Week 1.11 Classifications Flashcards

1
Q

Onset before 1 year of age

A
  • 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
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2
Q

What is dissociated vertical deviation

A

When you cover an eye both eyes go up in the same direction
Both eyes go up or both eyes go down

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3
Q

What are the different classifications of esotropia

A

Accommodative (refractive)
Non-accommodative (non-refractive)
Microtropia

May be primary, secondary or consecutive

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4
Q

Primary esotropia

A
  • 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
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5
Q

Fully accommodative SOT

A

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

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