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Certification of Vision Impairment in Patients with Uveitis Attending a Specialist Clinic.

PURPOSE: To identify the causes of severe visual loss in a UK uveitis clinic, to suggest means of reducing incidence, and to propose improvement in data collection of vision impairment.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Retrospective case series.

RESULTS: Over 128 months, 76 (3.5-4% of patients referred) were certified as vision-impaired or severely vision-impaired. The mean age at registration was 48.4 years, 76% were of working age, and 7% were children. The diagnosis leading most often to registration was sympathetic ophthalmia and the most frequent uveitis complications were secondary cataract (whether or not operated upon) in 62%, chronic cystoid macular edema in 43%, and secondary glaucoma in 28%. Visual loss was often multifactorial.

CONCLUSIONS: Severe and permanent visual loss in uveitis affects people predominantly of working age. It is probably underreported and a restructuring of the certificate of vision impairment may improve data collection. Early referral to a tertiary center may reduce the incidence of vision impairment.

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