Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4015062 Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundA change in the angle of deviation is often used to monitor the change in severity of intermittent exotropia over time; nevertheless, thresholds for a clinically significant change in angle have not been determined. We analyzed variability associated with test–retest differences and short-term variability in the condition, to provide thresholds for assessing clinically significant, long-term change in angle of intermittent exotropia.MethodsTwenty-six children with intermittent exotropia (median age, 7; range, 1-13 years) underwent repeat prism and alternate cover test measures during 3 or 4 examinations (2 hours apart) over the course of a day; 95% repeatability coefficients were derived to determine test–retest differences at distance and near fixation.ResultsDerived 95% repeatability coefficients at distance were 3.4Δ (95% CI, 0.7Δ-6.2Δ) for angles ≤20Δ and 7.2Δ (95% CI, 4.4Δ-9.9Δ) for angles >20Δ; at near, 6.6Δ (95% CI, 3.7Δ-9.6Δ) for angles ≤20Δ and 12.8Δ (95% CI, 5.3Δ-20.3Δ) for angles >20Δ.ConclusionsTest–retest reliability data in this study provide thresholds to help determine clinically significant change in angle of strabismus in children with intermittent exotropia. These data should facilitate evidence-based assessment of long-term change in intermittent exotropia over time.

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