Forty-five Years of Studying Intermittent Exotropia – What Have I Learned? The WSPOS Keynote Strabismus Lecture, October 3, 2020.

PubMed ID: 35819892

Author(s): Kushner BJ. Forty-five Years of Studying Intermittent Exotropia – What Have I Learned? The WSPOS Keynote Strabismus Lecture, October 3, 2020. J Binocul Vis Ocul Motil. 2022 Jul-Sep;72(3):131-138. Epub 2022 Jul 12. Erratum In: J Binocul Vis Ocul Motil. 2022 Oct-Dec;72(4):248. PMID 35819892

Journal: Journal Of Binocular Vision And Ocular Motility, Volume 72, Issue 3, 2022

There are three keys to understanding how the new way of classifying and treating intermittent exotropia (IXT) differs from Burian’s classic classification. First, the assumption that lateral rectus surgery selectively affects the distance deviation, recess/resect procedures affect the distance and near equally, and that medial rectus surgery selectively affects the near deviation, are false assumptions. Second, AC/A ratios in IXT can be calculated in all the usual manners, provided that any near measurement used in the calculation be made after prolonged monocular occlusion to eliminate the contaminating effect of the Scobee phenomenon. Third, the use of +3 diopter (D) lenses at near and prolonged monocular occlusion are not interchangeable and work on different mechanisms, the former on accommodative convergence and the latter on fusional convergence. All patients with IXT should have a measurement taken after prolonged monocular occlusion, as well as while fixating on a far distant outdoor target prior to surgery, which should target the largest angle measured.