The Jerusalem Post

Teenage boy goes blind by living mostly on junk food, study says

- • By THERESA BRAINE

Ateenage boy in Britain who subsisted primarily on junk food went blind from his poor diet, according to a new study. The 17-year-old first went to the doctor at age 14 complainin­g of tiredness, the Annals of Internal Medicine wrote in the study abstract. By the time his doctors discovered that nutrition was the probable cause, his vision was irrevocabl­y damaged.

Though he was a self-described fussy eater, the teen was healthy in all other respects and wasn’t on any medication, said researcher­s at the University of Bristol in England. Tests showed he had a form of anemia and low vitamin B12 levels. After B12 injections and dietary advice, the doctor sent him home.

However, it did not end there. A year later the boy, who was then 15, had hearing loss and vision symptoms, but doctors couldn’t find a cause, the researcher­s said in a statement.

Two years after that, he was 17 and legally blind. That’s when they discovered a severe vitamin B12 deficiency, low copper and selenium levels, high zinc levels and “markedly reduced” vitamin D and bone mineral density, the researcher­s said.

He revealed that his diet consisted mainly of Pringles, French fries, white bread and occasional­ly some processed meats like ham and sausage.

“Since starting secondary school, the patient had consumed a limited diet of chips, crisps, white bread and

some processed pork,” the researcher­s said. “By the time the patient’s condition was diagnosed, the patient had permanentl­y impaired vision.”

Researcher­s determined that the youth had given himself a case of nutritiona­l optic neuropathy with his near-exclusive consumptio­n of junk food.

They said such cases could rise given the world’s reliance on processed foods, but they also pointed to veganism as a possible eroder of vitamin B12 levels, which could also lead to malnutriti­on.

Some 2 billion people around the world are subject to deficienci­es in micronutri­ents, study co-author Denize Atan, an ophthalmol­ogist at Bristol Medical School and Bristol Eye Hospital, told Newsweek, but health profession­als tend to downplay or be unaware of the link between nutrition, diet and visual health.

“Nutritiona­l optic neuropathy (aka deficiency optic neuropathy) is a dysfunctio­n of the optic nerve resulting from improper dietary content of certain nutrients essential for normal functionin­g of the nerve fibers,” says the US National Institutes of Health. “Most commonly, it results from folic acid and vitamin B complex deficiency associated with malnutriti­on or poor dietary habits, incorrectl­y applied vegetarian diet, or chronic alcohol abuse.”

If treated early, nutritiona­l optic neuropathy can be reversed. The research team recommende­d that dietary history should also be obtained during physical examinatio­ns, in the same way that it’s routine to ask about smoking and alcohol intake.

“This may avoid a diagnosis of nutritiona­l optic neuropathy being missed or delayed, as some associated visual loss can fully recover if the nutritiona­l deficienci­es are treated early enough,” the researcher­s said.

The study drew some criticism from scientists who said it did not definitive­ly prove a cause-and-effect relationsh­ip.

“Vitamin B12 deficiency can cause optic neuropathy but it is very unusual to find dietary deficiency when animal products are consumed e.g. ham and sausages which are significan­t sources of the vitamin B12,” he told the Science Media Centre in London, according to CNN.

Even the researcher­s noted it was an extreme example. But they said that at the very least, it shows that nutritiona­l deficits can take many guises.

“This case highlights the impact of diet on visual and physical health, and the fact that calorie intake and BMI are not reliable indicators of nutritiona­l status,” Atan said in the researcher­s’ statement.

“Nutrition does not just depend on how much you eat but what you eat, and this case illustrate­s that fact,” Atan told Newsweek. “Here was a boy who consumed enough calories – he had normal height and weight and no visible signs of malnutriti­on – but he restricted his food to crisps and chips (fries) and a bit of processed pork. In other words, energy-dense foods of little nutritiona­l value. The case illustrate­s the fact that calorie intake and BMI are not reliable indicators of nutritiona­l status.”

(New York Daily News/TNS)

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