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A and V Patterns and Other Types of Strabismus Paviglianiti / January 21, 2010 A and V Patterns Horizontal deviations that change in magnitude in upgaze and downgaze A or V patterns reportedly in 15-25% of all horizontal strabismus IOOA assoc with V patterns SOOA assoc with A patterns Sometimes, if vertical muscles underacting (eg SR) then their tertiary adducting effect in upgaze will decrease, giving a V pattern; underacting IR will decrease its tertiary adduction in downgaze, giving an A pattern (both SR and IR are tertiary adductors) Pts with Aperts/Crouzons have V patterns since their orbits are excyclotorted Technically, need a difference between upgaze vs downgaze of at least 10d in A pattern; 15d in V pattern (I use 15 for both) If obliques are overacting, weaken them; if not, do MALE horizontal transposition by ½ tendon width…rules apply regardless of whether you are weakening or tightening or whether surgery on 2 eyes or R/R on 1. Special Forms of Strabismus Duanes Syndrome Möbius Syndrome Brown’s Syndrome Thyroid Eye Disease Congenital Fibrosis Syndrome Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia (PEO) Myasthenia Internuclear Ophthalmoplegia (INO) Congenital Oculomotor Apraxia Congenital / Acquired 3rd, 4th, 6th palsies Concomitant vs Incomitant Concomitant Strabismus: The measurements are the same in all fields of gaze (numbers on the tictactoe board are the same in all the boxes) AND the range of mvt of the eyes is full Incomitant Strabismus Measurements gaze different in different fields of Duane’s Syndrome Type I =>reduced abduction Type II => reduced adduction Type III => reduced abd and add Clinically, little use this classification scheme is of Duane’s Syndrome/Type I Can’t abduct, so usually esotropic in primary position, sometimes with compensatory head turn for fusion Usually girls More often left eye, but bilateral 20% On attempted abduction, involved lids widen Involved lids widen on attempted mvt toward deficit On adduction, involved lids narrow and globe retracts into orbit, and there are upshoots and downshoots Involved lids narrow on attempted mvt away from deficit; upshoots/downshoots on involved eye with attempted mvt away from deficit Bilateral Duane’s I Bilateral Duane’s; note lid widening on attempted abduction Note the working adducting eye with lids narrowing and globe retraction Duane’s Syndrome Type II Limited adduction, so XT in primary Ddx includes INO, but INO has no lid fissure widening on attempted movement toward the deficit Duane’s II Note full abduction, limited adduction with upshoot on attempted right gaze Could confuse with INO or IOOA Duane’s Syndrome Type III Limited abduction and adduction, so usually ortho in primary Duane’s Syndrome Usually NOT inherited (sporadic), but 10% there is auto dominant inheritance Since bilateral 20%, ddx includes congenital esotropia with tight medial recti, which don’t allow full abduction Used to be thought it was caused by hypoplasia of 6th nerve nucleus, with the 3rd nerve taking over innervation of the LR in an abnormal way; this isn’t proven and exact cause of Duane’s still mysterious Ocular associations: ptosis of involved side; cataracts, iris heterochromia, iris/retina coloboma Duane’s Syndrome Associations Thalidomide exposure (West Germany 19571962: 30% of these babies had Duane’s Possible fetal alcohol link (so teratogenicity during 4th to 5th weeks of gestation possible?) Deafness in 10% of Duane’s (although I haven’t noted that clinically) Duane’s + deafness + Klippel/Feil spine anomaly (short neck, reduced mvts, low posterior hairline) => WILDERVANKS (cervico-oculo-acoustic) Goldenhar’s Marcus-Gunn jaw winking and crocodile tears (other forms of aberrant innervation) Duane’s / Management Ability to abduct “will never get better” It is NOT possible to create “normal” eye mvts via surgery Treat any underlying amblyopia; Check for hearing deficits if indicated Indications for surgery: head turns (to try to gain ortho and fusion) or big tropia in primary Resist the urge to resect (tighten) the affected muscle: will increase retraction and the muscle doesn’t work well anyway. Some have even proposed weakening the affected LR more to decrease retraction Usually begin with MR recession; can do transpositions of SR and IR to LR with concurrent MR recession Möbius Syndrome 6th and 7th nerve palsies BUT… Motility is more than just limited abduction; may be some limited adduction as well (sometimes partial 3rd)as well as some elevation defects Mask-like facies may be incomplete (may spare lower face Check for incomplete lid closure, corneal anesthesia, and exposure Accompanied by limb, chest, tongue problems Agenesis/dysgenesis of limbs; terminal limb problems like polydactyly or syndactyly Check for absent pectoralis muscle (Poland’s Anomaly) Tongue hypoplastic; dental malocclusion Möbius Syndrome Postmortem evidence shows cause is agenesis of 6th, 7th, and 12th cranial nerve nuclei (the EOMs themselves are normal…though may become fibrotic from lack of innervation) Ophtho Management medial rectus recession for abduction deficits Lubricate corneas if not good lid closure; lateral tarsorrhaphy to protect corneas if needed Referral for speech eval, cardiac eval, and endocrine eval (can have heart and endocrine problems too) Usually only 10% mentally delayed Most are rejected and depressed due to facial appearance Möbius Syndrome Brown’s Syndrome Unable to elevate the adducted eye Restricted on forced duction testing Cause: developmental anomaly of the SO tendon (the trochlea and the SO tendon derive from the same mesenchymal tissue; in utero, these get tangled up and cause tethering / restriction of SO tendon Usually congenital, but can be acquired DDx: IO underaction and SO overaction Trauma or surgery to canthal area, inflammation, or metastasis to area These do not have positive forced ductions 10% are bilateral Sometimes runs in families (always bilateral) Brown’s Syndrome Kids present with abnormal head posture, or parents saying “eyes just don’t move right when pt looks up at me” Usually will note EXOtropia in upgaze Treat for significant head posture or significant hypotropia / diplopia in primary, loss of stereo Options: none good: SO weakening via SO tenectomy (but can over-do, and cause SO paresis); silicone expander (fallen out of favor); most need at least 2 re-ops Leave these kids alone unless forced to do something: reported tendency toward improvement as child get older, as abnormal connections between the trochlea and SO break down; but not always: some adults still have it; Brown’s Syndrome Thyroid Eye Disease Restrictive myopathy with lymphocytic infiltration of EOMs Usual order for boards IMSLow (IR affected most>MR>SR>LR; from recent lecture by Dr. Gearity, the 3 muscles are affected about the same. Usual misalignment is proptosis, hypotropia, and esotropia (from scarred/fibrosed IR pulling eye down; fibrosed MR pulling eye in); forced ductions are usually positive Present with diplopia that does not follow any pattern, therefore prisms usually don’t work Thyroid Eye Disease Most are hyperthyroid at dx, but can be euthyroid or hypothyroid Get TSI, TSH, and T4 (per Dr. Gearity) CT orbits can be helpful to see degree of EOM involvement Thyroid eye disease often co-exists with myasthenia so eval for this also If optic nerve involved, may need orbital decompression prior to strabismus surgery Surgery: optional oral prednisone for 2 weeks (“to soften things up”); then surgery (ie inferior rectus recession: aim to undercorrect Thyroid Eye Disease Congenital Fibrosis Syndromes Group of congenital anomalies with variable amts of restriction of EOMs via replacement of muscle tissue with fibrous tissue Can be single muscle on one eye to all muscles on both eyes Often levator involved=>ptosis=>chin up head posture DDx is PEO (frozen eyes and ptosis) Many types inherited (auto dominant usually) though can be sporadic Etiology unknown Goal: get ortho in primary Congenital Fibrosis Syndromes General fibrosis of all the EOMs (mostly auto dominant inheritance) Congenital fibrosis of the IR=>cannot look up; can mimic double elevator palsy Congenital fibrosis of the MR/LR (strabismus fixus) Can present with congenital esotropia appearance with both eyes pointing down and in toward nose Congenital fibrosis of the SR=>pt cannot look down Congenital Fibrosis - familial Chronic Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) Presents as ptosis, followed by progressive paresis of EOMs; pupils spared DDX is Congenital Fibrosis (frozen eye and ptosis) Triad of PEO, pigmentary retina changes and heart block/cardio problems is Kearns-Sayre, (usually before age 20) (many times a board question); mgmt: refer for sequential EKG Other signs of K-S: short stature, hearing loss, diabetes/endocrine problems Dx: EOM or limb muscle bx show “ragged red fibers” (actually are clumps of degenerated mitochondria) on trichrome stain May be mitochondrial dysfunction as cause Myasthenia Look for variable strabismus throughout the day or on sequential exams Diplopia is often intermittent Can be “ocular “ only or systemic Look for fatigueability on extended upgaze Often reversed by a few minutes of cold ice in a rubber glove on the eyelids Myasthenia Refer to Neuro for Tensilon test / EMG Test dose 0.1cc edrophonium (tensilon) If ok, then 0.9cc edrophonium Keep IV atropine on hand as antidote Can test for Acetylcholine receptor antibody Antistriated muscle antibody Found in 90% of acquired MG (not found in congenital MG); only present 50% of time in “ocular” MG Found in 90% of MG with thymoma and 30% of MG pts without thymoma Therefore, in typical diplopia pt with fatigueability, but no systemic sx, these tests will be negative often despite disease, so still refer to neuro for tensilon test if suspicious Internuclear Ophthalmoplegia (INO) Looks like a “one-sided MR palsy” (ipsilateral to the lesion), with the other eye having horizontal nystagmus The limited adduction may be total or partial Both eyes adduct normally on convergence to a near target Is a problem in the MLF (medial longitudinal fasciculus) of the brain stem Interruption in signal from from abducens relay signals from reaching the contralateral oculomotor nucleus, impairing adduction INO Anatomy IF I WANT TO LOOK LEFT: Left PPRF stimulates the Left 6th N nucleus=> (abduct left eye) Left 6th N nucleus stimulates the MLF MLF crosses and ascends to the contralateral (right) 3rd nucleus To give contralateral (right) MR contraction (adduct right eye) INO In adults: Multiple Sclerosis is common cause and many times is bilateral INO In kids: posterior fossa tumors (eg brainstem glioma), Arnold-Chiari, head trauma, sickle cell In old folks: frontal lobe CVA or tumor One and a Half Syndrome (INO + )(Fisher’s Syndrome) Injury to the PPRF (also known as the lateral gaze center) or the 6th nerve nucleus causes loss of ipsi abduction and contralateral adduction) (the one) Injury to the ipsi MLF (knocks off ipsi adduction) (the half) The only mvt remaining is the contralateral abduction (via the contralateral 6th N nucleus DDx: congenital fibrosis (forced ductions give the answer) Congenital Oculomotor Apraxia (Saccade Initiation Failure) These folks cannot voluntarily initiate horizontal eye mvts => see head thrusting to look to sides Vertical mvts intact Get MRI to look for head tumors If acquired oculomotor apraxia in adult, look for parietal CVA, mets, or trauma Etiology unknown 3rd, 4th, and 6th Nerve Palsies Congenital/Acquired Survey of 160 palsies in kids were 6th N palsies 25% were 3rd N palsies 25% were 4th or multiple N palsies 50+% Trauma most common cause in kids rd 3 Nerve Palsies Congenital Rare Look for ptosis and exotropia (with mixture of strab due to reduced adduction, elevation, and depression) and pupil involvement (the eye is down and out due to unopposed LR and SO (a depressor) Pupil usually dilated Look for aberrant regeneration due to misdirection of any 3rd N fibers that actually are working rd 3 N Palsies Acquired (kids) Trauma (most common cause of acquired 3rd N Post-viral Infectious (13/147 cases of meningitis had 3rd N palsies; Hflu, Nmeningitidis, Spneumoniae) Inflammatory Migraine (ophthalmoplegic migraine) Pain around the eye for 24-48 hrs, with N/V, then as pain lessens, a 3rd N palsy develops, can last for a few days to a few months Recurrent, usually a family h/o migraine First attack usually before age 12 More common in boys than girls Tumor (eg brainstem glioma) rd 3 Acquired N Palsies (adults) Aneurysm (youngest age for PCOM aneurysm is 14 so far); “angiography to exclude an aneurysm is NOT justified below the age of 10” (Taylors text) Diabetes (usually resolves over 6 months) Trauma Infection Tumor rd 3 Nerve Palsy Ptosis, exotropia and hypotropia (only the LR and SO working…so eye is down and out) and blown pupil 4th Nerve Palsy Congenital Look for the head tilt; do measurements with head straight, to show the strabismus Ddx of head tilt, with hypertropia in primary gaze is IOOA, DVD, Duane’s with upshoot Bielschowsky: LRL: means LHT, worse on right gaze, worse on L head tilt (is L SO4 palsy) (not to be confused with LLL which is RIO palsy) Look for excyclotorsion Look for facial asymmetry (hypodevelopment/ thinner face on contralateral side) Many times these present later in life; looking at old photos shows the head tilt present in childhood and they have large fusional amplitudes Causes: frequently birth trauma or just bad anatomy (weak SO tendon) th 4 Acquired Note: since the 4th N has the longest course and is the only one to exit on the dorsal surface of the brain stem, so it the most vulnerable to damage from trauma Causes: N Palsy Trauma (#1) Diabetes / ischemia (#2) Hydrocephalus / Tumors Post infectious Demyelinating disease Commonly: No cause found Surgical Mgmt of SO4 palsy: IO myectomy +/SO tuck +/- additional vertical rectus surgery Oblique Palsies and Overactions - TORSION 1st photo shows normal relationship of fovea to disk with respect to torsion. Normal fovea location is between two imaginary lines drawn thru middle of disk and lower margin of disk (direct view) Inferior oblique overaction / SO palsy could show the right fundus above; [note that on your 20Diopter INDIRECT view, the fovea should be at upper half of disk, and torsion will make fovea seem way up, as you view it with indirect] th 6 Nerve Palsy Congenital Duane’s Transient LR palsy of Newborns, usually goes away before it is even diagnosed (may be as common as 1/ 182 normal births); sometimes there is h/o birth trauma or forceps th 6 N Palsy Acquired Trauma (40%) Neoplasms (16%) (pontine glioma) Intracranial Hypertension (Pseudotumor or hydrocephalus) Infection (meningitis, varicella, Lyme) and s/p vaccination (MMR) Acquired 6th N palsy of unknown cause in children: isolated, painless 6th N palsy that resolves in 8-12 weeks; w/u negative (including MRI and CSF and neuro w/u); may recur th 6 Nerve Palsy 6th Nerve palsy in a 10yo male who had a brainstem glioma rd th thv1v2 th 3 /4 /5 /6 Image combo palsy the cavernous sinus area If there is proptosis, consider an orbital apex syndrome