Burton Mail

Boy ‘lucky to be alive’ after a routine eye test flags up brain swelling

ALFIE, 10, HAS MADE FULL RECOVERY

- By HELEN KREFT helen.kreft@reachplc.com

SCHOOLBOY Alfie Barney is “lucky to be alive” after a routine eye test picked up a life-threatenin­g brain condition.

Alfie, eight, started suffering with headaches which his parents attributed to nerves about returning to school.

Mum Catherine decided to get an eye test after noticing he had also developed a squint.

But during the test at Specsavers in Ashby, optician Adnan Nawaz immediatel­y noticed something was very wrong and recommende­d Alfie be taken to accident and emergency.

Doctors diagnosed bilateral papilloede­ma, a neurologic­al condition that is caused by increased intracrani­al pressure.

It can be fatal for some, cause sight loss or serious changes in vision for others.

Due to the swift diag- nosis, Alfie underwent lum- bar puncture treatment to help relieve the swelling on his brain and has since made a full recovery.

Giles Edmonds, Specsavers clinical services director, said: “Such stories really do put it into perspectiv­e that whenever you experience any changes to your vision or have continuous symptoms, you need to see an optician.

“A lot of people have no idea that such health issues can be identified through an eye test.

“Thankfully, in Alfie’s case, it was a happy ending, but this might not be so with others who ignore symptoms through fear of what that could mean for their health.”

According to a State of the UK’S Eye Health 2021 report, commission­ed by Specsavers in collaborat­ion with leading eye health experts and charities, there have been 4.3 million fewer eye tests in 2020 - a 23 per cent drop compared to the previous 12 months.

A further 235,000 eye hospital appointmen­ts were missed or delayed throughout the pandemic.

As a result, eye health experts are predicting a significan­t rise in vision loss and other health conditions in the months and years ahead.

According to the report, almost 3,000 people (2,986) are estimated to have already lost their vision due to delayed identifica­tion and treatment of eye disease during the pandemic.

And the number of people being referred with suspected glaucoma – known as the ‘silent thief of sight’ – fell by 43,000 during March to December 2020, of which 2,600 would have been for urgent treatment.

The State of the UK’S Eye Health 2021 report is estimating a three-year wait to clear the backlog of missed appointmen­ts, which could result in an additional wait of 57.2 million days for eye surgery.

It is also predicted that the pandemic will add an extra £2.5 million to cost of UK sight loss and blindness between 2021 and 2024, in addition to an existing annual approximat­ion of £36 million.

Specsavers also conducted research of 5,000 adults that found 15 per cent have delayed having an eye test through a fear of being told that they might have a more serious condition.

And more than one in one in 10 (12 per cent) revealed gym classes were prioritise­d ahead of an eye test. Concerns about the cost of an eye test, and subsequent­ly glasses, has caused 27 per cent of people to delay booking an eye test, despite 16 per cent admitting that headaches or migraines have impacted their vision since the beginning of the pandemic.

While 17 per cent of those polled, via Onepoll, suspect that they might already have an underlying issue they have yet to see an optician.

 ??  ?? Alfie Barney
Alfie Barney

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