Strabismus Flashcards

1
Q

What is the position of anatomical rest?

A
  • Eyes are normally divergent but can be convergent sometimes.
  • The visual axis should be parallel with both eyes meaning both eyes looking at the same object.
  • The visual axis of someone asleep/ under general anesthesia you should be divergent generally just because of the way they lie in the orbit.
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2
Q

What is the fusion free position?

A

Occurs when one eye is covered, or when looking at different images with both eyes - then eyes adapt the fusion free position.

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3
Q

What is distance fusion?

A

When eyes are opened again, you get fusion and distance fusion, where fusion and visual axis are parallel and you get BSV.

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4
Q

What is manifest strabismus?

A

A condition in which the foveas of both eyes are not simultaneously aligned on the object of regard.
- Visual axis not parallel for DV.

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5
Q

What are the 2 types of manifest strabismus? Explain each.

A
  • Constant: one eye always fixates and the other eye deviates on extrafoveal point of the other eye.
  • Intermittent: e.g. if eyes are tired, sometimes during close work or when under the influence of alcohol
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6
Q

Types of deviation?

A
  • Horizontal
  • Vertical
  • Torsional (turns on the sagittal axis)
  • Combination of all the above. ( most vertical deviations have a torsional and horizontal element).
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7
Q

What are cyclo/ torsional deviations?

- What two types?

A

A misalignment of one or both eyes around the sagittal axis.

  • Incyclorotation: a clockwise deviation
  • Excyclorotation: an anti-clockwise deviation
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8
Q

What is pseudostrabismus?

A

Patient appears to have strabismus/ manifest deviation but visual axes are actually aligned.

Check using corneal reflections

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9
Q

What are the common causes of psuedostrabismus?

A
  • Epicanthal folds: small bridge and excessive skin folds and so when the bridge develops there is extra skin to cover. Unsymmetrical folds can make it look like one eye is turning in.
  • Interpupillary distance: Wide PD = exodeviation, Small PD = esodeviation
  • Unilateral myopia or exopthalmos
  • Facial asymmetry e.g. ptosis
  • Variation of the angle kappa
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10
Q

How do you check for psuedostrabismus?

A
  • Hold pentorch at 30cm from Px’s eye and observe corneal reflections
  • If they are symmetrical - then psuedostrabismus is present.
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11
Q

Why are corneal reflexes used?

What does it tell us?

A
  • For uncooperative children
  • When the cover test is not possible or as an adjunct.

Tells us the Px/baby doesn’t have a medium or large deviation - but small deviation is still possible.

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12
Q

What is the Angle Kappa?

A

Angle Kappa is the angle between the centre of the pupil and corneal reflection.

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13
Q

What are the different types of Angle Kappa?

A
  • Positive angle kappa: fovea lies temporally to posterior pole ( normal position of corneal reflexes)
  • Zero angle kappa: fovea coincides with the posterior pole ( central corneal reflexes)
  • Negative posterior pole: fovea lies nasally to the posterior pole ( temporal corneal reflex)

A large angle kappa gives the appearance of a psuedostrabismus.

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14
Q

What are the targets for the cover test - for each type of accommodation?

A

Accommodative:

  • DV = a letter on the line above that which the weakest eye can read
  • NV = a letter on the budgie stick or near chart above that which the weakest eye can read

Non-accommodative:
- DV = spotlight - on chart at distance - always use a letter provided they can resolve it
- NV = pentorch
Also non-accommodative targets are generally used in Px’s with eso-deviations

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15
Q

What is Hering’s Law?

A

It is the innervation that always occurs to both eyes (except in pathological conditons).
When impulses are sent to the EOM’s to move the eyes - the corresponding muscle in each eye recieve equal innervation to either contract or relax.
Applies to all eye movements including vergences.

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16
Q

What is latent/hidden strabismus?

A

It is a binocular condition.
If sensory funtion is artificially suspended:
- the deviation of the visual axes will occur in most indiciduals
- can also happen if different images presented to both eyes

17
Q

What is the role of accommodation in strabismus?

A

When accommodation is exerted, it is coupled with convergence. 1D of accommodation is assc. with 4prismdioptres of convergence.
Excessive accommodation will lead to excessive convergence.