Investigation of concomitant esotropia Flashcards
what are the 3 classifications of esotropia
- primary esotropia
- secondary esotropia
- consecutive esotropia
what is a primary esotropia
its an initial esotropia i.e. the first thing they have had
what is a secondary esotropia
it is a result of something else e.g. poor vision in the deviating eye from a cataracts or corneal opacity whereby the px developed a secondary squint as a result of this
what is a consecutive esotropia
it is the result from a surgery that was done to correct an exotropia whereby the deviation has now gone the opposite way, so the patient developed an esotropia as a result
what are the 2 types of primary intermittent esotropias
- accommodative
- non-accommodative
what are the 2 types of accommodative primary esotropias
- intermittent
- constant
what are the 2 types of primary accommodative intermittent esotropias
- fully accommodative esotropia
- convergence excess esotropia
what causes the deviation of a primary accommodative esotropia to increase
the more accommodation and the more they focus
what is seen with a primary intermittent accommodative esotropia
the esotropia can be for near or for distance, it can be there without the glasses, but with the glasses on their is no esotropia present
what type of primary accommodative constant esotropia is there and what does it mean
- esotropia with an accommodative element
the esotropia is there all the time with all viewing distances when the patient is not wearing their glasses
what are the 2 types of primary non-accommodative esotropias
- intermittent
- constant
what are the 3 types of primary non-accommodative intermittent esotropias
- near esotropia
- distance esotropia
- cyclic esotropia
what are the 2 types of primary non-accommodative constant esotropias
- early onset esotropia
- acute late onset esotropia
what are the 6 possible aetiologies of an esotropia
Various factors contribute in varying degrees:
- Hereditary (family history)
- Refractive errors
- Neurological defects (higher incidence of getting esot)
- Innervational causes
- Anatomical/mechanical factors
- Febrile illness (higher incidence of getting esot)
a hereditary cause of esotropia often _________ more than _____ member of a ________
a hereditary cause of esotropia often affects more than one member of a family
i.e. if more than one family member has esotropia then that person is more likely to develop an esotropia
what is the mode of inheritance of an esotropia and which gene locus is responsible for some types of squint
- Mode of inheritance unclear – multi-factorialthe trait is produced by a number of pairs of genes that have an additive effect
- The gene locus has been identified in certain specific types of squint e.g. CFEOM
_________ discovered the close relationship between _____________ and ____________
Donders discovered the close relationship between accommodation and convergence
what is required to give a clear retinal image with an uncorrected hypermetropia and therefore what must all patients have when investigating an esotropia
- an excessive amount of accommodation
- all patients must have a cyclopegic refraction
accommodation and refraction: If motor fusion is _____________ the eyes may _________ _________
If motor fusion is inadequate the eyes may deviate inwards
what is a major risk of developing a strabismus
refractive errors
what are not all esotropias in origin
accommodative (some are non-accommodative)
what does the amount of deviation induced by accommodation depend on
the individual’s AC/A ratio
accommodation and refraction: what is a high AC/A ratio found in
in cases of low rather than moderate hypermetropia and people with convergence excess esotropia
which types of esotropia does uncorrected refractive error most commonly lead to
several types of strabismus most commonly accommodative with moderate degree of hypermetropia
what 2 things does anisometropia lead to
central suppression and amblyopia
High incidence of strabismus in ______ __________ children
High incidence of strabismus in brain damaged children
Neurological defects: in which type of brain damage is a child with an esotropia more common in
Children with cerebral palsy
Neurological defects: what is an esotropia more prevalent than in a child with brain damage and by how much
3x more prevalent than exo
Neurological defects: what can cause a child to have brain damage and subsequent esotropia
Premature/low birth weight babies
what are the 2 possible causes of innervational factors in an infantile esotropia
caused by:
- congenital defect in neural wiring of the brainstem
or a
- maldevelopment of visual cortex as find OKN abnormal/absent when stimulus moved temporally
what is an innvervational cause of a non-accommodative esotropia
Paralytic in origin:
- Paresis of an EOM becomes concomitant with time
Anatomical/mechanical factors: what causes a concomitant deviation and more likely to be incomitant
Congenital absence or anomalous insertion of an EOM
Strabismus is commonly seen in cases of ____________ abnormalities
Strabismus is commonly seen in cases of craniofacial abnormalities
what are A and V patterns seen in
anomalies of the lid fissures
anatomical/mechanical factors cause ___________ rather than ___________ esotropia
anatomical/mechanical factors cause incomitant rather than concomitant esotropia
what is a concomitant esotropia
the degree of deviation is primary position stays the same in all directions of gaze
which sort of febrile illnesses is linked to a concomitant esotropia and under which age and rather than cause it what does it do
- measles and chicken pox
- under 6 years of age
- rather than causing the concomitant esotropia, it participates in it
what are the 5 aims of investigation
- Diagnose presence and type of strabismus they have in primary position
- Determine if BSV is present all or some of the time
- Elicit whether patient with constant strabismus has capacity to fuse images to restore BSV
- Area and density of suppression
- Measure angle of deviation that they have in primary deviation
what 4 things will you carry out in order to investigate the concomitant esotropia
- A clear case history will give an indication of the type of esotropia present
- Full orthoptic investigation
- Cycloplegic Refraction
- Fundus and media examination by an ophthalmologist to exclude any pathology
why do you want to carry out a clear history when investigating the esotropia
it will give an indication of the type of esotropia present
why do you want to carry out a fundus and media examination and by who when investigating the esotropia
- to exclude any pathology
- by an ophthalmologist
list some types of questions you will ask in your history in order to determine the type of esotropia a patient has
- how long have they had the squint for?
- is it there all the time or only some of the time?
- is it one eye or alternating?
what 2 things can you do whilst carrying out your full orthophoric investigation
- look at the angle of deviation
and - density of suppression
what can be the 2 other causes of an esotropia if there was nil pathology after carrying out the fundus examination
- amblyopia
- reduced va
which drug will you use in your cylopegic refraction for a 6/12 year old px to investigate their esotropia
1% cylclopentolate
which drug will you use in your cylopegic refraction for a less than 6 month old px to investigate their esotropia
0.5% cyclopentolate
which drug will you use in your cylopegic refraction for a px with darkly pigmented irides
atropine 1%
the only thing you need to deduct is your working distance, so give them the full rx that they need
what is prescribed to a patient and for how long to enable a accurate diagnosis of a patient’s esotropia from refraction
glasses worn full time for 1 month
this can suggest if a patient’s esotropia is constant or intermittent, accommodative or non-accommodative to begin with
what is a intermittent fully accommodative esotropia always associated with
hypermetropia usually of a moderate amount +3.00DS to +6.00DS
what does a cover test with glasses reveal in a intermittent fully accommodative esotropia
well compensated esophoria for all distances when wearing their full hypermetropic correction