Abstract

Medical advances in neonatology have improved the survival rate of premature infants, as well as children who are born under difficult neurological conditions. As a result, the prevalence of cerebral dysfunctions, whether minimal or more severe, is increasing in all industrialized countries and in some developing nations. Whereas in the past, ophthalmological diseases were considered principally responsible for severe visual impairment, today, all recent epidemiological studies show that the primary cause of blindness and severe visual impairment in children in industrialized countries is now neurological, with lesions acquired around the time of birth currently comprising the commonest contributor. The resulting cortical or cerebral visual impairments (CVIs) have long been ignored, or have been confused either with other ophthalmological disorders causing low vision, or with a range of learning disabilities. We present here the deleterious consequences that CVI can have upon learning and social interaction, and how these can be given behavioral labels without the underlying visual causes being considered. We discuss the need to train and inform clinicians in the identification and diagnosis of CVI, and how to distinguish the diagnosis of CVI from amongst other visual disorders, including the specific learning disorders. This is important because the range of approaches needed to enhance the development of children with CVI is specific to each child’s unique visual needs, making incorrect labeling or diagnosis potentially detrimental to affected children because these needs are not met.

Highlights

  • This review offers an overview to consider how the diagnosis of cerebral visual impairments (CVIs) can potentially explain, at least in Cerebral Visual Impairments and Learning Disabilities part, a wide range of learning difficulties, which can be overcome by appropriate management and educational strategies made accessible to the affected child

  • The neuropsychological approach combined with structured history taking for CVI allows us to finely describe visual function disorders as well as to characterize their deleterious effect on cognitive, social and motor development

  • Future research in this field will aim to standardize both assessment and management, tenable collection of comprehensive data on the subject, and dissemination of diagnostic and rehabilitative methodologies for the dynamic assessment and management of CVI to bring about optimal learning and development

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Summary

Cortical Visual Impairments and Learning Disabilities

We discuss the need to train and inform clinicians in the identification and diagnosis of CVI, and how to distinguish the diagnosis of CVI from amongst other visual disorders, including the specific learning disorders. This is important because the range of approaches needed to enhance the development of children with CVI is specific to each child’s unique visual needs, making incorrect labeling or diagnosis potentially detrimental to affected children because these needs are not met

INTRODUCTION
Semiology of Cortical or Cerebral Visual Impairment in Children
BEHAVIORAL EXPRESSIONS OF CORTICAL OR CEREBRAL VISUAL IMPAIRMENT IN CHILDREN
Cortical or Cerebral Visual Impairment and Learning Disabilities
Possible visual explanations
Visual field deficits Spatial neglect
Visual recognition deficit Simultanagnosia Optic ataxia
Findings
CONCLUSION

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