Constable Tania, Pilling Rachel Fiona, Woodhouse J Margaret
Clinical Optometrist Children's Health Ireland (CHI) Temple Street, Dublin, Ireland.
School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of Bradford, Shearbridge Road, Bradford, BD7 1NL, UK.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2024 Aug 12. doi: 10.1007/s10803-024-06509-w.
There is a higher prevalence of visual problems in children with Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD) compared with the neuro-typical population. Issues relating to visual perception can be evident as atypical visual behaviours (ViBes). The aim of the study was to compare findings of parents and eye health professionals using questionnaires to describe visual function in young children with ASD.
Parents/Caregivers of patients diagnosed with ASD attending routine hospital eye clinics were invited to participate. A questionnaire to draw out presence of ViBes was completed by the parent prior to attending clinic. The clinician independently completed the same questionnaire and undertook a clinical ocular assessment.
32 children were recruited (mean age 7 years, range 4-11). Most caregivers indicated they had noted at least one atypical ViBe (97%, median 5, range 0-8). Parental-reported ViBe8 scores were higher than clinician-reported scores (p = 0.04). The most commonly reported ViBes by both groups related to use of vision at the same time as other senses, and atypical fixation (e.g. looking away during speech or side viewing). There was weak correlation between visual acuity and parental ViBe8 score (rho = 0.364) and no correlation between refractive error and parental ViBe8 score (rho = 0.047).
Clinicians were likely to under-report atypical visual function compared with parent. Refraction and visual acuity alone do not detect all visual problems in children with ASD. A Visual Behaviour (ViBe) questionnaire offers a structured approach and shared language to allow documentation of functional visual assessment for both parents, carers, and educational professionals. Use of the ViBe questionnaire may promote understanding between caregiver and professional and provide a baseline for visual behaviours.
与神经典型人群相比,自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)儿童的视力问题患病率更高。与视觉感知相关的问题可能表现为非典型视觉行为(ViBes)。本研究的目的是比较家长和眼科保健专业人员使用问卷描述ASD幼儿视觉功能的结果。
邀请在常规医院眼科诊所就诊的被诊断为ASD的患者的家长/照顾者参与。家长在就诊前完成一份用于了解ViBes存在情况的问卷。临床医生独立完成相同问卷并进行临床眼部评估。
招募了32名儿童(平均年龄7岁,范围4 - 11岁)。大多数照顾者表示他们至少注意到一种非典型ViBe(97%,中位数为5,范围0 - 8)。家长报告的ViBe8分数高于临床医生报告的分数(p = 0.04)。两组最常报告的ViBes与同时使用视觉和其他感官以及非典型注视有关(例如在说话时看向别处或侧视)。视力与家长ViBe8分数之间存在弱相关性(rho = 0.364),屈光不正与家长ViBe8分数之间无相关性(rho = 0.047)。
与家长相比,临床医生可能会少报非典型视觉功能。仅屈光和视力检查无法检测出ASD儿童的所有视觉问题。视觉行为(ViBe)问卷提供了一种结构化方法和通用语言,以便为家长、照顾者和教育专业人员记录功能性视觉评估。使用ViBe问卷可能会促进照顾者和专业人员之间的理解,并为视觉行为提供基线。