© Shehadeh et al.; Licensee Bentham Open.Purpose: To screen for keratoconus and potential associated risk factors in a tertiary student population sample. Population and Methods: This cross sectional study included 1234 students attending An-Najah National University (Nablus, West Bank, Palestine), that were randomly selected from a total of 20,000 university students. 634 (51.3%) student participants responded by completing a self-administered questionnaire and were assessed by means of corneal topography. Following initial evaluation, participants were referred for Pentacam evaluation if they demonstrated either a mean keratometry of more than 45 diopters, corneal astigmatism of more than 2 diopters and/or if asymmetric topographic patterns were present. Pentacam images were analyzed by an experienced ophthalmologist based on a number of indices and the participants were classified as normal, keratoconus suspects, and keratoconus patients. Results: A total of 620 participants (mean age, 20.1±1.6 years) were included in this study, 379 (61.1%) were females and 241 (38.9%) were males. Nine subjects were diagnosed with keratoconus, demonstrating a prevalence of 1.5%. 52 (8.4%) participants showed at least one abnormal pentacam index, and were considered as KC suspects. Conclusion: Keratoconus is a prevalent disease among the tertiary Palestinian student population. This may be related to a combination of genetic and environmental factors. The results of this study signal the need for public health outreach and intervention for keratoconus.
CITATION STYLE
Shehadeh, M. M., Diakonis, V. F., Jalil, S. A., Younis, R., Qadoumi, J., & Al-Labadi, L. (2016). Prevalence of Keratoconus Among a Palestinian Tertiary Student Population. The Open Ophthalmology Journal, 9(1), 172–176. https://doi.org/10.2174/1874364101509010172
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