| April 12, 2000
Media contact: Kate
Deely 619/543-6163
UCSD SHILEY OPTHALMOLOGISTS
DISCOVER RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EYE CONDITION AND ATTENTION DEFICIT
HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER
UCSD Shiley Eye Center
ophthalmologists and researchers have uncovered a relationship between
an eye disease characterized by an inability to focus on a target and
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
“We showed that children with
the disorder, convergence insufficiency are three times as likely to
be diagnosed with ADHD than children without the disorder,”
according to David B. Granet, M.D., a UCSD School of Medicine
associate professor of ophthalmology and pediatrics and director of
the UCSD Ratner Children’s Eye Center. “This is the first time
such a relationship has been identified between these two
disorders.”
Convergence insufficiency, a
disorder that affects less than five percent of children, is a
physical eye problem that makes it hard to keep both eyes pointed and
focused at a near target, making it difficult to maintain
concentration when reading. ADHD is considered to be one of the most
common psychiatric disorders in children.
When reviewing 266 charts of
patients with convergence insufficiency, Dr. Granet and his colleagues
found that 26 patients (9.8%) were diagnosed with ADHD sometime in
their life. Of those, 20 (76.9%) were on medication for ADHD when they
were diagnosed with convergence insufficiency. “When we turned it
around and looked at the ADHD population we found an almost 16 percent
incidence of convergence insufficiency, or again more than three times
what you’d expect.”
“The significance of this
relationship is intriguing,” Dr. Granet said. “We don’t know if
convergence insufficiency makes ADHD worse or if convergence
insufficiency is misdiagnosed as ADHD. What we do know is that more
research must be done on this subject and that patients diagnosed with
ADHD should also be evaluated for convergence insufficiency and
treated accordingly. Further work may aid in understanding both
disorders.”
Dr. Granet added that convergence
insufficiency is one of the very few ocular conditions that respond to
eye exercises (orthoptics) which can be done at home.
* Dr. Granet will be
presenting these findings at the American Academy of Pediatric
Ophthalmology and Strabismus on Thursday, April 13 in San Diego.
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