Genetic Eye Diseases in Children

On this page

Genetic Eye Diseases Overview - Gene Scene Basics

  • Modes of Inheritance:
    • Autosomal Dominant (AD): Vertical transmission; 50% offspring risk.
    • Autosomal Recessive (AR): Horizontal transmission; 25% offspring risk; consanguinity ↑ risk.
    • X-linked Recessive (XLR): Males primarily affected; females are carriers. 📌 "X-Gents affected, Carrier Ladies."
    • X-linked Dominant (XLD): Affects both males & females; often lethal in males.
    • Mitochondrial: Exclusively maternal inheritance.
  • Key Genetic Terms:
    • Penetrance: Percentage (%) of individuals with a specific genotype who express the associated phenotype.
    • Expressivity: Variable severity or range of manifestations of a phenotype among individuals with the same genotype.
    • Locus Heterogeneity: Same disease/phenotype caused by mutations at different gene loci.
    • Allelic Heterogeneity: Different mutations (alleles) at the same gene locus cause the same or similar phenotype.
    • Pleiotropy: A single gene influences multiple, seemingly unrelated phenotypic traits.

Pedigree Chart: Autosomal Dominant Inheritance

⭐ Mitochondrial inheritance is exclusively maternal to all offspring.

Phakomatoses & Systemic Syndromes - Dots, Spots, Eye Troubles

Key genetic disorders with ocular and systemic manifestations:

SyndromeOcular FindingsSystemic Findings
Neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1)Lisch nodules (iris hamartomas), Optic nerve gliomaCafé-au-lait macules, Neurofibromas
Neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2)Posterior Subcapsular Cataracts (PSC)Bilateral vestibular schwannomas
Tuberous Sclerosis (TSC)Retinal astrocytic hamartomas, Achromic patchesAsh-leaf spots (hypopigmented), Facial angiofibromas
Sturge-Weber SyndromeCongenital glaucoma (often unilateral), Choroidal hemangiomaFacial port-wine stain (V1/V2), Leptomeningeal angioma
Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL)Retinal capillary hemangioblastomaCNS hemangioblastomas, Renal cell carcinoma, Pheochromocytoma

⭐ Lisch nodules (iris hamartomas) are present in >90% of adult patients with NF1.

Retinoblastoma - Glow Worm Alert

  • Pathogenesis: Mutation in RB1 tumor suppressor gene. Explained by Knudson's "two-hit" hypothesis.
  • Classic Presentation: Leukocoria (📌 "cat's eye reflex" - most common sign), strabismus (second most common). Leukocoria in infant eye
  • Forms & Implications:
  • Key Concern: Significant risk of secondary primary malignancies, especially osteosarcoma with heritable RB.

⭐ The most common intraocular malignancy in children is Retinoblastoma.

Anterior Segment Genetic Disorders - Cloudy & Pressured Views

FeatureCongenital CataractAniridiaPrimary Congenital Glaucoma (PCG)
PresentationCloudy lens (leukocoria), ↓vision. Often bilateral.Absent/partial iris, photophobia, nystagmus. Often bilateral.Buphthalmos ('ox eye'), corneal haze/edema, tearing, photophobia.
Key GenesGJA3, GJA8, CRYAA (connexins, crystallins)PAX6 (master control gene)CYP1B1, LTBP2
AssociationsGalactosemia, Lowe syndrome, TORCH (e.g., Rubella)WAGR syn. (Wilms, Aniridia, GU, Retard.), glaucoma risk (50-75%)Haab's striae (breaks in Descemet's), ↑IOP >21 mmHg.
ImageLeukocoria in infant with congenital cataractAniridia vs. Typical EyePrimary Congenital Glaucoma Signs and Symptoms

Retinal Dystrophies & Albinism - Night Blind & Sun Shy

  • Leber Congenital Amaurosis (LCA):
    • Severe visual loss from birth, nystagmus, amaurotic pupils.
    • Key genes: RPE65, CEP290.
  • Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP):
    • Early onset forms; progressive night blindness, peripheral vision loss.
    • Fundus: Classic bone spicule pigmentation, attenuated vessels.
    • Fundus of Retinitis Pigmentosa with bone spicules
  • Albinism (Oculocutaneous & Ocular):
    • Photophobia ("Sun Shy"), nystagmus, often ↓ visual acuity.
    • Foveal hypoplasia (key for ↓VA), transillumination iris defects.
    • Key genes: TYR, OCA2.
    • Iris transillumination defect in ocular albinism

⭐ Foveal hypoplasia is a characteristic feature of albinism, leading to reduced visual acuity.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Retinoblastoma: RB1 gene, leukocoria, strabismus; most common childhood intraocular malignancy.
  • Congenital Cataract: Often AD; linked to galactosemia, rubella (TORCH).
  • Aniridia: PAX6 gene; associated with WAGR syndrome (Wilms tumor risk).
  • LCA: Severe neonatal vision loss, AR; RPE65 gene is a common cause.
  • Albinism: Nystagmus, foveal hypoplasia, iris transillumination, photophobia.
  • Retinitis Pigmentosa: Night blindness, peripheral vision loss (tunnel vision); progressive.
  • Ectopia Lentis: Upward in Marfan (FBN1); downward in Homocystinuria.

Practice Questions: Genetic Eye Diseases in Children

Test your understanding with these related questions

When should surgery be performed for congenital cataracts with visual disturbances?

1 of 5

Flashcards: Genetic Eye Diseases in Children

1/10

_____ refers to a partial reversible loss of vision in one or both eyes in the absence of any organic disease of ocular media, retina, and visual pathway.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ refers to a partial reversible loss of vision in one or both eyes in the absence of any organic disease of ocular media, retina, and visual pathway.

Amblyopia

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start Your Free Trial