Week 1.11 Classifications Flashcards
Onset before 1 year of age
- may be difficult to ascertain
- maybe review photographs
- infantile esotropia (or exo)
- usually onset before 6 moths
- large and relatively stable angle of strabismus
- px are usually emmetropic and rarely have more than a low degree of hyperopia or astigmatism
- often associated with nystagmus and dissociated vertical deviation
- urgent referral - early treatment has better prognosis
What is dissociated vertical deviation
When you cover an eye both eyes go up in the same direction
Both eyes go up or both eyes go down
What are the different classifications of esotropia
Accommodative (refractive)
Non-accommodative (non-refractive)
Microtropia
May be primary, secondary or consecutive
Primary esotropia
- after 6 months of age
- Most prevalent from ~2yrs
- AC/A ratio may be abnormal
- binocularity can be restored if eye can be re-aligned by optical, prismatic or orthoptic means
Fully accommodative SOT
Intermittent deviation, secondary to the presence of hyperopia I.e. no manifest deviation with full rx (perhaps latent tho)
- uncorrected requires accompanying for dist and near that stimulates excessive converg sufficient to cause a strab
- onset usually 2-5yrs
AC/A ratio normal
BSV present in nearly all cases; may have MT if anisohyperopic
Usually no or slight amblyopia