Infantile nystagmus without overt eye abnormality: Early features and neuro-ophthalmological diagnosis

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Abstract

Aim: To analyse the neuro-ophthalmological data of children referred for further work-up of infantile nystagmus where ophthalmological evaluation had not achieved a diagnosis. Method: We retrospectively reviewed medical records of patients presenting with infantile nystagmus at our institution between 2007 and 2019. Inclusion criteria were onset before 6 months of age, availability of complete ophthalmic examination, visual electrophysiological tests, and neurological examination. Children with a previous definite ophthalmological diagnosis at onset and those with uncertain nystagmus onset age were not recruited. Results: Out of 142 infants (mean age at nystagmus onset 3.6 mo, SD 1.7, range 0–6 mo; 56 females, 86 males), 23% had neurological nystagmus, 7% mixed neurological and sensory nystagmus, 48% sensory defect, and 22% idiopathic infantile nystagmus. The neurological diagnoses were inborn errors of metabolism, white matter genetic disorders, and brain malformations. The prevalent diagnosis in the sensory defect subgroup was retinal dystrophy. Interpretation: Infantile nystagmus without diagnostic ocular findings may be due to neurological, retinal, and optic nerve disorders or be a benign idiopathic condition. In infants with and without neurological abnormalities, the search for a sensory defect should include visual electrophysiology performed early in the diagnostic pathway. What this paper adds: Infantile nystagmus without diagnostic ophthalmological signs has an underlying neurological cause in 30% of cases. Neurological diagnoses include congenital brain malformations, and metabolic and genetic disorders. Sensory defects are part of systemic neurological disorders in 23% of infants. Electrophysiology is useful when ophthalmological examination is uninformative.

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Suppiej, A., Ceccato, C., Lonardi, V., & Reffo, M. E. (2022). Infantile nystagmus without overt eye abnormality: Early features and neuro-ophthalmological diagnosis. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 64(12), 1532–1538. https://doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.15284

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