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Outcome of inferior and superior rectus recession in Graves' orbitopathy patients. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the effectiveness of unilateral inferior rectus recession surgery, with or without additional recession of the contralateral superior rectus, in patients with Graves' Orbitopathy (GO).
  • Results showed significant improvement in squint angles post-surgery, with the IR-group achieving a 74% success rate compared to 64% in the IR-SR-group.
  • Both groups demonstrated improvements in eye elevation, while overall eye movement range remained stable or improved, indicating that surgery positively affected motility without changing muscle size impact.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the surgical effect of unilateral inferior rectus recession (IR-group) with or without a recession of contralateral superior rectus (IR-SR-group) on squint angle and motility restrictions in Graves' Orbitopathy (GO) patients.

Design: Retrospective case series.

Materials And Methods: Primary outcome parameters were the changes of squint angle 3 months and 6-12 months postoperatively. As in a previous study, success was defined as a postoperative vertical squint angle of ≤3° in primary position and on downgaze. Secondary outcome parameters were the influence of surgery on duction range and influence of muscle size on dose-effect response.

Results: Fifty-six patients were included in the study; 31 patients in the IR-group and 25 patients in the IR-SR-group. The amount of (fixed suture) recession ranged from 2 mm to 7 mm. Vertical deviations in primary position changed from 8.0° [95% CI 6.6-9.7°] to 1.0° [95% CI -0.4-6.5°] in the IR-group and from 17.0° [95% CI 15.7-20.0°] to 1.5° [95% CI 0.8-2.9°] in the IR-SR-group. The success rate was 74% in the IR-group and 64% in the IR-SR-group. Elevation significantly improved in both groups (IR-group p = 0.007; IR-SR- group p = 0.000). The volume of vertical rectus muscles as assessed on CT-scans did not influence the dose-effect response.

Conclusions: The highest success rate and highest reduction of depression was found in the IR-group. The total duction range remained stable after strabismus surgery (IR-group) or improved (IR-SR-group). Both squint angle and cyclodeviation remained stable during long time follow-up (6-12 months after surgery).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/01676830.2015.1014501DOI Listing

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