Adaptive bioresonance and multiresonance therapy in the rehabilitation of children and adolescents with congenital diseases of the retina and optic nerve
AUTHORS : Malinovskaya T.A. | Tarakanovsky A.V. | Bolotova L.O. | Ivanov A.N. | Egorova T.S.
RELEVANT UNIVERSITIES : Federal State Budgetary Institution “Helmholtz MNII GB” Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation, Moscow, Russia
YEAR : 2014
More than 4,000 children are diagnosed with visual disabilities in the Russian Federation every year. The leading place in its structure is occupied by refractive errors (26.4% of the total number of disabled people); congenital cataracts (17.3%), as a result of which obscuration
amblyopia develops; retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) and other retinal diseases (16.6%); dysplasia and optic nerve atrophy (PASN) (12%). Primary disability is highest in the age group of children from 4 to 7 years old [1]. Considering that disability is a multifactorial problem, as well
as the presence of concomitant somatic, most often neurological, pathology in children of these
groups, it is necessary to use complex treatment aimed not only at improving visual functions,
but also at improving the body’s adaptive capabilities to the social environment.