Intermittent Esotropia
Symptoms
of
intermittent esotropia
are
mainly asthenopic occurring early in the morning or
after periods of fatigue. Symptoms of
intermittent
esotropia
depends on the amplitude of fusional
divergence that overcomes tendency to converge.
Symptoms are nearly absent if the amplitude of
fusional divergence is enough.
Sensorial adaptation is not
difficult to explain in patients with
intermittent esotropia.
Periodic suppression develops in children
as an adaptation to diplopia that occurs during
periods of ocular deviation.
The
principle of treating intermittent esotropia is
to create conditions that will allow the patient
to have comfortable and functionally complete
binocular vision depending on the individual
case, a symptomatic esophoric
patient in whom refraction reveals a significant amount
of hypermetropia (at least 1.25D sph) is
treated by full correction of the hypermetropic refractive error in the same manner as in an esotropic
patient. Surgery should be considered
only when the size of the deviation in a
patient with intermittent esotropia
falls within the range that can be
corrected without fear of overcorrection.
Prerequisites for planning surgery are stability of the
deviation after full correction of the hypermetropic
refractive error and the presence of muscular asthenopia. When
the decision has been made to operate,
the surgeon should determine the extent of
surgery necessary and select the muscles to be
operated on. Many surgeon believe thant patients
with intermittent deviations need lesser amounts of
surgery. This attitude is erroneous,
of course, and causes undercorrections that,
because of their small size, may be difficult to control
by additional surgery.
The rule is :
The amount of surgery must
be aimed at the basic deviation and on the goal to
align the eyes, regardless of whether it is a latent, intermittent, or manifest deviation.
It
is preferable to establish a
secondary exophoria rather than be left with a residual esophoria.
Convergence fusional movements and also voluntary
convergence are more effective than the
divergence mechanism in keeping such a residual heterophoria
in check. In
younger patients, small surgical overcorrections
present no problem and usually are easily
compensated for by fusional convergence. On the other
hand, a consecutive exodeviation, regardless of
how small, can cause considerable and often
insurmountable difficulties.
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