Abstract

PurposeTo study the causes of visual impairment among Bahraini patients registered as visually disabled.Materials and methodsA retrospective descriptive study of all patients referred to the Ministry of Social Development for visual disability from January 2014 to December 2019 was performed. Information recorded were age, gender, the cause of the visual impairment, and visual acuity in the better eye. If a patient had multiple ophthalmic diseases, the untreatable disease causing visual impairment was recorded. Patients were considered to have visual impairment according to World Health Organization criteria.ResultsA total of 484 Bahraini patients were included in the study. The mean age was 57.3 years of age ranging from 3 to 100 years; 63% of the total cases were males. The most common cause of visual impairment was diabetic retinopathy (DR) 201 (41.53%), followed by glaucoma 161 (33.26%). This is followed by hereditary and congenital disorders 34 (7.02%), glaucoma combined with DR 21 (4.34%), other retinal diseases 17 (3.51), retinitis pigmentosa 14 (2.89), optic atrophy 9 (1.86), corneal disorders 8 (1.65%), age-related macular degeneration 8 (1.65%), and others 11 (0.83%).ConclusionDR and glaucoma are the major causes of visual impairment among adults. Complications leading to visual impairment of both disorders are avoidable. Prevention measures to be taken control these diseases and prevent their morbidity. Congenital and hereditary disorders are the most common causes of visual impairment among children.

Highlights

  • Visual impairment was ranked in 2015 as the third disability worldwide, after anemia and hearing loss [1]

  • A total of 484 Bahraini patients were included in the study

  • The most common cause of visual impairment was diabetic retinopathy (DR) 201 (41.53%), followed by glaucoma 161 (33.26%). This is followed by hereditary and congenital disorders 34 (7.02%), glaucoma combined with DR 21 (4.34%), other retinal diseases 17 (3.51), retinitis pigmentosa 14 (2.89), optic atrophy 9 (1.86), corneal disorders 8 (1.65%), age-related macular degeneration 8 (1.65%), and others 11 (0.83%)

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Summary

Introduction

Visual impairment was ranked in 2015 as the third disability worldwide, after anemia and hearing loss [1]. The number of visually impaired of all ages is estimated to be 285 million, of which 39 million are blind. Socioeconomic factors could explain 69.4% of the global variations in the prevalence of visual impairment [3]. In 2020, cataracts continued to be the leading cause of visual impairment of adults aged 50 years or more. It affects over 15 million adults, forming 45% of 33.6 million cases of global visual impairment. Diabetic retinopathy (DR), glaucoma, and age-related macular degeneration (ARMD) account for more than 19 million cases of visual impairment in 2020 [4]

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