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

Six pedigrees including 107 animals of the breed German Brown Swiss were available to test for a single gene conditioning for convergent strabismus with exophthalmus. The regressive logit models of the segregation analysis showed that a major gene model with additively acting genes explained the segregation of affected animals in the pedigrees in the best way. Additionally, polygenic and environmental effects might be of importance in the occurrence of convergent strabismus with exophthalmus.
Dtsch Tierarztl Wochenschr 1991 Sep
PMID:[Heritability of strabismus convergens with exophthalmos in cattle]. 195 64

Asymptomatic eight-year old girl was admitted to our surgical department from ophthalmology complaining enlarged heart size at the routine check before operation of strabismus. By pericardiocentesis it was confirmed that pericardial effusion was chyle biochemically and microscopically. In spite of several medical trials (i.e. diuretics, pericardial drainage, complete starvation with parenteral nutrition), copious amount of chyle discharge, measured 180 ml per day, couldn't be controlled. Mediastinal mass lesion and thoracic duct anomaly were excluded by both thoracic CT and lymphangiography, and primary chylopericardium without thoracic duct anomalies was suspected preoperatively. The diagnosis of primary pericardium was confirmed by intraoperative thoracic ductography which visualized thoracic duct and it's tributaries more clear than that of preoperative lymphangiography. Low thoracic duct ligation with resection of duct 55 mm in length and fenestration of the pericardium through right thoracotomy was successfully carried out. She was discharged on 8th day after surgery without any problems. She is doing well 7 months postoperation after discharge with reduced heart size and returns to normal activity. We concluded that intraoperative thoracic ductography had some advantages in terms of more clear visualization of thoracic duct anastomosis, precise diagnosis of etiology and choice of surgical options.
Nihon Kyobu Geka Gakkai Zasshi 1991 Sep
PMID:[Successful surgical treatment of primary chylopericardium in infant--a usefulness of intraoperative thoracic ductgraphy]. 196 Apr 57

Prism adaptation, the preoperative use of prisms in acquired esotropia to determine the maximum angle of strabismus and to estimate fusional potential, has been suggested as a method of improving the results of initial surgery and minimizing the rate of reoperation. We performed a prospective, randomized, multicenter clinical trial of the effectiveness of prism adaptation. Two levels of randomization were used. Sixty percent of the patients underwent prism adaptation and 40% did not. Of those who responded to prisms with motor stability and sensory fusion, half underwent a conventional amount of surgery and half underwent augmented surgery based on the prism-adapted angle of deviation. Success rates were highest (54 [89%] of 61 patients) in prism adaptation responders who underwent augmented surgery and lowest (92 [72%] of 127 patients) in patients who did not undergo prism adaptation. Prism responders had better results with augmented surgery than with conventional surgery (54 [89%] of 61 patients vs 53 [79%] of 67 patients, P = .23). Our results indicated a significant beneficial overall effect of prism adaptation in patients with acquired esotropia (success rates, 83% vs 72%, P = .04). Although the process requires some additional time and effort, it appears to result in a higher rate of satisfactory alignment.
Arch Ophthalmol 1990 Sep
PMID:Efficacy of prism adaptation in the surgical management of acquired esotropia. Prism Adaptation Study Research Group. 204 55

It has previously been suggested that the difference between tonic vergence (TV) and distance heterophoria may relate either to proximally induced vergence or accommodative divergence. To identify which of these components was responsible for this difference, the present study compared TV and distance heterophoria in a population of 20 subjects. However, distance heterophoria was now assessed with open-loop accommodation. No significant difference was observed between these two measures. This suggests that the previously observed variations between TV and distance heterophoria (with accommodation closed-loop) were produced by accommodative divergence. However, in a subgroup of 7 subjects, measurements of TV were more convergent (greater than 2 delta) than the distance heterophoria. In these subjects, proximally induced vergence may have accounted for the difference in response.
Optom Vis Sci 1990 Sep
PMID:Distance heterophoria and tonic vergence. 223 23

We report on an Arabic sibship originating from Morocco in which four children manifest an undiagnosed sublethal multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), microcephaly, large soft pinnae, telecanthus or true hypertelorism with squint, flat face, unusual hooked nose, very narrow mouth, retrognathia, and extremely severe neurologic impairment. One child was stillborn. Three others died in a cachectic state during their second year. One child had a severe cerebral malformation compatible with semilobar holoprosencephaly. Other inconstant manifestations are anterior chamber cleavage defect, preaxial polydactyly of feet, interventricular septal defect, and atresia of the external auditory meatus. Autosomal recessive inheritance is likely.
Am J Med Genet 1990 Sep
PMID:Lambotte syndrome: microcephaly, holoprosencephaly, intrauterine growth retardation, facial anomalies, and early lethality--a new sublethal multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation syndrome in four sibs. 224 28

Eye-hand open-loop pointing responses were measured in eight patients before and after unilateral strabismus surgery. They showed large shifts in pointing responses with the operated eye and relatively small ones with the non-operated eye. The same pointing responses were examined in five normal subjects. Statistically significant shifts were found even in cases of normal subjects. From these results, it was speculated that visual localization and eye-hand coordination may change by some unknown factors or under casual conditions.
Nippon Ganka Gakkai Zasshi 1990 Sep
PMID:[Pointing response before and after strabismus surgery]. 224 68

Adjustable sutures allow eye muscle positions to be changed following strabismus surgery, when the patient is awake and able to cooperate in muscle balance testing. Bow-tie-knot and sliding-handle sutures can be adjusted within 24 hours after surgery. Scleral traction sutures, which can be used to fix the globe to periorbital tissues during postoperative healing, can be adjusted for up to 14 days after surgery. We describe these techniques as well as an adjustable loop suture for conjunctival closure.
Ophthalmic Surg 1990 Sep
PMID:Techniques of adjustable suture strabismus surgery. 225 Aug 71

We compared the clinical characteristics of esotropic, hypermetropic children whose strabismus was fully corrected with spectacles (refractive accommodative esotropia) with those who remained orthotropic (that is, had no manifest strabismus on the cover test) in the presence of uncorrected hypermetropia. In addition to a standard ophthalmologic and orthoptic examination, we determined the stimulus accommodative convergence/accommodation (AC/A) ratio by using the gradient method over a range of 6 diopters, the near point of accommodation, and random dot stereopsis. Hypermetropic patients without esotropia or significant esophoria were found to have a low AC/A ratio in contrast to those patients with refractive accommodative esotropia. This finding explains why esodeviations may be absent in some hypermetropic patients with uncorrected vision. We found a high prevalence of abnormally low near points of accommodation and defective or absent stereopsis in both groups of patients.
Am J Ophthalmol 1990 Sep 15
PMID:Accommodative convergence in hypermetropia. 239 54

Bailey-Lovie-Ferris visual acuity charts and Teller visual acuity cards were used to compare recognition and grating visual acuity at near testing distances in 32 children with anisometropic amblyopia without strabismus. Appropriate optical corrections were worn. Test-retest intraobserver reliability was higher for letters (r =.95) than for gratings (r = .68). Using 20/30 visual acuity or better as the criterion for normal visual acuity, eight eyes with letter visual acuities ranging from 20/42 to 20/138 would have been inaccurately found to be normal by using the Teller visual acuity cards alone. Grating visual acuity measurements tended to be better than letter visual acuity; and, in general, they did not worsen proportionately with poorer letter visual acuity.
Am J Ophthalmol 1990 Sep 15
PMID:A comparative study of grating and recognition visual acuity testing in children with anisometropic amblyopia without strabismus. 239 55

It has been suggested that development of central connections in the mammalian visual system is governed by a simple Hebbian rule of synaptic modifiability. Under such a rule, simultaneity of presynaptic and postsynaptic action potentials is a prerequisite for enhanced synaptic efficacy. The present paper reports the results of a study designed to test whether this hypothesis is applicable to the development of the thalamo-cortical visual pathway. In four-week-old kittens, exposure to a 2-d period of monocular deprivation was used to render the vast majority of cortical cells capable of being activated only by the nondeprived eye. During a subsequent 3-5 month recovery period, both eyes were open but surgically misaligned. This combination of conditions was chosen so that during the recovery period presynaptic activity originating from the initially deprived eye would be decorrelated from postsynaptic action potentials in cortical neurons. If synaptic modification is regulated by a simple Hebbian mechanism, then in this situation the deprived eye should be unable to recover control of cortical cells. In fact, the present results indicate that during the recovery period the proportion of cortical neurons dominated by the deprived eye rose to a level equal to that of the nondeprived eye--a result contrary to that predicted by a simple Hebbian rule of development. Histological analysis indicated that a similar level of recovery was present both within and outside of cortical layer IV, the main thalamo-recipient layer. As expected, the induced strabismus resulted in a failure of cortical binocularity to recover in these kittens. Although these results argue against a simple Hebbian mechanism of development, they are compatible with the hypothesis that synaptic modifiability is dependent upon correlations between presynaptic activity and local, subthreshold, postsynaptic changes. This alternative hypothesis has the advantage of allowing modification of local synaptic circuits within the dendritic arbors of a single neuron.
Vis Neurosci 1989 Sep
PMID:Strabismus does not prevent recovery from monocular deprivation: a challenge for simple Hebbian models of synaptic modification. 248 6


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