Pinpoint cold saves sight, not acuity.Since its beginnings early in the baby boom, the plastic oxygen tent oxygen tent, device used to maintain a patient in an oxygen-rich environment. The oxygen tent is composed of a clear plastic sheet suspended over the bed and tucked beneath the mattress to provide an almost airtight compartment. that serves as a womb for premature babies has saved many lives-but often at the cost of the infants' eyesight. Now, doctors who can save a preemie weighing just 1 pound can sometimes preserve the infant's vision, though it may never be 20/20, says Earl A. Palmer of the Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland in the April Archives of Ophthalmology This article is about the journal published by the American Medical Association. For other journals and uses, see Ophthalmology (disambiguation). The Archives of Ophthalmology . The key is cryotherapy-pinpoint applications of extreme cold-to the retina. The link between oxygen and blindness was recognized in the 1940s. At that time, doctors thought excess oxygen was the only culprit. They now know better. Excess oxygen halts the growth of blood vessels Blood vessels Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names. in the eye. As preemies are weaned wean tr.v. weaned, wean·ing, weans 1. To accustom (the young of a mammal) to take nourishment other than by suckling. 2. from the oxygen, cells in the retina react by issuing a chemical that triggers rapid blood vessel blood vessel n. An elastic tubular channel, such as an artery, a vein, a sinus, or a capillary, through which the blood circulates. blood vessel(s), n the network of muscular tubes that carry blood. growth. The new, weak-walled vessels leak blood, prying the retina from its bed. This causes severe loss of vision in 60 percent of the smallest preemies. Doctors use cryotherapy Cryotherapy Definition Cryotherapy is a technique that uses an extremely cold liquid or instrument to freeze and destroy abnormal skin cells that require removal. to destroy tissue bordering the retina, thereby limiting the creation of new vessels. In this way, a baby's vision can sometimes be saved. The researchers studied 234 children in 25 medical centers. They treated just one eye in each child with cryotherapy to find out whether treated eyes fare better than untreated ones. Thus researchers could 'make sure each patient gets the best treatment, not knowing which it would turn out to be,' says Palmer. At age 5, 32 percent of the children had lost all sight in the treated eye; 48 percent had lost all vision in the untreated eye. On the other hand, 13 percent of the children who retained sight in the treated eye had 20/40 vision or better, whereas 17 percent of the children with sight in the untreated eye had 20/40 vision or better. Anthony Adamis of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. in Boston says that unless methods improve, saving premature babies means having more blind children. 'The incidence is rising,' he notes. |
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