5 results on '"Schulze-Schwering M"'
Search Results
2. [Visual impairment and blindness in children in a Malawian school for the blind].
- Author
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Schulze Schwering M, Nyrenda M, Spitzer MS, and Kalua K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Causality, Child, Comorbidity, Corneal Diseases diagnosis, Female, Humans, Incidence, Lens Diseases diagnosis, Malawi epidemiology, Male, Optic Nerve Diseases diagnosis, Risk Factors, Uveal Diseases diagnosis, Uveal Diseases epidemiology, Vision Disorders diagnosis, Young Adult, Corneal Diseases epidemiology, Lens Diseases epidemiology, Optic Nerve Diseases epidemiology, Retinal Diseases epidemiology, Students statistics & numerical data, Vision Disorders epidemiology, Visually Impaired Persons statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine the anatomic sites of severe visual impairment and blindness in children in an integrated school for the blind in Malawi, and to compare the results with those of previous Malawian blind school studies., Methods: Children attending an integrated school for the blind in Malawi were examined in September 2011 using the standard WHO/PBL eye examination record for children with blindness and low vision. Visual acuity [VA] of the better eye was classified using the standardised WHO reporting form., Results: Fifty-five pupils aged 6 to 19 years were examined, 39 (71 %) males, and 16 (29 %) females. Thirty eight (69%) were blind [BL], 8 (15 %) were severely visually impaired [SVI], 8 (15 %) visually impaired [VI], and 1 (1.8 %) was not visually impaired [NVI]. The major anatomic sites of visual loss were optic nerve (16 %) and retina (16 %), followed by lens/cataract (15 %), cornea (11 %) and lesions of the whole globe (11 %), uveal pathologies (6 %) and cortical blindness (2 %). The exact aetiology of VI or BL could not be determined in most children. Albinism accounted for 13 % (7/55) of the visual impairments. 24 % of the cases were considered to be potentially avoidable: refractive amblyopia among pseudophakic patients and corneal scaring., Conclusions: Optic atrophy, retinal diseases (mostly albinism) and cataracts were the major causes of severe visual impairment and blindness in children in an integrated school for the blind in Malawi. Corneal scarring was now the fourth cause of visual impairment, compared to being the commonest cause 35 years ago. Congenital cataract and its postoperative outcome were the commonest remedial causes of visual impairment., (Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. [Resident training in ophthalmology: can the German system learn from the Malawian one?].
- Author
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Schulze Schwering M and Batumba HN
- Subjects
- Germany, Malawi, Curriculum, Internship and Residency methods, Internship and Residency organization & administration, Ophthalmology education, Teaching methods, Teaching organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Training regulations in Germany and Malawi are compared. One German "Facharztausbildungsordnung" was compared with the syllabus of the Malawian Master of Medicine Degree in Ophthalmology. Germany nowadays has got 7000 ophthalmologists, Malawi nine; population in Germany 80 million, in Malawi 14 million., Methods: We present a written comparison underlined with one illustrative table., Results: Modalities in resident training are very different. Training period: Germany 60 months, Malawi 48 months. Training manner: In Germany mostly theoretical private studies at hospitals and in private practices. Practical advice comes from senior residents, specialists and consultants. It is qualitywise and quantitatively very different within the country. The Malawian syllabus is very structured according to teaching in theory and practice. There are 250 hours of regular teaching each year. Lecturers are especially paid for teaching from outside the country. Training aim in Germany is mainly a medical ophthalmologist whereas in Malawi it is an ophthalmic surgeon. Exams: Germans take part in an oral exam of 30 minutes after 60 months training. Malawian residents take exams every two years: written, oral, practical. Furthermore they are supposed to take part in exams of the ICO (International Council of Ophthalmology) - until now with 100% success for the first attempts., Conclusion: German residents have lots of academic freedom during their training. It is non-uniform. Training aim in Germany is mainly a medical ophthalmologist whereas in Malawi it is an ophthalmic surgeon. The Malawian postgraduate training is uniform with scheduled instructions. That is why quality among candidates can be better compared., (© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. [Four plus one].
- Author
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Schulze Schwering M, Trojan HJ, Klauss V, Rohrbach JM, and Bartz-Schmidt KU
- Subjects
- Blindness prevention & control, Curriculum, Germany, Humans, India, Medical Missions, Tanzania, Developing Countries, Education, Medical, Graduate, Internship and Residency, Ophthalmology education, Specialization
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. [Hallermann-Streiff syndrome: should spontaneous resorption of the lens opacity be awaited?].
- Author
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Rohrbach JM, Djelebova T, Schulze Schwering MJ, and Schlote T
- Subjects
- Cataract diagnosis, Cataract Extraction, Child, Preschool, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Remission, Spontaneous, Cataract congenital, Hallermann's Syndrome diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: As the lens may become absorbed spontaneously extraction of the congenital cataract in the Hallermann-Streiff syndrome is controversial., Patient: A male newborn with Hallermann-Streiff syndrome was referred to the eye clinic because of a bilateral mature cataract. The risks of an operation seemed too serious because the eyes were extremely microphthalmic (a-p diameter approx. 10.5 mm). Instead, it was decided to await spontaneous lens absorption which then occurred slowly and completely between the beginning of the 2nd and the end of the 3rd year of life without considerable inflammatory responses. In the meantime, the child has a good orientation and is able to paint and to discriminate colours without optic correction., Conclusions: The critical investigation of the literature reveals that the frequency of spontaneous lens absorption in the Hallermann-Streiff syndrome is probably (widely) underestimated. It can be estimated with up to 50% (or even more) if patients which were operated on are excluded and if untreated patients are followed up till the end of the 5th year of life. Functional results seem to be quite similar for treated and untreated eyes. Therefore we would recommend to await the spontaneous lens absorption in the Hallermann-Steiff syndrome especially when the cataract is combined with considerable microphthalmia.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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