Because there are different types of LCA, there is considerable variation in the symptoms experienced by an affected infant. Most infants with LCA are often blind at birth or lose their sight within the first few years of life, however some people with LCA may have residual vision. In these patients, visual acuity is usually limited to the level of counting fingers or detecting hand motions or bright lights, and patients are extremely farsighted. There may be some small improvement in vision during the first decade of life as the visual system reaches maturity, but it is uncommon for children to be able to navigate without assistance or to be able to read print.
Other symptoms of LCA may include crossed eyes, sluggish pupils, rapid involuntary eye movements, unusual sensitivity to light, and the clouding of the lenses of the eyes. Many children with LCA habitually press on their eyes with their fists or fingers. This habitual pressing on the eyes is known as an oculo-digital reflex and may represent an instinctual attempt to provide the eveloping visual cortex of the brain with a stimulus to replace the loss of normal visual stimuli. As a result of this behavior, the eyes may become thin and conical in shape and appear sunken or deep. In some cases, LCA is associated with hearing loss, epilepsy, decreased coordination, kidney problems, or heart abnormalities. Mental retardation may be present in approximately 20% of individuals affected with LCA.
| Type | Abnormal | Mutant gene | Gene location |
| LCA1 | Retinal-specific guanylate cyclase | RETGC/GUC2D | 17p13.1 |
| LCA2 | Retinal pigment epithelium-specific protein | RPE65 | 1p31 |
| LCA3 | Unknown | Unknown | 14q24 |
| LCA4 | Arlhydrocarbon-interacting protein-like1 | AIPL1 | 17p13.1 |
| LCA5 | Unknown | Unknown | 6q11–q16 |
| LCA due to CRX defect | Cone-rod homeobox protein | CRX | 19q13.3 |
Infants are usually brought to medical attention within the first six months of life when parents note a
Eye examinations of infants with LCA usually reveal a normal appearing retina. By early adolescence, however, various changes in the retinas of patients with LCA become readily apparent; blood vessels often become narrow and constricted, and a variety of color changes can also occur in the retina and its supportive tissue.
One of the most important tests in diagnosing LCA is called electroretinography (ERG). This test measures electrical impulses which are produced in the retina when light is sensed by the rod and cone cells. It is useful in distinguishing whether blindness is due to a problem in the retina versus a problem in the visual cortex of the brain. When ERG tests are performed on people with LCA, there is no recordable electrical activity arising from the eye, indicating the problem is based in the retina rather than in the brain.
Thus, an absence of activity on ERG, combined with the absence of diagnostic signs of other conditions which result in blindness, point to a diagnosis of LCA. Although several abnormal genes have been identified which are responsible for LCA, genetic analysis and prenatal diagnosis is rarely performed outside of research studies.
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Author Info: Oren Traub MD, PhD, Thomson Gale, Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders Part II, 2005 |