Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4014380 Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeMonkey neurophysiology suggests that changes in neural drive rather than extraocular muscle structure underlie sensory-induced strabismus. If this is true, then extraocular muscle structure should be normal. We used magnetic resonance imaging to measure horizontal rectus muscle size and contractility to determine whether muscle structure is a factor in human concomitant esotropia.MethodsHigh-resolution, quasicoronal plane magnetic resonance imaging was performed in target-controlled central gaze, abduction, and adduction in 13 orthotropic controls (mean age, 38 ± 19 years) and 12 adults (mean age, 52 ± 16 years) who had concomitant esotropia averaging 28Δ ± 18Δ at distance. Thyroid ophthalmopathy was excluded. Horizontal rectus muscle cross sections were determined in 6 contiguous, 2-mm-thick midorbital image planes. Contractility was computed in each plane as the difference in cross section from contraction to relaxation.ResultsMedial rectus muscle cross sections in multiple planes averaged up to 39% larger in esotropic patients than in controls (P < 0.005), whereas lateral rectus muscle cross sections in esotropia were up to 28% larger but only significantly larger in one plane (P < 0.02). Medial rectus contractility was increased by up to 60% in esotropic patients (P < 0.005), whereas lateral rectus contractility in esotropia was slightly but not significantly supernormal.ConclusionsMedial rectus muscle size is supernormal and lateral rectus muscle size is not subnormal in concomitant esotropia. This finding indicates that human concomitant esotropia is associated with peripheral muscular abnormality.

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