Pattern of vitreo-retinal diseases at the national referral hospital in Bhutan: a retrospective, hospital-based study
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Rai, Bhim Bahadur
Morley, Michael G.
Bernstein, Paul S.
Maddess, Ted
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BioMed Central
Abstract
Background: Knowing the pattern and presentation of the diseases is critical for management strategies. To inform
eye-care policy we quantified the pattern of vitreo-retinal (VR) diseases presenting at the national referral hospital in
Bhutan.
Methods: We reviewed all new patients over three years from the retinal clinic of the Jigme Dorji Wangchuck
National Referral Hospital. Demographic data, presenting complaints and duration, treatment history, associated
systemic diseases, diagnostic procedures performed, and final diagnoses were quantified. Comparisons of the
expected and observed frequency of gender used Chi-squared tests. We applied a sampling with replacement
based bootstrap analysis (10,000 cycles) to estimate the population means and the standard errors of the means
and standard error of the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentiles of the ages of the males and females within
20-year cohorts. We then applied t-tests employing the estimated means and standard errors. The 2913 subjects
insured that the bootstrap estimates were statistically conservative.
Results: The 2913 new cases were aged 47.2 ± 21.8 years. 1544 (53.0%) were males. Housewives (953, 32.7%) and
farmers (648, 22.2%) were the commonest occupations. Poor vision (41.9%), screening for diabetic and hypertensive
retinopathy (13.1%), referral (9.7%), sudden vision loss (9.3%), and trauma (8.0%) were the commonest presenting
symptoms. Coexistent diabetes and hypertension were the most common associated systemic diseases.
Haematological tests (blood sugar, HbA1c and lipid profile, 31.8%), OCT (27.4%), refraction (9.9%), B-scan (8.7%),
fundus photography (8.0%) were the most commonly performed diagnostic tests. Hypertensive retinopathy (18.9%)
was the commonest VR disease, followed by refractive errors referred for retinal evaluation (16.7%), diabetic
retinopathy with macular oedema (15.8%), and AMD (11.0%). Retinal detachment was more prevalent in females (83
vs. 41, p = 0.007). Rare vision-threatening diseases like seasonal hyper-acute pan-uveitis also presented.
Conclusions: The developing VR service in Bhutan is challenged by the spectrum of diseases, limited human
resources (e.g. one retinal surgeon during the study), and accessibility to tertiary eye-care services, all amidst difficult
terrain. Sustained effort and robust coordination among the eye-care professionals, government and nongovernmental
organisations are critical for optimising VR services, especially as rates of diseases such as diabetes
and hypertension grow.
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BMC Ophthalmology
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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