Vitamins Diary
 
Web vitaminsdiary.com
 
VitaminsMineralsHerbsHerbal RemediesFruits and VegetablesAmino AcidsNutrientsDietsRelieve SymptomsDisordersHealth & NutritionEating DisordersGojiArticlesLow Carb DietGardeningHGHHoodiaColon CleansingAcai Berry
Add Post

Vitamins Information (Home) > Disorders > Night Blindness

Night Blindness: Keratomalcia

Keratomalcia is also known as Night Blindness, Retinol Deficiency, Vitamin A Deficiency, Xerophthalmia and Xerotic Keratitis. It is an ocular condition when the cornea becomes dry, soft and thin, and then ulcerates, usually affecting both eyes. It occurs as a result of severe deficiency of vitamin A in addition to an inadequate diet, sprue, cystic fibrosis etc.

Night Blindness

Secondary conditions may also be associated to Night Blindness with impaired absorption, storage, or transport of vitamin A, such as celiac disease, ulcerative colitis, cystic fibrosis, liver disease, or intestinal bypass surgery, as well as any condition that leads to mal-absorption of fat soluble vitamins.

The most common cause worldwide is deficiency in diets due to the poor intake of vitamin A. In some developing countries, this deficiency associated with Night Blindness are the major cause of childhood blindness as a result of nonselective general malnutrition observed in under nourished children mainly residing in slums whose diet is deficient of vitamins and proteins. Nearly 20,000 young children go blind every year due to severe deficiency.

Vitamin A is essential for normal vision, healthy skin, proper bone growth, and protection of the mucous membranes of the digestive, respiratory, and urinary tracts against infection. One of the early signs of vitamin A deficiency that leads to Night Blindness is a "Bitot's spot1", characterized by a foamy, wedge-shaped area in the conjunctiva, usually on its temporal side.

Bitot's spots are white plaques of keratinized epithelial cells found on the conjunctiva of young children with remarkable vitamin A deficiency, although these spots can be seen without vitamin A deficiency, possibly as result of exposure, Corneal softening, ulceration and eventually, dissolution. Superimposed infection is also a frequent accompaniment of Night Blindness and both can lead to blindness.

Although, Night Blindness is hastened by protein-caloric malnutrition, it also can be precipitated by a systemic illness including pneumonia, measles, or diarrhea. This condition presents itself with bilateral or unilateral centrally located, grey, indolent corneal ulcers surrounded by dull lack-luster hazy cornea, photophobia. After that, the cornea becomes soft, necrotic and perforation may occur.

Early symptoms of Night Blindness may include night blindness, characterized by poor vision at night or in dim light, as well as extreme dryness of the eyes, like in xerophthalmia, followed by wrinkling, progressive cloudiness, and increasing softening of the corneas. As the vitamin A deficiency advances, dry, "foamy," and silver-gray deposits may appear on the delicate membranes covering the whites of the eyes.

Without adequate treatment, increasing softening of the corneas may lead to corneal infection, rupture and degenerative tissue changes that result in blindness. To treat this condition a Vitamin A therapy and a protein-rich diet are essential.

The prescription of topical antibiotics is usually prescribed to prevent secondary bacterial infection. In addition, diverse oral supplements rich in vitamin A or beta-carotene and diet modification may be necessary as well.

Night Blindness is irreversible and causes permanent corneal scarring. It is also associated with secondary bacterial infection, corneal ulceration and necrosis, which is the cause of corneal perforation and panophthalmitis. It is important to provide regular vitamin A supplements in high risk areas to prevent this condition, although vitamin A should be avoided during pregnancy because of the risk of vitamin A embryopathy.

Early intervention by parents, doctors and health professionals can prevent permanent eye damage in children, so parents must be made aware of the situation and know in advance that they can prevent such conditions by feeding their children wisely. This condition can also occur in any apparently healthy individual at any age, and be developed relatively rapidly in a few weeks or over several months with deformation or destruction of the cornea into a cloudy gelatinous mass, extrusion of the lens and loss of vitreous humor.

VISITOR COMMENTS on "Keratomalcia: Night Blindness":

comments

Form

My Nick:

My comment:

Security Code:



More Articles
1. Don't Buy Wu Yi Tea Before Reading This Review
BEWARE of WU-YI TEA SCAMS! Read EVERY WORD ON THIS PAGE before you buy wu-yi tea... Hello there, my name is [...]

2. Selenium Information: Deficiency, Benefits, Food Sources
Selenium - A Special Friend to Women - Information on Deficiency, Benefits, Food Sources Selenium acts as a micronutrient or trace element in the human body. Its distribution [...]

3. Mango: Benefits and Recipes
Mango: Benefits and Recipes General Statistics and Origin of Mangos Mangoes are said to be the King of fruits. It is said so because of [...]

4. Herbs for Cancer: Herbal Treatment
Herbs for Cancer Cancer is an abnormal growth of cells which tend to spread in an uncontrolled manner. Cancer can be [...]

Bookmark This Page:

Bookmark in your browser

del.icio.us

Furl This!

Spurl It!

Add to My Yahoo!

Send Page to a Friend

Migraine Blog
Visitors' Blog

Disorders

Anorexia Nervosa
Binge Eating Disorder
Bitot's Spots
Bulimia Nervosa
Macrocytic Anemia
Megaloblastic Anemia
Night Blindness
Peptic Ulcer
Prophylaxis
Rhodopsin
Rickets Disease
Scurvy Disease
Wilson’s Disease
Xerophthalmia
Hemochromatosis
Siderosis
Thalassemia
Sideroblastic Anemia
Porphyria Cutanea Tarda
Sickle Cell Anemia
Kwashiorkor
Menkes Disease
Neutropenia
Keratomalacia
Beriberi
Pellagra
Macrocytic
Megaloblastic
Pernicious Anemia
Scurvy
Rickets
Osteomalacia
Abetalipoproteinemia
Muscular Dystrophy
Haemolytic Anaemia
Cholestatic Constipation
Pretibial Myxedema
Cretinism Diesease
Hypothyroidism
Hypothyroidism
Feline Hyperthyroidism
Graves Disease
Plummer’s Disease
Thyrotoxicosis
Acrodermatitis Enteropathica
congenital-hypothyroidism
Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis
Hyperthyroidism
Keshan Disease
Lose Weight with Hypothyroidism
Metal Fume Fever
Postpartum Thyroiditis
Thyroid Storm
Subclinical Hypothyroidism

VitaminsMineralsHerbsHerbal RemediesFruits and VegetablesAmino AcidsNutrientsDietsRelieve SymptomsDisordersHealth & NutritionEating DisordersGojiArticlesLow Carb DietGardeningHGHHoodiaColon CleansingAcai Berry

Copyright © Vitamins Diary | SITEMAP

Migraine Blog
Visitors' Blog

RSS Feed

About Us | Contact Us | Link to Us

Terms of Service, Privacy Policy and Disclaimer