Squint
Transcription
Squint
2 Squint Clinical Squint (Strabismus) Hyperphoria and Hypophoria Strabismus or squint is a misalignment of visual axis. One eye forced in out, up or down. A latent squint is a phoria. Heterophoria consists of exophoria, esophoria, hyperphoria, hypophoria, cyclophoria. A manifest squint is a tropia. Hetrotropia is a term which includes all types of manifest squint. - Latent Squint Exophoria and Esophoria are divided into types according to the distance at which the phoria is maximum. Exophoria - - - Exophoria of the convergence weakness types: In which the exophoria measures more for near than it does for distance. Exophoria of the divergence excess types: In which it measures more for distance than for near. Exophoria of the basic types: In which the measurements are the same for near and distance. Esophoria - - - Esophoria of the convergence excess types: In which the esophoria measure, more for near than it does for distance. Esophoria of the divergence weakness types: In which it measures more for distance than for near. Esophoria of the basic types: In which the measurements are the same for near & distance. Manifest - clear; Intermittent - occuring at regular intervals A R A V I N D E Y E C A R E S Y S T E M - It is customary to describe a vertical phoria for example right hyperphoria rather than left hypophoria. Most hyperphoria and are incomitant due to muscle under action or over action. The vertical fusion amplitude is normally small, making it difficult to control more than a few dioptres of vertical deviation but exceptions to this rule are occasionally seen, mainly in long standing deviations. Cyclophoria As with cyclotropia, cyclophoria does not occur alone. When seen it is associated with hyperphoria but in a rare condition. Exophoria is by far the most common type of heterophoria, particularly the convergence weakness type. Manifest Squint All concomitant manifest squint starts in childhood. The common types of concomitant squint are exophoria concomitant, esotropia concomitant. Vertical and torsional squint are very rare. Both exophoria and esoptropia can be constant or intermittent. Manifest Squint – Exotropia 1. Intermittent Exotropia There are three types, a. Intermittent Exotropia with divergence Excess: In which one eye diverges on distance fixation. The squint is smaller for near or in the form of a controlled exophoria. 3 b. Intermittent Exotropia with Convergence Weakness: In which the exotropia is present for near fixation but is controlled with exophoria for distance. c. Basic types: In which the squint is intermittently manifest for near or distance. Usually the angle of deviation is much the same for both distances. 2. Constant Exotropia The exotropia can be primary, secondary or corsecutia. Esotropia: Esotropia can be accommodation directly related to the exertion of accommodation or non-accommodative in which the squint is not influenced by the amount of accommodation produced. 1. Intermittent Exotropia accommodative refractive: a. Fully accommodative esotropia: There is a moderate degree of hypermetropia. The esotropia is usually intermittent and is seen when the child looks at near objects is tired or unwell. BSV is restored. b. Accommodative non refractive esotropia : The squint is present for near fixation but is controlled Non - accommodative a. Non – accommodative convergence excess: The squint is the same as in accommodative convergence excess except that the AC/A ratio is normal. b. Esotropia with divergence weakness: Is present for distance fixation with an esophoria for near fixation. This is also a rare condition. the angle of squint but not enough to restore BSV. b. Infantile or early onset esotropia : - Marked esotropia, often measuring 30 prism dioptres or more. - Alternating esotropia in the primary position. - No significant refractive error c. Late onset esotropia: Onset after 6 months of age, commonly between 3 years. d. Secondary esotropia: The squint follows loss of vision in one eye or more marked in one eye. e. Consecutice esotropia: Follows a primary exotropia. This can result from surgical correction of exotropia. Microtropia: A microtropia is very small manifest squint with BSV; it is a common condition in which the eye can be esotropic. Effects of strabismus - Diplopia confusion, loss of stereopsis suppression, Amblyopia, Abnormal retinal correspondence, Compensatory head posture. Treatment - - - - Correcting the refractive correction. If the squint is slight or intermittent exercises an help the patient to control it. Patching method Patching Surgery 3. Constant Esotropia a. Partially accommodative esotropia: the squint is associated with hypermetropia correction of the refractive error reduces Before Surgery After Surgery - Sr. P.S. Monisha Refraction, Aravind - Madurai Compassion July - Sep, 2015