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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Necrotizing scleritis may occur following ocular surgery, most commonly after cataract extraction. This complication developed in a 60-year-old woman following
strabismus
surgery for a gaze palsy and sixth-nerve
paresis
following a stroke. Although an autoimmune process is present in many patients with necrotizing scleritis, none was detected in this patient. Inflammation was controlled with topical and systemic corticosteroids and ibuprofen. Good visual acuity was preserved, and improved ocular alignment was achieved. Transient myopia, not previously reported in necrotizing scleritis, was observed.
...
PMID:Necrotizing scleritis and transient myopia following strabismus surgery. 797 May 28
We studied excyclotorsion prospectively in 12 non-strabismic normal patients, 24 patients with unilateral superior oblique
paresis
(SOP), and 14 patients with bilateral SOP to determine which test and position, and what amount of torsion best discriminates between bilateral and unilateral SOP. For each patient, we measured torsion at near in primary position and in 20 degrees downgaze, using both the double Maddox rod (DMR) and Bagolini lens (BL) tests. We calculated the average of three measurements for each test in each position and the differences in mean excyclotorsion between downgaze and primary position for each patient for each test. To discriminate between unilateral SOP and normal, and bilateral and unilateral SOP patients, the best test and position combination was the DMR in downgaze (P = .0001). The probability of a torsion measurement indicating a unilateral SOP rather than a normal value was 95% at 6 degrees of excyclotorsion; of bilateral rather than unilateral SOP, 90% at 20 degrees. The range in the three torsion readings within patients with either DMR or BL in either position varied up to 7 degrees.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol
Strabismus
PMID:Cyclotorsion in unilateral and bilateral superior oblique paresis. 812 Jul 40
We used the freeze-fracture method to compare the intramembrane structure of the plasma membrane in inferior oblique (IO) muscles from six
strabismus
patients with normal IO muscles. Inferior oblique myectomy provided us with small pieces of IO muscle from three patients with superior oblique
paresis
, and from one patient each with V-pattern exotropia, V-pattern esotropia, and V-pattern intermittent exotropia. Samples of normal IO muscle were obtained from two men, aged 33 and 73 years, within 24 hours of their death. The excised muscles were separated at their belly part into orbital and global layers, and small bundles of muscle fiber were fixed and freeze-fractured. The size of intramembrane particles (IMPs) did not differ significantly between normal and
strabismus
-affected specimens (mean: 9.5 nm). The density of IMP in the 33-year-old man's sample ranged from 800 to 3300/microns2 with a mean of 1823/microns2, in the 73-year-old man's sample ranged from 100 to 2500/microns2 with a mean of 670/microns2, while in the affected tissues it ranged from 100 to 1000/microns2 with a mean 500/microns2. There were no significant differences in caveola size and density between normal and
strabismus
-affected IO muscles.
...
PMID:[Plasma intramembrane structure of overaction of the inferior muscle in humans]. 835 81
A single 5.5-millimeter to 8.0-millimeter lateral rectus resection eliminated diplopia in five of six adult patients with divergence paralysis and in all three patients with a sixth cranial nerve
paresis
. Preoperative distance esotropia ranged from 11 to 20 prism diopters in primary gaze. Prism therapy failed in seven of nine patients. Lateral incomitance was reduced in three patients with a mild limitation of abduction preoperatively, but was not induced in the six patients with divergence paralysis. Significant overcorrection of the near esodeviation did not occur. A single lateral rectus resection can effectively eliminate diplopia in selected patients with divergence and partial sixth nerve paralysis.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol
Strabismus
PMID:Results of a single lateral rectus resection for divergence and partial sixth nerve paralysis. 850 17
Ocular alignment and saccades were studied in seven patients with trochlear nerve pareses, before and after
strabismus
surgery. Prior to surgery, a position-dependent vertical ocular misalignment was present, and downward saccades were hypometric in the paretic eye.
Strabismus
surgery reduced the magnitude and position-dependence of the static misalignment. Saccade conjugacy improved in the patients with congenital pareses, and in the patient with a gradual-onset acquired
paresis
, but less improvement occurred in subjects with traumatic pareses. The post-operative change in saccade conjugacy relative to the change in static alignment correlated with pre-operative vertical vergence, suggesting that changes in saccade yoking depend on an interaction between saccades and vertical vergence.
...
PMID:Regulation of static and dynamic ocular alignment in patients with trochlear nerve pareses. 856 Jul 97
A prospective study was performed on 16 unoperated patients with frontal plagiocephaly to characterize the relationship between
strabismus
and abnormal head posture. Serial eye examinations were performed preoperatively and for 24 to 46 months following fronto-orbital advancement. In 14 patients (88 percent), preoperative clinical examination and CT scan indicated coronal plagiocephaly (synostotic); unicoronal synostosis was documented during fronto-orbital advancement in all these patients. Ten patients had abnormal head posture on preoperative examination, 9 of whom had
strabismus
at some time during the study. These 9 patients all had unicoronal synostosis with ipsilateral
strabismus
and a contralateral head tilt. All had eye muscle findings consistent with superior oblique
paresis
, although in 2 patients these signs first developed following fronto-orbital advancement.
Strabismus
resolved spontaneously in 2 patients between 2 and 8 months following fronto-orbital advancement; the remaining 7 patients underwent extraocular muscle surgery following fronto-orbital advancement, with early resolution of
strabismus
in all cases. The head tilt resolved or improved significantly in all 9 patients following resolution of the
strabismus
. Two patients had recurrent superior oblique
paresis
following surgical correction, necessitating secondary
strabismus
surgery. The present study indicates that extraocular muscle dysfunction is the major cause of abnormal head posture in patients with coronal plagiocephaly and emphasizes the need for long-term ophthalmologic surveillance in these patients.
...
PMID:A prospective study of the relationship between strabismus and head posture in patients with frontal plagiocephaly. 861 90
Sixteen patients with combined
paresis
and restriction of extraocular muscle(s) orbital fracture repair were studied before and after in order to determine the clinical features and management of such patients. All 16 patients showed limited ductions of the involved eye in the field of action of the entrapped, paretic muscle and of the antagonist muscle after orbital fracture. Single extraocular muscles (13 patients) and two extraocular muscles (three patients) were demonstrated adjacent to the fracture site on orbital computed tomography (CT). In three patients prior to orbital surgery, a deviation in primary position was present. After fracture repair with release of the entrapped muscle in all patients, evidence of
paresis
of the muscle was demonstrated by underaction in its field of action and overaction in the field of its antagonist. There was a resultant manifest tropia or phoria in the primary position. In seven patients, the
paresis
gradually improved with no tropia and little diplopia in the functional fields of gaze. Three patients had minimal deviations and required no further treatment. Six patients with significant deviations required prisms (three patients) or
strabismus
surgery (three patients). The latter three patients had two muscles involved. Results of this study demonstrate that the ophthalmologist must appropriately diagnose patients with
paresis
and restriction of an extraocular muscle and counsel them that "new" diplopia may occur after orbital fracture repair and that this diplopia may require additional therapy.
...
PMID:Combined paresis and restriction of the extraocular muscles after orbital fracture: a study of 16 patients. 886 78
A 68-year-old man developed
strabismus
after having sub-Tenon's anesthesia for cataract extraction and intraocular lens implantation. An ipsilateral hypertropia with superior oblique muscle
paresis
developed in the operated eye. The hypertropia appeared 1 day after surgery and resolved 1 month later. Although sub-Tenon's anesthesia is considered safer than other methods of local anesthesia,
strabismus
may occur.
...
PMID:Superior oblique muscle paresis after sub-Tenon's anesthesia for cataract surgery. 988 91
Improvements in the management of
strabismus
are largely dependent on making the specific diagnosis and differentiating patterns of
strabismus
. This finding is especially true in the management of superior oblique
paresis
because there are various types. Recent observation suggests that superior oblique
paresis
may be associated with a lax superior oblique tendon and that the cause of the
paresis
is not always neurogenic. Some authorities have suggested using the traction test of the superior oblique to determine whether the superior oblique tendon is lax. If it is lax, the treatment of choice would be a tightening procedure of the superior oblique such as the superior oblique tuck. Adjustable-suture
strabismus
surgery has reduced the incidence of repeat operations; however, adapting the procedure to the fornix incision has been difficult. The use of a scleral traction suture that retracts the conjunctiva to expose the muscle suture area has been useful for fornix surgery. The rectus muscles supply circulation to the anterior segment via the anterior ciliary vessels, which are routinely interrupted during
strabismus
surgery. Various procedures have recently been described to preserve the anterior ciliary vessels, and these procedures will be useful in patients who are predisposed to anterior segment ischemia. In the 1950s, inferior oblique weakening procedures were deemed dangerous and unpredictable. Recent advances in the understanding of inferior oblique physiology and fascial relationships have inspired the development of a new inferior oblique weakening strategy--the anteriorization procedure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Surgical techniques of strabismus. 1014 90
The use of botulinum toxin A (BTXA) in childhood
strabismus
is still a matter of debate. This study investigates the indications for and outcome of BTXA therapy in children at our institution. From 1985 to 1995, 237 children up to and including 16 years of age were treated with BTXA for
strabismus
. We undertook a retrospective study of 163 (69%) children from this group. Factors considered were age; anaesthesia; number of, indication for and outcome of injections; complications and follow-up. There were three major indications for the use of BTXA in children: firstly to improve binocular function, secondly as a post-operative diplopia test or for cosmetic reasons, and thirdly in the investigation or treatment of paralytic and restrictive
strabismus
. In the first group (54 children), BTXA produced improved binocular function in 54% of all patients treated and in 49% of those with a minimum follow-up of 12 months. In the second group (82 children), 88% showed informative post-operative diplopia tests and 44% had more than one injection to maintain improved cosmetic alignment. The third group comprised 27 children with a range of diagnoses, including 1 third nerve
paresis
, 12 unilateral or bilateral sixth nerve pareses, 7 unilateral or bilateral Duane's syndromes, 5 lost or fibrosed muscles and 2 others. This group had a range of outcomes which are discussed in the text. BTXA is useful in the treatment of a select group of children with
strabismus
. If there is evidence of threatened or recently lost binocularity, or risk of creating or worsening diplopia after surgery, it is a useful therapeutic tool. In children with
strabismus
of unusual cause it has diagnostic value.
Strabismus
1999 Jun
PMID:Botulinum toxin in childhood strabismus. 1042 Feb 15
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