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Re: Eye Surgery?

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Eye surgery is one of the wonders of modern medicine. IS this doc doing the

surgery or will he refer you? I am assuming that the surgery he is

suggesting is caused by a " crossed " eye? Amblyopia? That is definately

correctible and (in my experience, including myself) much better than

patching which is so continually annoying. Recovery in children is

generally really quick - maybe a day or two as to feeling find. There may

be bruising that looks pretty gross, but no pain and the kid doesn't know

he/she is bruised!! And then learning to use the weak eye properly - wonder

how that happens???? The brain needs to re-learn to use the weak eye.

I would want this to be explained.

> Have any of your kids had eye surgery to correct a head tilt? Kayla saw

> a wonderful pediatric ophthalmologist today. He spent a good 30 - 45

> minutes observing her vision. He thinks her head tilt is caused by her

> vision (compensating for a weak left eye) and thinks she will need

> surgery to correct it. He doesn't think that it could be corrected by

> vision therapy or patching.

>

> Just wondering if this will help her fine motor and climbing skills

> which are very poor. How long was the surgery and recovery? Any other

> helpful info would be appreciated!

>

> Ecki

> Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01)

> http://oppositekids.blogspot.com/

>

>

>

--

Sara - Life is a journey- we choose the path.

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Hi Ecki,

Perhaps you could try the patching first?

My son had similar problem to what you describe. In his case, we were

told that without treatment he would lose visual function in the

affected eye. Which then put the good eye at major risk.

He was also older than your child when diagnosed. My understanding is

that the earlier treatment begins, success is optimized. So we had a

much narrower window of opportunity than you do.

During the time that we began patching, my son had alot of fears as

well as sensory issues involving facial touch. I actually put a patch

on my eye before I patched his eye. And wore it for the while, the

first day. This helped, along with our silliness and consistency.

Long story short, it worked. NOT 100% but this is only due to his age

when we started. So no surgery was needed or further heart failure on

my part.

Understand that when patching, it starts out in time increments until

the patch is worn EVERY WAKING HOUR. I think DJ was patched for about

three school years-sorry I can't remember the exact timeframe right now.

In the beginning, it also required going to ped ophthal every 4- 6

weeks for progress checks.

The patching is of the GOOD eye. So initially, kids try to cheat in

many ways unless you are diligent about checking the patch & their

affect (head tilt is a dead give away that they've found an opening in

the patch to use...)

There was no way that I wanted him to go blind as well as having his

other issues, so I actually even had it in the IEP & personally scared

the teachers enough about the blindness part that they were diligent

also about making sure the patch went on and off and later stayed on

100% during school.

Initially it requires diligence, but surprisingly soon becomes just

another part of the routine (like meds). My child actually got to the

point that he reminded us if we appeared to have forgotten by getting

the patch & pointing to his eye.

Whatever you decide to do, please remember to inform all those who work

with your child about this visual problem. It impacts EVERY area of

development if only one eye is sending visual messages to the brain. If

informed, modifications and presentations can be put into place:)

Hope this helps some.

Peace.

Kris

>

> Have any of your kids had eye surgery to correct a head tilt? Kayla

saw

> a wonderful pediatric ophthalmologist today. He spent a good 30 - 45

> minutes observing her vision. He thinks her head tilt is caused by

her

> vision (compensating for a weak left eye) and thinks she will need

> surgery to correct it. He doesn't think that it could be corrected by

> vision therapy or patching.

>

> Just wondering if this will help her fine motor and climbing skills

> which are very poor. How long was the surgery and recovery? Any other

> helpful info would be appreciated!

>

> Ecki

> Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01)

> http://oppositekids.blogspot.com/

>

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Thanks everyone for your input. I just realized that Kayla's ABA

teacher is also a Vision Therapist (she's multi-talented, LOL), so I

will see what she has to say. Her left eye tends to drift inwards, but

not all the time, just on occasion, so I don't know how serious it is.

She also doesn't tilt her head all the time, maybe just 50 - 60% of the

time. A friend thought that maybe because of her autism she doesn't

feel the need to focus on the outside world, so she only tilts her head

when she has to deal with others. When she is in her own world she

doesn't really tilt her head. Interesting.

Ecki

Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01)

http://oppositekids.blogspot.com/

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nathan has, when he was a toddler he use to always have his chin down on his

chest, the pediatric eye doc explained he had a perfect " V " pattern, put his

chin down and his eyes are perfectly aligned and when he lifted his chin they

would come down and in,but at least they didnt cross. they even took pictures

for their text book. they did two different surgeries, one to fix the " V "

pattern and then a year later to realign the muscles in the left eye, drifting

to the left, and then we patched for several years to strengthen this lazy eye.

All i really have to say about the surgery was it was way better than when they

fixed his drooping flipping out eyelids, no bruising or anything like that one.

It was so long ago I dont even remember if he had eye drops or anything after. I

dont think he did, just ice pack if tolerated, lol like that works. Anyways he

has beautiful blue eyes and they are aligned etc, just a little bit far sighted

doesnt need to wear glasses or anything, just gets his check up with our family

eye doc now every year. Dont ask me how we got him to do that, I schedule at the

same time as mine and he watches me and then jumps up in the chair just like how

we taught him for his hair cuts, except with dad and brother, lol, and does

great. shawna

To: @...: yulan@...: Thu, 12 Jun 2008 23:13:55

+0000Subject: Eye Surgery?

Have any of your kids had eye surgery to correct a head tilt? Kayla saw a

wonderful pediatric ophthalmologist today. He spent a good 30 - 45 minutes

observing her vision. He thinks her head tilt is caused by her vision

(compensating for a weak left eye) and thinks she will need surgery to correct

it. He doesn't think that it could be corrected by vision therapy or

patching.Just wondering if this will help her fine motor and climbing skills

which are very poor. How long was the surgery and recovery? Any other helpful

info would be appreciated!EckiMom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS,

7/12/01)http://oppositekids.blogspot.com/

_________________________________________________________________

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My Daivd is 19 years old. He tilts his head when looking at photos and

other close work. His vision was not adequately addressed in his early

years due to birth parents failing to follow through on medical issues

and a variety of other things.

Anyway, we believe that has not developed much if any binocular

vision but he does an awesome job with climbing. He hates fine motor

which is understandable with his level of vision issues.

is very athletic but if I could go back and do things over I'd do

as much as possible to get his vision corrected. He has many avoidance

behaviors associated with fine motor tasks and I think that he would

actually be a true reader and writer if he didn't struggle so with

vision.

BTW, he is a great climber but I think he does it most by feel not

vision.

Karyn

>

> Have any of your kids had eye surgery to correct a head tilt? Kayla

saw

> a wonderful pediatric ophthalmologist today. He spent a good 30 - 45

> minutes observing her vision. He thinks her head tilt is caused by

her

> vision (compensating for a weak left eye) and thinks she will need

> surgery to correct it. He doesn't think that it could be corrected by

> vision therapy or patching.

>

> Just wondering if this will help her fine motor and climbing skills

> which are very poor. How long was the surgery and recovery? Any other

> helpful info would be appreciated!

>

> Ecki

> Mom to Kayla (DS/ASD, 4/5/04) and Laurie (PDD-NOS, 7/12/01)

> http://oppositekids.blogspot.com/

>

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