Letter to the Editor re: “Refractive and Vision Status in Down Syndrome: A Comparative Study”
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Letter to the Editor
VOLUME: 52 ISSUE: 3
P: 220 - 220
June 2022

Letter to the Editor re: “Refractive and Vision Status in Down Syndrome: A Comparative Study”

Turk J Ophthalmol 2022;52(3):220-220
1. Private Academic Consultant, Bangkok, Thailand
2. Department of Community Medicine, DY Patil University, Pune, India
No information available.
No information available
Received Date: 01.09.2021
Accepted Date: 09.03.2022
Publish Date: 29.06.2022
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Dear editor,

We would like to share our ideas on the publication “Refractive and Vision Status in Down Syndrome: A Comparative Study.”1 Hashemi et al.1 concluded that In DS patients, the prevalence rates of refractive errors, amblyopia, and visual impairment are higher than those in non-DS individuals.” Regarding DS and refractive/vision problems, there should be a hypothesis for the clinical association. How DS might contribute to ocular problems should be proposed. In a recent report, the possible mechanism was cerebral visual impairment, not an intraocular problem.2 This might not be concluded based on the findings of the present study. An important concern is about the control group. The control group is only a group of non-DS cases but not healthy controls. For example, “candidates for refractive surgery” must have an ocular problem. Additionally, Hashemi et al.1 mentioned “age- and gender-matched normal controls,” but there were unequal numbers of subjects in the patient and control groups. Hence, there might be a methodological flaw and bias.

References

1
Hashemi H, Mehravaran S, Asgari S, Dehghanian Nasrabadi F. Refractive and Vision Status in Down Syndrome: A Comparative Study. Turk J Ophthalmol. 2021;51:199-205.
2
Wilton GJ, Woodhouse R, Vinuela-Navarro V, England R, Woodhouse JM. Behavioural Features of Cerebral Visual Impairment Are Common in Children with Down Syndrome. Front Hum Neurosci. 2021;15:673342.