Strabismus Flashcards

1
Q

A child is brought in whose eyes are misaligned/ “one eye is turned in”. What are 10 questions you should ask?

A
  1. Have you noticed any problems with child’s vision? e.g. being clumsy, bumping into things?
  2. Has the eye always been like this?
  3. Has the child had any injury to the head?
  4. Has the child had any other problems with eyes or surgery on them?
  5. Were there any problems during pregnancy or was child premature?
  6. Has child’s development been normal?
  7. Is child fully up to date with immunisations?
  8. Is there family history of eye problems?
  9. Is child on any medication?
  10. Has child spent time in hospital in past?
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2
Q

Who will first see a child with strabismus in the eye clinic?

A

Orthoptist

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3
Q

What is the role of the orthoptist generally?

A
  • Crucial member of NHS eye care team, work closely with ophthalmologists, optometrists and vision scientists.
  • Involved in diagnosis and management of conditions e.g. glaucoma, cataract, stroke, retinal disease, neurological disorders.
  • Examine patients with eye problems, such as ocular motility problems, binocular vision, amblyopia (lazy eye) or strabismus (squint)
  • some screen vision of children in schools and community health centres
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4
Q

What are 7 examinations performed by the orthoptist in a child with strabismus?

A
  1. Visual acuity: don’t know their alphabet in this age group, so checked with Cardiff Acuity Cards (Kay Pictures) + preferental looking
  2. Deviations of the eyes
  3. Hirschberg (corneal light reflex) test
  4. Cover test
  5. Prism cover test
  6. Ocular movements
  7. Binocular signle vision
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5
Q

What are Cardiff Acuity Cards (Kay Pictures) and how are they used?

A
  • Use familiar pictures and preferential looking; observer notes child’s eye movements to determine if they can see pictures. Use pictures of house/car/duck etc. at top or bottom of otherwise grey card.
  • 11 visual acuity levels with three cards at each level
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6
Q

What is the Hirschberg (corneal light reflex) test?

A
  • Shine a light on the eyes with a pen torch, look to see where corneal light reflex is (reflection of light off cornea, a pinpoint white light) in relation to the pupil.
  • If eyes are straight, corneal light reflex will be in the middle of each pupil
  • If, e.g., left eye turned in (esotropia) then for the right eye, corneal light reflex will be in the middle of the pupil but for left eye it will beon the outside of (lateral to) the pupil
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7
Q

What is the cover test?

A

can identify if strabismus is present constantly (tropia) or if there is a tendency for there to be a squint when unaffected eye is covered (phoria)

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8
Q

What is a phoria in strabismus?

A

A phoria is a misalignment of the eyes that only appears when binocular viewing is broken and the two eyes are no longer looking at the same object (i.e. by covering one eye), can also appear when patient is tired

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9
Q

What is a tropia in strabismus?

A

Misalignment of the eyes that is present constantly, rather than just when one eye is covered (phoria)

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10
Q

What 6 things will an ophthalmologist perform in a child with strabismus, after they have seen the orthoptist?

A
  1. Confirm the findings of the orthoptist
  2. RAPD: swinging light test to check for optic nerve or gross retinal pathology
  3. Pupils dilated with cyclopentolate 1% and phenylephrine 2.5% drops to allow next three steps
  4. Red reflex check - detect cataract
  5. Cycloplegic refraction (testing for glasses) - see if there’s an accommodative element to the strabismus
  6. Fundus check - look for optic nerve and retinal pathology such as retinoblastoma
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11
Q

Why would the ophthalmologist perform the swinging light test to check for RAPD in a child with strabismus?

A

check for optic nerve or gross retinal pathology

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12
Q

What is used to dilate the pupils of a child with strabismus when seeing the ophthalmologist, and why?

A
  1. Cyclopentolate 1%
  2. Phenylephrine 2.5% drops

This is to ensure child will be unable to accommodate, to allow red reflex check, cycloplegic refraction, & fundus check to be performed

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13
Q

Why is cycloplegic refraction performed by the ophthalmologist in a child with strabismus?

A

To see if there is an accommodative elemtn to the strabismus i.e. child may be very hypermetropic (long-sighted) and a pair of glasses may completely correct (accommodative esotropia) or partly correct the deviation (partially accommodative esotropia), plus it will improve the vision in the deviated eye

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14
Q

Why is a fundus check i.e. ophthalmoscopy performed by the ophthalmologist in a child with strabismus?

A

To look for any optic nerve and retinal pathology, such as retinoblastoma

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15
Q

What is the prism cover test, performed by an orthoptist in a child with strabismus?

A

An objective measurement and gold standard in measuring strabismus; bar containing prisms of different strengths is used to overcome the deviation of the eye. Amount eye is deviated (in or out) meausred in prism dioptres (the higher the number, the larger the deviation)

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16
Q

How is a tropia revealed by the cover test?

A
  • One eye is covered while fixating on a point
  • Observe uncovered eye for corrective movement
  • When normal eye covered, abnormal eye will move from deviated position to take up correct fixation position → indicates abnormal eye is uncovered, normal eye covered
17
Q

How is a phoria revelealed by the cover test?

A
  • Is actually revealed by the “uncover” test
  • one eye covered for 5 seconds while child fixates on target
  • cover is quickly removed, newly uncovered eye observed for corrective movement (i.e. if it was deviated behind the cover)
  • if corrective movement occurs after uncovering, a latent phoria is present in newly uncovered eye
  • defect is in eye that was covered/ newly uncovered
18
Q

Why are tests of ocular movements performed by the orthoptist in a child with strabismus?

A

To exclude III, IV or VI cranial nerve palsy

19
Q

What is the binocular single vision test performed by the orthoptist a test of?

A

ability to view the world with two eyes; requires clear image to stimulate fovea in each eye

20
Q

What are 4 different types of strabismus?

A

Estotropia/phoria

Exotropia/phoria

Hypertropia/phoria

Hypotropia/phoria

21
Q

What is amblyopia (lazy eye)?

A
  • Developmental defect of central vision processing, leading to reduced form sense and reduced vision.
  • In a young child, unless there is a perfect foveal image the brain will switch off/ignore the image, leading to a reduction in vision
22
Q

When should amblyopia be treated?

A

ALWAYS needs treatment even after it’s unlikely to be effective (7-8 years of age)

23
Q

After which age is treatment of amblyopia unlikely to be effective?

A

7-8 years of age

24
Q

What are 2 options for the treatment of amblyopia?

A
  1. Occlusion/ “patching”: patching of the good eye for a few hours a day OR
  2. Penalisation: atropic drops used in good eye to dilate the pupil and blur the vision
25
Q

What is the basis of the two treatment options for amblyopia?

A

Force brain to recognise image from squinting eye, thus improving vision and reversing amblyopia

26
Q

What is the result of unsuccessful amblyopia treatment?

A

Child will have poor vision in that eye for the rest of their life

27
Q

What are 3 causes of amblyopia?

A
  1. Misalignment of the eyes (stabismus/squint) - to stop double vision brain switches off image from squinting eye
  2. No or reduced image getting to the brain e.g. from cataract or tumours (retinoblastoma)
  3. Blurred image due to an uncorrected refractive error in that eye
28
Q

How can amblyopia be inferred in a patient with misaligned eyes?

A

If vision is reduced in the squinting eye, you can infer that the strabismus has caused amblyopia - i.e. switched off image in diverging eye to stop double vision

29
Q

What is the purpose of surgical correction of strabismus?

A

Correct the appearance of the squint itsef, and may restore binocular single vision. Main aim is improving appearance, rather than correcting the amblyopia (i.e. poor vision in one eye)- corrected with occlusion or penalisation

30
Q

What does surgical resection of strabismus involve?

A

Medial rectus recession and lateral rectus resection. Means weakening (moving insertion nearer the origin of the muscle) of the merial rectus e.g. 5mm and strengthening (shortening) lateral rectus e.g. 7mm to pull the eye straight

31
Q

How can the cover test help inform you which way a squint is?

A

If uncovered eye moves out to fixate, eye must have originally been turned in i.e. esotropia; if uncovered eye moves in to fix, must be exotropia

32
Q

How many cover/ uncover tests are performed in total?

A

Each is performed in each eye and for near and distance vision (so each performed 4 times)

33
Q

What are the 3 components of testing binocular single vision (BSV)?

A
  1. Simultaneous perception of 2 images: using synoptophore.
  2. Fusion of 2 images: using synoptophore.
  3. Stereopsis
34
Q

What does testing for simultaneous perception of 2 images as part of BSV involve?

A

Using synoptophore: machine presents image of bird to one eye, image of cage to other. Person with normal simultaneous perception will say bird is in cage

35
Q

What does testing of the fusion of 2 images as part of BSV involve?

A

Use synoptophore; image of rabbit with tail and no flowers will be presened to one eye, rabbit with no tail but holding bunch of flowers presented to other. Person with normal fusion will say they see rabbit with tail holding a bunch of flowers

36
Q

What does testing of stereopsis as part of BSV involve?

A

3D/depth perception - Lang (random dot stereograms) test. Think of a magic eye book