Microtropia Flashcards
What is microtropia?
- Small angle <10^ with ARC
- Common
- Stable
- Anisometropia – usually 1.50DS or more – of at least 1.00D difference
o Blur at fovea of one eye – focus with clarity of eye – minute start to develop blur at back of fovea – they either ignore the image or they move slightly where the blur is not noticed (and then get a microtropia) - Always mildly amblyopic – one line at least (will not be 4 or 5 lines difference but 1 eye 6/5 & other 6/9 for e.g.)
- Central suppression
- Good but not perfect BSV
o Will not get 40” but may get 70” - Strong motor fusion
o See cross on bagolini – will be able to maintain this cross on prisms & movement? - Differs from classic ARC because associated with eccentric fixation
o They are always fixing from new fovea they found - Not possible to treat but may prevent successful orthoptic exercises
o Have to accept that they will never have equal VA
o If anisometropic & don’t do all investigations – could patch for ages & nothing happens
What is the classification of microtropia?
- Classic microtropia w/o identity – small manifest angle
- Microtropia w/ identity – ARC & eccentric fixation at same retinal point, so no movement on cover test
o Only diagnosed with fixation ophthalmoscope - Microtropia associated w/ larger latent component
o Increases on alternate CT or if one eye covered longer than usual (AKA monofixational syndrome) - Microtropia associate w/ other intermittent esotropia e.g. fully accomm
o A primary microtropia which becomes decompensated particularly between 1-3yrs as result of accomm element or superimposed phoria - Divergent microtropia
- Secondary – follows optical or surgical correction
What are the features of classic microtropia WITHOUTidentity?
- Small manifest deviation
o Do CT – right SOT small angled – cover LE and RE moves to take up fixation – only happen if they are WITHOUT IDENTITY
o They diagnose themselves on CT – micro strabismus as tiny flick of movement
o If told it is very small and there is a manifest movement – being told they have microtropia
o They have amblyopia
- Small manifest deviation
- Less than 10^
- Mostly esotropia but can be exotropia
What are the features of classic microtropia WITHOUT identity with latent component
- Manifest deviation will increase on continued dissociation
o More start to do alternate CT – start to elicit bigger angle
o Either have manifest or latent – unless microtropia – only a microtropia can have latent component too
- Manifest deviation will increase on continued dissociation
- Must measure manifest component with simulated PCT
o Rather than fully dissociating px then bringing prisms up – bring prism & cover test up at same time – only measuring small manifest
- Must measure manifest component with simulated PCT
- Measure latent component with full PCT
What are the features of microtropia WITH identity?
- ARC & eccentric fixation at same retinal point
- No movement on cover test
o No manifest deviation
o New fovea – P point – they are looking with new fovea – straight in pxs mind – not functioning normally though as not looking bifoveal – slightly amblyopic, anisometropic – but NO MOVEMENT ON CT
- No movement on cover test
- Only diagnosed with fixation ophthalmoscope and 4^ prism test
o Only way to diagnose to see where they are fixing – 4^ used to look for central suppression scotoma
- Only diagnosed with fixation ophthalmoscope and 4^ prism test
What are the features of microtropia associated with other intermittent esotropia e.g. full accomm?
- Anisometropic Fully Accomm Esotropia
- Small manifest esotropia when hyperopia corrected
o They have small microtropia with glasses on
o They MUST be anisometropic
- Small manifest esotropia when hyperopia corrected
- ARC instead of NRC
- Rare
What are the investigations into microtropia?
- Visual acuity
o Are they amblyopic or not? - Crowding
o Px sees outside two letters on a line but not the middle letters
o CHART MUST BE LOGMAR – not picked up on Snellen - Fixation: ophthalmoscope, visuscope
- Cover test may or may not be strabismic movement
- 4^ Prism test – MUST be done on anyone with microtropia
- Bagolini lens with or with suppression gap – px don’t often report gap
- Amsler chart – scotoma may be seen – if scotoma is central (often small)
What three factors together make you suspect microtropia WITH identity?
Amblyopia + No CT movement + Positive 4^ test
What are the features of microtropia WITH identity?
- No movement on CT
- Harmonious ARC
- Subjective angle = 0
- Absolute eccentric fixation
- Angle of anomaly = angle of eccentricity
- Visuscopy – stable parafoveal fixation
What are the features of microtropia WITHOUT identity?
- Movement seen on CT – manifest component MUST be <10^ for it to microtropia - small flick on CT seen
- May have:
o Central fixation with ARC
o Unharmonious ARC
o Central fixation with NRC, central suppression and peripheral fusion – extended Panum’s area - Visuscopy – unstable
Describe ophthalmoscope methods of viewing fixation?
- Target is projected & focussed onto retina & is seen by both px & practitioner
o Use graticule setting on ophthalmoscope
o Put green filter on – to find fluorescence of fovea
o Fixate on centre circle of graticule - Px is asked to look at centre of target & position of fovea is noted
o Should see twinkly light of fovea in centre of middle circle if fixing with fovea - MUST BE DONE MONOCULARLY
- Position is then recorded in diagram – also record if steady/unsteady
o Usually EF is slightly nasal in SOT
o Can calibrate using size of optic disc in graticule Disc = 5 deg x 7 deg - NB: accomm is usually induced using this method – change focus or cycloplegia
- Do visuscope/fixation ophthalmoscope on 50^ esotropia – dense amblyopia – when cover eye need to know where they are fixing – does the fixation point match the 6/60 vision – the angle of squint stays same but can move fixation point
Describe eccentric fixation in microtropia?
- Microtropia with identity
- When cover LE, RE wont move as fixing from new fovea – eye is straight as far as px is concerned
- When use fixation ophthalmoscope – will see they are not fixing centrally
- Need all these tests to give complete diagnosis
- Do 4^ prism test – determines if someone is bifoveal or not
- Must be done on any suspect microtropia
- Central suppression – between old fovea and new fovea
- 4^ prism test – don’t see movement on CT – need to know if there is a suppression area
Describe 4^ in normal binocular single vision?
- If conjugate gaze – when LE moves in – RE moves out – but then since diplopia – RE then turns in to regain binocularity
- Normal – adduction of eye under prism – abduction of other eye
Describe 4^ in central suppression?
- LE doesn’t know anything has happened as it is falling on suppressed retina – brain doesn’t know image has moved
- Microtropia in LE
- But if prism is put in front of RE – RE adducts – the LE abducts due to conjugate gaze – but the LE doesn’t come back in as no incentive to move back in due to microtropia – not wired up normally
- Left microtropia with identity
- Movement ignored if prism in front of LE
What is the treatment for microtropia?
- Prescribe full cycloplegic Rx – allow 16-18wks refractive adaptation (before starting occlusion)
- Aniseikonia is often a problem in high degrees of anisometropia
o But pxs wont have massive difference - Treat underlying amblyopia by occlusion of non-strabismic eye – regular review
o If still amblyopia after spectacle correction – then occlusion and know they will never have equal vision – would accept 1 line difference between the eyes - Surgery is not appropriate