Unilateral Horizontal Rectus Muscle Recessions for Pediatric Comitant Strabismus.

J Binocul Vis Ocul Motil

Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Neurosciences, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

Published: July 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • A unilateral horizontal rectus muscle recession (UHR) takes less time and has lower risks compared to bilateral procedures, leading to easier recovery in pediatric patients.
  • A study reviewed the outcomes of UMR for esotropia (ET) and ULR for exotropia (XT), finding an overall success rate of 71.9%; XT surgeries showed higher success at 80%, while ET had mixed results.
  • The research suggested that ULR for small to medium XT deviations was more successful, while large UMR and ULR had lower success rates, and post-operative issues were common but not often severe.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Compared to bilateral horizontal rectus muscle recessions (BHR), a unilateral horizontal rectus muscle recession (UHR) confers shorter operating time and anesthesia exposure, limits complication risks to one eye, and requires less recovery from the patient.

Methods: Retrospective chart review of pediatric patients who underwent unilateral medial rectus recession (UMR) for esotropia (ET), or unilateral lateral rectus recession (ULR) for exotropia (XT). Primary successes were defined as maximum distance deviation at post-operative month 3: -12 to +5 for ET, -5 to +12 for XT. Rates of postoperative horizontal incomitance (HI) >5 PD and success for small medium, and large (in mm, respectively, ET: <5, 5-6 mm, >6; XT: <8, 8-10, >10) recessions were analyzed.

Results: Seventeen ETs and 40 XTs were analyzed. Overall primary success was 71.9% (p = .02). Significantly, 80% (95% CI: 67.60,92.40) XTs succeeded. ETs were equally likely to succeed (53.9%) or fail (47.1%) (p = .22). For patients without significant preoperative HI, average postoperative HI was 3.90 PD (95% CI: 0.20, 7.60) for ETs; 5.48 PD (95% CI: 3.65, 7.32) for XTs.

Conclusions: UHR was 71.9% successful in treating pediatric comitant strabismus. ULR for XT, particularly small to medium deviations, was most likely to succeed. In contrast to prior reports, large UMR and ULR were less likely to succeed and post-operative incomitance was frequent but rarely clinically significant.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

horizontal rectus
12
rectus muscle
12
unilateral horizontal
8
muscle recessions
8
pediatric comitant
8
comitant strabismus
8
rectus recession
8
small medium
8
rectus
5
unilateral
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!