Purpose. Development or restoration of binocular vision is one of the key goals of strabismus management; however, the functional impact of stereoacuity has largely been neglected. Methods. Subjects aged 10 to 30 years with normal, reduced, or nil stereoacuity performed three tasks: Purdue pegboard (measured how many pegs placed in 30 seconds), bead threading (with two sizes of bead, to increase the difficulty; measured time taken to thread a number of beads), and water pouring (measured both accuracy and time). All tests were undertaken both with and without occlusion of one eye. Results. One hundred forty-three subjects were recruited, 32.9% (n = 47) with a manifest deviation. Performances on the pegboard and bead tasks were significantly worse in the nil stereoacuity group when compared with that of the normal stereoacuity group. On the large and small bead tasks, those with reduced stereoacuity were better than those with nil stereoacuity (when the Preschool Randot Stereoacuity Test [Stereo Optical Co, Inc., Chicago, IL] results were used to determine stereoacuity levels). Comparison of the short-term monocular conditions (those with normal stereoacuity but occluded) with nil stereoacuity showed that, on all measures, the performance was best in the nil stereoacuity group and was statistically significant for the large and small beads task, irrespective of which test result was used to define the stereoacuity levels. Conclusions. Performance on motor skills tasks was related to stereoacuity, with subjects with normal stereoacuity performing best on all tests. This quantifiable degradation in performance on some motor skill tasks supports the need to implement management strategies to maximize development of high-grade stereoacuity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/iovs.09-4434 | DOI Listing |
J AAPOS
June 2024
Stein Eye Institute, Department of Ophthalmology, University of California Los Angeles David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California.
Purpose: To assess the utility of 3D, tablet-based, glasses-free Accurate STEReotest (ASTEROID) in children compared with the Titmus test.
Methods: Children aged 5-13 years were enrolled in a single-center, nonrandomized, observational comparison study and analyzed by age (5-7 vs 8-13 years) and visual acuity (20/25 or better in both eyes vs abnormal). Each participant underwent both the ASTEROID and Titmus stereoacuity tests.
Saudi J Ophthalmol
March 2023
Department of Ophthalmology, Bangalore Medical College and Research Institute, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India.
Purpose: Improved stereoacuity following delayed strabismus surgery is associated with long-term alignment of eyes and reduced severity of amblyopia. The objective of this study is to evaluate stereopsis following delayed strabismus surgery in early-onset strabismus.
Methods: It is a hospital-based prospective, nonrandomized, interventional case study.
Klin Monbl Augenheilkd
October 2022
Boston Eye Care Center, Cambridge, United States.
Background: To investigate whether detection of disconjugacy of eye movements during attempted fixation, or interocular position instability, may serve as a single sensitive test for amblyopia.
Patients/methods And Material: Binocular eye movements were recorded at 500 Hz using the EyeLink 1000 eye tracker (SR Research Ltd., Kanata, Ontario, Canada) and analyzed using EyeLink software and Matlab (MathWorks, Natick, MA, USA).
Purpose: To compare improvement in long-term stereoacuity between patients with refractive accommodative esotropia (RAET) with initial subnormal stereopsis (between 120 and 1,980 arcsec of stereoacuity) and nil stereopsis.
Methods: The medical records of patients 4 years and older who had RAET with initial subnormal stereopsis and nil stereopsis and a minimum follow-up period of 5 years were retrospectively reviewed. Improvement in stereoacuity at the last follow-up visit and the factors that could influence it were compared between the initial subnormal stereopsis and the nil stereopsis groups.
J Binocul Vis Ocul Motil
October 2021
Pediatric Vision Laboratory, Retina Foundation of the Southwest , Dallas, Texas.
: Age norms and testability for 3-5 year old children have been reported for the PASS III stereotest using a pointing response. We aimed to expand the normative data to children as young as 6 months, assess testability, and evaluate validity use of the PASS III as a preferential-looking test for younger children and children with special needs. : 68 control children, 362 children with eye conditions, and 167 children with special needs were tested with the PASS III.
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