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Parisa Abdi, Zakieh Vahedian, Atefeh Dehghani, Mona Safizadeh, Elias Khalilipour ,
Volume 81, Issue 5 (August 2023)
Abstract

Congenital cataract refers to the presence of any opacity in the lens at birth or during early childhood. Cataracts in children can manifest as unilateral or bilateral, congenital or acquired, with specific inheritance patterns or occurring sporadically. Additionally, the condition can be stable or progressive. Congenital cataracts can be associated with certain systemic diseases, or they may occur in the eye of an otherwise healthy child in isolation. Congenital cataract is one of the main causes of blindness in childhood. According to the report of the World Health Organization in 2001, congenital cataract is responsible for about 5 to 20 percent of cases of childhood blindness in the world based on different geographical regions. Untreated cataract in children leads to a tremendous social, economic and emotional burden for the child, family and society. Common complaints associated with congenital cataracts often include leukocoria (white pupil), reduced vision, a child's inability to track objects up close, light sensitivity leading to eye closure, squinting, the presence of either small eyes (microphthalmos) or large eyes (buphthalmos), strabismus (eye deviation), and abnormal eye movements such as nystagmus. Childhood cataract-related blindness can be cured with early detection and appropriate management. Managing pediatric cataracts is a challenge. Increased intraoperative complications compared to adults, tendency to increase postoperative inflammation, associated with complications such as aphakic glaucoma and persistent fetal vasculature, change in refractive status of the eye, and tendency to develop amblyopia, all complicate the achievement of good vision. Congenital cataract has a good prognosis if it is diagnosed early and surgery is performed before 6 weeks. Factors that may adversely affect the outcome, include the presence of unilateral cataract, presence of nystagmus, strabismus, or any ocular defect such as microphthalmos and PFV. Pediatric cataract surgery has evolved over the years, and with improved knowledge about myopic shift and axial growth, outcomes for these patients have become more predictable. Optimal results depend not only on effective surgery, but also on careful postoperative care and visual rehabilitation. Hence, it is the combined effort of parents, surgeons, anesthesiologists, pediatricians and optometrists that can make the difference.

Maryam Hajhashemi , Hedieh Bonakdarchian, Tahereh Khalili Borujeni , Minoo Movahedi , Roya Sahebi, Fedyeh Haghollahi,
Volume 83, Issue 6 (September 2025)
Abstract

Background: Pelvic organ prolapse (POP) is a condition resulting from weakness or damage to the muscles, ligaments, and other supporting structures of the vagina, and it exposes affected women to reduced quality of life and sexual function. The present study examined the symptoms, sexual function, and quality of life of women one year after repair of pelvic organ prolapse.
Methods: This study was a prospective cohort before-after study that was conducted on 200 married women with pelvic prolapse grade 1-4 (POP-Q) in the age group of 47-75 years who underwent reconstructive surgery (anterior and posterior colporrhaphy) in Shahid Beheshti and Al-Zahra hospitals in Isfahan between October 2022 and March 2024. The data collection tools were three questionnaires: Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI), Pelvic Discomfort (PFDI-20) and Quality of Life (SF-36) which were completed before surgery and one year after surgery. Stata software version 17 was used to analyze the data. To compare the scores before and after, paired t-test or Wilcoxon statistical tests were used, to compare the severity of patients' clinical symptoms based on the levels before and after surgery, the symmetry/Bowker test was used, and to compare the status of the sexual function index (impairment/no impairment) before and after surgery, the McNemar test was used and the significance level was considered to be P<0.05.
Results: The mean age of the study participants was 59.5±12.6 years. The majority of the women (157 individuals; 78.5%) were housewives. The mean number of pregnancies was 4.3±2.1, and the mean number of live births was 3.75±1.89. All women included in the study were postmenopausal. The severity of clinical symptoms, sexual dysfunction index status, and median quality of life score were significant between before and after the intervention. The severity of clinical symptoms, the status of the sexual dysfunction index, and the median quality of life score showed significant differences before and after the intervention.
Conclusion: Pelvic prolapse surgery can significantly improve the quality of life and sexual function of patients one year after surgery, in addition to correcting the anatomical structure.
 

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