Evaluation of the results of surgical correction of V pattern intermittent exotropia without inferior oblique muscle overaction by either performing bilateral lateral rectus recession (BLR) alone or performing bilateral lateral rectus recession asssosiated with upward transposition of lateral rectus muscle insertion
Intermittent exotropia (IXT) is the most common type of strabismus which is a disorder of binocular eye movement control in which one eye intermittently moves outwards.Intermittent exotropia may be associated with difference in the horizontal deviation from the primary position to the upward or downward gaze giving A or V pattern In V-pattern intermittent exotropia (XT), there is an increase in the horizontal deviation as the eyes move from downgaze to upgaze. Non-surgical treatment includes correction of refractive error, orthoptics, overcorrecting minus lenses and prismotherapy. Surgical options includes unilateral medial rectus muscle resection combined with a lateral rectus muscle recession or bilateral lateral rectus recession as in basic type IXT OR bilateral lateral rectus muscle recession as in divergent excess type OR bilateral medial rectus muscle resection as in convergence insufficiency.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
This procedure involved recession of both lateral rectus muscles to reduce large-angle exotropia.
This procedure involved bilateral lateral rectus recession combined with upward transposition of the insertion to enhance ocular alignment in patients with large-angle exotropia.
Tanta University
Tanta, El-Gharbia Governorate, Egypt, Egypt
Angle of Ocular Deviation
The degree of ocular misalignment was measured using prism cover test at near and distance fixation. Successful outcome was defined as residual deviation ≤10 prism diopters.
Time frame: 6 months postoperatively
Postoperative Complications
Complications such as overcorrection, undercorrection, or limitation of ocular motility were recorded.
Time frame: 6 months postoperatively
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