PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Postoperative changes of intermittent exotropia type as classified by 1-hour monocular occlusion.

  • Seok Hyun Bae,
  • Young Bok Lee,
  • Soolienah Rhiu,
  • Joo Yeon Lee,
  • Mi Young Choi,
  • Hae Jung Paik,
  • Key Hwan Lim,
  • Dong Gyu Choi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0200592
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. e0200592

Abstract

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PURPOSE:To evaluate postoperative changes of the intermittent exotropia type as classified by 1-hour monocular occlusion test. DESIGN:Institutional, retrospective study. METHODS:We retrospectively reviewed the medical records of 179 patients who had undergone surgery for intermittent exotropia with a postoperative follow-up of 6 months or more. We evaluated the exodeviation obtained before and after 1-hour monocular occlusion preoperatively and again at postoperative 1, 3 and 6 months. Intermittent exotropia was divided into 4 types according to Burian's classification. The main outcome measure was the distribution of intermittent exotropia type based on 1-hour monocular occlusion in both pre- and postoperative periods. RESULTS:Of the 179 patients, 152 (84.9%) were assigned preoperatively to the basic type, 14 (7.8%) to the pseudo-divergence excess type, and 13 (7.8%) to the convergence insufficiency type. At postoperative 1, 3, and 6 months, the exotropia-type distribution was shifted predominantly to the basic type (p<0.001, p = 0.004, p = 0.029, respectively). Among the preoperative basic-type patients, 96.9% maintained that type postoperatively. However, only 18.2 and 11.1% of the pseudo-divergence excess and convergence insufficiency types maintained the same type. The proportions of the basic type had increased at postoperative 6 months, from 87.8 to 95.7% for bilateral lateral rectus (BLR) recession, from 73.7 to 92.3% for unilateral recess-resect (R&R), and from 88.0 to 95.0% for unilateral lateral rectus (ULR) recession. CONCLUSION:The type of intermittent exotropia changed mostly to the basic type postoperatively even as classified after 1-hour monocular occlusion. This finding was consistent regardless of the surgical methods (BLR, ULR recession and R&R).