Identifying Albinism in Your Baby

Jen Warner
Jen Warner
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What to Look for If Albinism Doesn't Run in Your Family

Albinism is a group of inherited disorders most commonly characterized by unusually fair hair and skin at birth.

Because eye development is severely affected by albinism, it is important to obtain a diagnosis quickly, so that therapy and help can be established for the baby. Eye development is also the most obvious sign that your baby may need evaluated for albinism.


But how do you know what to look for, if no other family members have albinism, and blond hair, even very blond hair, is present in other family members?

Below are three signs that your baby may need evaluated for albinism.

1. Behind On Eye Development

Babies are not born with perfectly functioning eyes, so an inability to focus on objects is not an immediate cause for worry. When my son turned four months old, however, and still could not focus on toys, faces, or his little hand, I became concerned. I smiled when strangers commented that he loved to "look around" but I had the feeling the rhythmic, horizontal eye movement was not completely natural.

This involuntary, rhythmic eye movement is actually nystagmus, and is a result of underdevelopment of the eye muscles and central retina, which is due directly to the lack of melanin pigment, a chemical that both colors the eyes and skin, and is crucial for proper eye development.

If, at three to four months old, your baby has not begun focusing and holding his gaze on objects, contact your pediatrician to ascertain if further action is necessary.

2. Baby Develops a Head Tilt When Trying to Focus on Objects

Individuals with nystagmus or the low vision that accompanies albinism, may develop a "sweet spot", or specific head tilt or position, when focusing on an object. For someone with nystagmus, this tilt is the point at which their eyes move the least, allowing them to focus on the object in front of them.

For people with low, or poor, vision, this is the point at which their vision is clearest. This is a compensation mechanism and may show that the baby or toddler would be helped by glasses.

3. The Fairest of All

 
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Your baby is so cute! :-)

Posted on 11/16/2008 at 5:11:23 PM

This very precise and upto date article post about the albinism some people I also to had assumed albinism as an extreme type of vitiligo but it is wrong as claimed in http://www.antivitiligo.com/vitiligo/albinism-and-vitiligo.html by vitiligo experts there are many thing differents in boty skin disorder and these are not same. recognizing albinism in baby specially in western countries is really a mater.

Posted on 07/27/2008 at 11:07:20 PM

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