An entoptic phenomenon where the viewer perceives a faint, yellowish brushstroke pattern when viewing a polarized light source. This pattern arises from the radially arranged yellow pigment fibers in the macula lutea. Haidinger’s brushes are used to assess fixation in amblyopia. If fixation is foveal, the brushstroke pattern moves in synchrony with eye movements. However, if fixation is eccentric, the brushes appear displaced from the object being viewed.
A surgical technique used to treat torsional diplopia and excyclotorsion resulting from superior oblique palsy where the superior oblique tendon is divided lengthwise into anterior and posterior halves. The anterior one-third of the tendon fibers are disinserted and transposed anterolaterally to be sutured near the superior border of the lateral rectus muscle insertion. This enhances the incyclotorsional effect of the superior oblique to correct the excyclotorsion, without affecting the vertical position.
For any intended eye movement, the neural signals (innervation) sent from the brain to the extraocular muscles are equal for both eyes. This results in conjugate, yoked movements where the two eyes move symmetrically in the same direction.
Also known as dissociated phoria, heterophoria is a latent condition where the eyes tend to deviate from the orthophoric position when binocular fusion is disrupted. It requires fusional vergence to maintain bifixation and alignment. Heterophoria can be exophoric (outward deviation) or esophoric (inward deviation). It is measured using dissociating tests that disrupt binocular fusion, like the cover test or Maddox rod. Excessive heterophoria can cause symptoms like eyestrain, diplopia, and asthenopia, but differs from strabismus, which is a manifest misalignment.
A test to estimate the angle of ocular misalignment or strabismus. The examiner notes the position of the corneal light reflex relative to the pupil center. A temporally displaced reflex indicates exotropia (outward deviation), while a nasally displaced reflex indicates esotropia (inward deviation).
A rare binocular vision anomaly characterized by an active avoidance or suppression of bifoveal fusion. Patients experience constant diplopia but are unable to fuse or tolerate the double images. It often presents in childhood with long-standing strabismus or amblyopia and may involve abnormal cortical wiring or sensory adaptations. Treatment is difficult as prisms, occlusion, or surgery typically cannot eliminate the diplopia. Over time, patients learn to ignore or suppress one of the images.
A transposition surgery used to treat complete lateral rectus palsy or sixth nerve palsy that involves disinserting the lateral halves of the superior and inferior rectus muscle tendons and transposing them to be sutured adjacent to the lateral rectus muscle insertion. This augments the lateral rectus function by adding vector forces from the transposed vertical rectus muscles, improving abduction and reducing esotropia caused by the palsy.
A binocular vision condition where one eye has a tendency to be vertically higher than the other when fusion is disrupted.
A type of vertical strabismus where the visual axes are vertically misaligned, with the hypertropic eye appearing higher compared to the fellow eye. The deviation may be constant or intermittent, comitant or incomitant.
Hypophoria is a binocular vision condition where one eye has a tendency to be vertically lower than the other when fusion is disrupted.
A type of vertical strabismus where the visual axes are vertically misaligned, with the hypotropic eye appearing lower or more depressed compared to the fellow eye. The deviation may be constant or intermittent, comitant or incomitant.