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Query: UMLS:C0038379 (strabismus)
9,317 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Limited data exist on the recovery of ocular motility after adjustable suture strabismus surgery performed under local anesthesia. The timing of adjustment has been chosen empirically and has varied widely. We sought to more precisely quantify the recovery of motility by measuring ductions before and after surgery with a modified arc perimeter. Twenty-one eyes of 20 patients were studied. All patients underwent adjustable suture strabismus surgery under retrobulbar or peribulbar anesthesia using 2% lidocaine with hyaluronidase. Mean ductions orthogonal to the field of action of the operated muscle(s) returned to 90% of preoperative levels between 5 and 6 hours after injection. We recommend adjustment 6 or more hours after injection, or at least 5 to 6 hours postoperatively, when 2% lidocaine with hyaluronidase is used for local anesthesia.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus
PMID:Recovery of extraocular muscle function after adjustable suture strabismus surgery under local anesthesia. 158 75

We prospectively studied 76 patients to analyze the effectiveness of peribulbar anesthesia during strabismus surgery. The patients, ranging in age from 14 to 77 years, were given anesthesia with standard preoperative medication and a peribulbar injection of a mixture of 2% mepivacaine hydrochloride and hyaluronidase. Only one of the 76 patients required an additional injection of anesthetic to achieve adequate anesthesia. No morbidity was associated with the peribulbar anesthesia. Local anesthesia, particularly retrobulbar anesthesia, has been used as an alternative technique in an attempt to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with general anesthesia in ocular surgery, particularly in those patients with high-risk characteristics. Even with retrobulbar anesthesia, however, there is a risk of morbidity and, in rare cases, mortality. Our results suggest that the use of peribulbar anesthesia is a safe and effective means of anesthesia in strabismus surgery because of minimal associated morbidity.
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PMID:Peribulbar anesthesia for strabismus surgery. 234

Forty-nine patients, ranging in age from 12 to 77 years, underwent strabismus surgery under local anesthesia. With standard preoperative medication and a retrobulbar injection of 2% mepivacaine hydrochloride (hyaluronidase added in 12 patients), effective anesthesia was obtained. Twenty-four patients were observed during the immediate postoperative period, and return of extraocular muscle function and visual acuity was found to be complete an average of 3.8 hours after the injection. The addition of hyaluronidase significantly altered the duration of the anesthetic. Local anesthesia may be a preferable technique in terms of decreased morbidity, especially in the older patient. The short duration of anesthesia and lack of side effects also enable the surgeon to use adjustable sutures and make the final adjustment relatively early in the postoperative period.
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PMID:Retrobulbar anesthesia in strabismus surgery. 647 50

We describe a second cluster of cases of iatrogenic strabismus that occurred in clinical practices following cataract surgeries that occurred in 2000 when hyaluronidase was once again unavailable for use in periocular anesthetic regimens. Twelve cases of transient or permanent strabismus were referred by 4 anterior segment surgeons who had no previous cases of postcataract strabismus when performing periocular injections with hyaluronidase. The charts of the patients were reviewed retrospectively. Recurrence of an increase in postoperative strabismus when hyaluronidase became unavailable for a second time supports the concept that this enzyme may be more important than previously suspected in preventing damage to the extraocular muscles after periocular anesthetic injections.
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PMID:Second cluster of strabismus cases after periocular anesthesia without hyaluronidase. 1170 63