Strabismus Flashcards

1
Q

Orthophoria

A

the ideal condition of ocular

alignment under binocular conditions

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2
Q

Heterophoria

A

ocular deviation kept latent by the fusional

mechanism (latent strabismus)

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3
Q

Heterotropia

A

deviation that is manifest and not kept under control by
the fusional mechanism (manifest
strabismus)

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4
Q

Eso-

A

this is also known as

convergent strabismus.

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5
Q

Exo-

A

this is also known as

divergent strabismus.

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6
Q

Hyper-

A

This is also known as

vertical strabismus.

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7
Q

Hypo-

A

This is also known as

vertical strabismus

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8
Q

-phoria

A
A latent deviation (e.g.,
esophoria, exophoria, right
hyperphoria) that is controlled
by the fusional mechanism so that
The eyes remain aligned under
normal binocular vision
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9
Q

-tropia

A
A manifest deviation (eg,
esotropia, exotropia, right
hypertropia, excyclotropia) that
exceeds the control of the fusional
mechanism so that the eyes are not
aligned under binocular conditions
Can be intermittent or constant
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10
Q

Comitant : (concomitant)

A
The
size of the deviation does not
vary by more than a few prism
diopters with direction of gaze
or with the eye used for fixating.
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11
Q

Incomitant : (noncomitant)

A
The
deviation varies in size with the
direction of gaze or with the
eye used for fixating. Most
incomitant strabismus is
paralytic or restrictive.
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12
Q

Alternating fixation

A

Spontaneous alternation of fixation from one eye to the other.

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13
Q

Monocular fixation

A

Definite preference for fixation with one eye.

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14
Q

Congenital

A

before 6 months / infantile. Antonym: acquired

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15
Q

Torsional deviation

A

Incyclodeviation or Excyclodeviation

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16
Q

rectus muscles

A

four of them: superior, inferior (CN VI), lateral, medial. All others (CN III innervation)

17
Q

oblique muscles

A

two of them: superior (CN IV) and inferior (CN III).

18
Q

Levator palpebrae superioris

A

LPS - innervated by CN III - elevates and retracts the upper eyelid

19
Q

primary position

A

the normal state of the eyes. The primary action of the muscle is the way the eye turns when it is contracted, away from the primary position. Eye can turn up to 50 degrees in any direction, but typically more than 15-20 degrees will result in head movement

20
Q

MR vs LR

A

medial rectus vs lateral rectus. Medial is an adductor, lateral is an abductor. The MR muscle is the only
rectus muscle that does not
have an oblique muscle running
tangential to it

21
Q

annulus of Zinn

A

ring of fibrous tissue surrounding the optic nerve at its entrance at the apex of the orbit. Origin of five of seven EOM

22
Q

limbus

A

border of iris and sclera

23
Q

Tenon’s capsule

A

membrane that envelopes the eyeball from the limbus to the optic nerve, separating it from the orbital fat and the socket which it moves

24
Q

retinoscopy

A

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAreDffuVCQ

25
Q

epicanthic fold

A

denoting a fold of skin from the upper eyelid covering the inner angle of the eye, typical in many peoples of eastern Asia and found as a congenital abnormality elsewhere.