have astigmatism, as well as to
show the benefit of early intervention with glasses," study
co-author Barbara Brody, director of the Center for Community
Ophthalmology at the Shiley Eye Center, said in a prepared
statement.
More information
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