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The
New York Times | International
Herald Tribune
Not
Autistic or Hyperactive. Just Seeing Double at Times
By LAURA NOVAK
Published: September 11, 2007
As
an infant, Raea Gragg was withdrawn and could not make eye contact.
By preschool she needed to smell and squeeze every object she saw.

Thor Swift for The New York Times
Raea
Gragg, 9, needed therapy to help her eyes work together.
“She touched faces and would bring everything to mouth,”
said her mother, Kara Gragg, of Lafayette, Calif. “She would
go up to people, sniff them and touch their cheeks.”
Specialists
conducted a battery of tests. The possible diagnoses mounted: autism
spectrum disorder, neurofibromatosis, attention-deficit hyperactivity
disorder, anxiety disorder.
A
behavioral pediatrician prescribed three drugs for attention deficit
and depression. The only constant was that Raea, now 9, did anything
she could to avoid reading and writing.
Though
she had already had two eye exams, finding her vision was 20/20,
this year a school reading specialist suggested another. And this
time the ophthalmologist did what no one else had: he put his finger
on Raea’s nose and moved it in and out. Her eyes jumped all
over the place.
Within
minutes he had the diagnosis: convergence insufficiency, in which
the patient sees double because the eyes cannot work together at
close range.
Experts
estimate that 5 percent of school-age children have convergence
insufficiency. They can suffer headaches, dizziness and nausea,
which can lead to irritability, low self-esteem and inability to
concentrate.
Doctors
and teachers often attribute the behavior to attention disorders
or seek other medical explanations. Mrs. Gragg said her pediatrician
had never heard of convergence insufficiency.
Dr.
David Granet, a professor of ophthalmology and pediatrics at the
University of California, San Diego, said: “Everyone is familiar
with A.D.H.D. and A.D.D., but not with eye problems, especially
not with convergence insufficiency. But we don’t want to send
kids for remedial reading and education efforts if they have an
eye problem. This should be part of the protocol for eye doctors.”
In
2005, Dr. Granet studied 266 patients with convergence insufficiency.
Nearly 10 percent also had diagnoses of attention deficit or hyperactivity
— three times that of the general population. The reverse
also proved true: examining the hospital records of 1,700 children
with A.D.H.D., Dr. Granet and colleagues found that 16 percent also
had convergence insufficiency, three times the normal rate.
“When
five of the symptoms of A.D.H.D. overlap with C.I.,” he said,
“how can you not step back and say, Wait a minute?”
Dr.
Eric Borsting, an optometrist and professor at the Southern California
College of Optometry who has also studied the links between vision
and attention problems, agreed. “We know that kids with C.I.
are more likely to have problems like loss of concentration when
reading and trouble remembering what they read,” he said.
“Doctors should look at it when there’s a history of
poor school performance.”
Dr.
Stuart Dankner, a pediatric ophthalmologist in Baltimore and an
assistant clinical professor at Johns Hopkins, said that children
should be tested for convergence difficulty, but cautioned that
it was not the cause of most attention and reading problems.
Dr.
Dankner recommended an overall assessment by a psychologist or education
specialist. “An eye exam should be done as an adjunct,”
he said, “because even if the child has convergence difficulty,
they will usually also have other problems that need to be addressed.”
Doctors
recommend a dilated eye exam and a check of eye teaming and focusing
skills. Testing includes using a pen or finger to test for the “near
point of convergence,” as well as a phoropter, which uses
lenses and prisms to test the eyes’ ability to work together.
There
is no consensus on how to treat convergence insufficiency. Next
spring, the National Eye Institute will announce the results of
a $6 million randomized clinical trial measuring the benefits of
vision therapy in a doctor’s office versus home-based therapy.
For
Raea Gragg, the treatment was relatively simple. For nine months
she wore special glasses that use prisms to help the eyes converge
inward. She then had three months of vision therapy. She has just
entered fourth grade and is reading at grade level.
“Raea
didn’t know how to describe it because that’s all she’s
ever known,” her mother said. “She felt like she had
been telling us all along that she couldn’t see, but nobody
listened.”
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