Diplopia: characteristics and etiologic distribution in a referral-based university hospital.

J Neurol

Department of Neurology, Clinical Neuroscience Center, Dizziness Center, Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam, Republic of Korea.

Published: February 2023

Background And Objectives: The etiologic distribution and clinical features of diplopia may differ according to the specialties involved in the management. This study aimed to establish the clinical features and underlying etiologies of diplopia by recruiting patients from all departments.

Methods: We reviewed the medical records of 4127 patients with diplopia as the chief complaint, who had been recruited from all departments at Seoul National University Bundang Hospital, Seongnam, Republic of Korea, from 2003 to 2020.

Results: Diplopia was binocular in 3557 (94.2%) and monocular in 219 (5.8%) patients. The common causes of binocular diplopia included microvascular (n = 516, 14.5%), strokes (n = 412, 11.6%), neoplastic (n = 304, 8.5%), myasthenia gravis (n = 253, 7.1%), traumatic (n = 240, 6.7%), and decompensated phoria (n = 232, 6.5%), and comprised more than a half of the causes. Patients with binocular diplopia were usually managed by neurologists (2549/3557, 71.7%), followed by ophthalmologists (2247/3557, 63.2%), emergency physicians (1528/3557, 43.0%), neurosurgeons (361/3557, 10.1%), and others (271/3557, 7.6%). The etiologies of binocular diplopia differed markedly according to the patients' age and the specialties involved in the management (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: Given the differences in the etiologic distribution of diplopia according to the patients' age and the specialties involved in the management, the results of previous reports on the characteristics and etiology of diplopia, primarily performed in a single specialty department, should be interpreted with a possible selection bias.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-022-11471-7DOI Listing

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