Rehab Goals & Assessment - Charting Recovery
Core Rehabilitation Goals:
- Visual: Maximize residual vision; prescribe optical/non-optical aids.
- Functional: Enhance independence in Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) like reading, mobility.
- Psychological: Address anxiety, depression; foster coping strategies.
- Vocational: Facilitate return to work or explore new vocational pathways.
- Team Approach: Involves Ophthalmologist, Optometrist, Low Vision Therapist, Counsellor, Occupational Therapist (OT).
Comprehensive Assessment Battery:
- Ophthalmic Examination:
- Visual Acuity (VA): Best-corrected, near, distance.
- Intraocular Pressure (IOP) measurement.
- Slit-lamp biomicroscopy: Detailed anterior segment evaluation.
- Fundoscopy: Posterior segment, optic nerve head status.
- Visual Field testing (Perimetry): e.g., Humphrey, Goldmann.
- Electrophysiology (if needed): ERG for retinal function, VEP for optic pathway integrity.
- Functional Vision Assessment: Evaluate performance of vision-dependent tasks.
- Quality of Life (QoL) Scales: e.g., NEI VFQ-25 to gauge patient-reported outcomes.

⭐ Early referral for low vision aids (LVAs) and vision rehabilitation services significantly improves outcomes and QoL after ocular trauma, even with moderate vision loss.
Visual Function Restoration - Sight Savers
- Low Vision Aids (LVAs): For visual acuity (VA) <6/18 to 3/60 (WHO criteria).
- Optical LVAs:
- Magnifiers (hand-held, stand, spectacle): For near vision.
- Telescopes (hand-held, spectacle): For distance vision.
⭐ Telescopic LVAs are prescribed for distance vision enhancement.
- Non-Optical LVAs:
- Lighting: Enhanced illumination, glare control.
- Large print materials, high-contrast objects.
- Electronic aids (e.g., CCTV, screen readers).
- Optical LVAs:
- Management of Specific Visual Impairments:
- Diplopia: Management 📌 P.O.S. - Prisms, Occlusion, Surgery.
- Prisms (e.g., Fresnel, ground-in).
- Occlusion (e.g., patching one eye).
- Surgical correction (for stable deviation).
- Photophobia:
- Tinted lenses (e.g., FL-41 tints, photochromic).
- Broad-brimmed hats.
- Visual Field Defects (e.g., hemianopia):
- Scanning techniques (systematic head/eye movements).
- Prisms (e.g., Peli prisms for field expansion).

- Diplopia: Management 📌 P.O.S. - Prisms, Occlusion, Surgery.
- Vision Therapy/Orthoptics:
- Addresses binocular vision anomalies (e.g., convergence insufficiency, suppression).
- Improves accommodative dysfunction.
- Exercises to enhance eye teaming, focusing, and visual tracking.
Beyond Vision - Holistic Comeback
- Psychosocial Support: Crucial for managing emotional and psychological sequelae.
- Counseling: Addresses trauma-induced anxiety, depression, body image concerns, and PTSD.
- Support groups: Offer invaluable peer understanding, shared experiences, and coping strategies.
- Vocational Rehabilitation: Facilitates successful reintegration into the workforce and daily life.
- Job modification: Adapting specific tasks or the overall work environment.
- Retraining: Acquiring new, relevant skills for suitable alternative employment.
- Assistive technology: Includes low vision aids, screen readers, and voice-activated software.
- Cosmetic Rehabilitation: Aims to restore facial aesthetics, symmetry, and patient confidence.
- Ocular prosthetics: Custom-fitted artificial eyes provide optimal cosmesis and motility.
- Indications for enucleation/evisceration: Severe irreparable trauma, blind painful eye, prevention of sympathetic ophthalmia, select intraocular malignancies.
- Anaplastology: Utilized for extensive orbital or periorbital tissue defects.
⭐ Custom ocular prostheses offer superior motility and cosmesis compared to stock shells.
- Ocular prosthetics: Custom-fitted artificial eyes provide optimal cosmesis and motility.
- Patient Education: Essential for promoting long-term adaptation, self-efficacy, and care.
- Detailed instruction on self-care, prosthesis handling, insertion/removal, and socket hygiene.
- Stress critical importance of consistent long-term follow-up appointments for monitoring.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Early, comprehensive management is critical for visual outcome post-trauma.
- Visual rehabilitation aims to maximize residual vision with appropriate aids.
- Key Low Vision Aids (LVAs): magnifiers, telescopes, electronic aids.
- Occupational therapy facilitates ADL adaptation and vocational training.
- Psychological support is essential for coping with vision loss and trauma.
- Custom ocular prostheses provide cosmesis and socket health in anophthalmia.
- Regular, long-term follow-up detects late complications and guides ongoing care.
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