Intermittent Esotropia Flashcards
What is Primary Intermittent Esotropia?
The esotropia is the initial defect and is intermittently present under certain circumstances (accommodative effort, fixation distance, time/day)
How might primary intermittent esotropia be split?
Accommodative (either Convergence Excess ET or Fully Accommodative ET)
Time (Cyclic ET)
Distance (Near ET or Distance ET)
Non-Specific
What’s the difference between Near ET and Convergence Excess ET?
Near ET have a normal or low AC/A ratio whereas Convergence Excess ET have a high AC/A ratio
What’s an Intermittent fully accommodative ET? Definition:
Corrected at both near and distance with refractive correction.
The ET is driven by clarity without glasses and when asked to relax accommodation (make the world blurry) the ET disappears to straight eyes.
A fully accommodative esotropia is a condition in which binocular single vision (BSV) is present for all distances when the hypermetropia is corrected, but in which an esotropia develops without the hypermetropic correction, as accommodation is exerted (and thus accommodative convergence) to overcome the uncorrected hypermetropia.
What are the features of an Accommodative ET?
May result from:
Uncorrected refractive error
High AC/A ratio
Horwood and Riddel (2013, 2014) have shown that accommodative esotropia is sensitive to blur and excessive accommodation is exerted to see clearly.
Hypermetropia (+2.00 to +7.00DS)
Onset around 2-5 years
Presentation typically an intermittent
esotropia noticed when perform near tasks
BSV is present when hypermetropia is corrected
Child may rub/ close one eye (uncomfortable to have to do additional accommodation all of the time)
Intermittent diplopia (rarely volunteer; brain will often have suppressed also)
May have family history of hypermetropia/ strabismus
Why is ET associated with hypermetropia?
- Blurred image on the retina triggers an accommodative response
- Accommodative mechanisms are related to convergence mechanisms so there is increased accommodative effort leading to over-convergence and then in the absence of adequate divergent fusion reserves, an accommodative ET presents
In an intermittent ET that has a low degree of refractive correction (<+3.00DS) what causes the ET?
To see clearly, the child has to exert increased accommodation to overcome uncorrected hypermetropia which causes an increased amount of accommodative convergence, however, if there’s sufficient negative fusional reserves then BSV is maintained.
They may be able to control it some of the time to overcome the hypermetropia but in times of fatigue for example this may breakdown
If someone has an intermittent ET with a moderate refractive error (+3.00DS - +6.00DS), how does this present?
Usually occurs between 2-5yo due to increased visual demands and accommodation required at this age.
They must accommodate to overcome the hypermetropia, if they have sufficient negative fusional reserves to control the AC then BSV is maintained, but if they do not this breakdown leads to the ET.
If they can accept a blurred single image however, BSV continues to be maintained.
Once hypermetropia is corrected and deviation controlled with glasses they become a fully accommodative ET
If someone has an intermittent ET with a high degree of refractive error (>+6.00DS), how does this present?
This degree of uncorrected hypermetropia exceeds that possible to control with the accommodative system which is known as ‘insuperable hypermetropia’ so there is no benefit of accommodating and thus a persist blurred image is appreciated. The eyes therefore remain straight or diverge.
What is ‘Insuperable Hypermetropia’?
A high degree (>+6.00DS) of uncorrected hypermetropia that exceeds that possible to control with the accommodative system which is known as ‘insuperable hypermetropia’.
Should we give a child full hypermetropic correction?
Cycloplegic drugs used to test. Research says if they’re hypermetropic, give them the full prescription as there is little fluctuation between the ages of 1 - 8yo but after this age decreases slightly (previously there was some debate between giving full prescription or lesser prescription). If 4D or larger then at 6yo we start to see this decrease.
What are the long-term treatment results of accommodative ET?
Mohan & Sharma (2014) -
At the first examination performed 10 years after spectacle correction (mean, 10.2 years), 85 patients (79%) had orthophoria or esotropia ≤10(Δ) at both near and distance fixation, 14 (13%) had consecutive exotropia, 5 (5%) had decompensation and 3 (3%) had esotropia with a high ratio of accommodative convergence to accommodation (AC/A). The mean time interval between presentation and prescription of full hyperopic correction, initial cycloplegic refraction, and presence of amblyopia was not associated with consecutive exotropia, decompensation, or a high AC/A ratio esotropia.
What’s the definition of a convergence excess ET?
Convergence excess accommodative esotropia describes an esotropia on accommodation at near fixation, which persists with refractive correction, and is controlled to an esophoria/orthophoria at distance fixation with binocular single vision.
Bifocals – Near is more +ve convex lens
Give bifocals so that the prescription is higher in the near compared to their “near” prescription in order to give them straight eyes when looking at near.
What are the features of Convergence Excess ET?
Onset around 2-5 years
Main aetiological factor is high AC/A ratio.
AC/A ratio may be 5 or 6 times the normal amount, resulting in a manifest convergent deviation for near whenever accommodation is exerted
Persistent esotropia on accommodation at near despite refractive correction
BSV is present in the distance when hypermetropia corrected
What is Hypo-Accommodative, Convergence Excess ET?
Arnoldi KA (1999)
A much less common aetiological factor is thought to be a remote near point of accommodation. Excessive effort to accommodate resulting in excessive convergence and a manifest convergent squint on accommodation
BUT
This is where 1% of convergence excess patients present with low AC/A ratio (making them hypo-accommodative) so defective accommodation meaning they cannot accommodate effectively and so in constantly trying to make something clear it causes the eyes to drive in.