Yoshitaka Nakao1, Tohru Kimura. 1. Kimura Eye and Internal Medicine Hospital, 2-3-28 Nakadoori, Kure, Hiroshima, 737-0046, Japan, nakao@hiroshima-u.ac.jp.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To survey the prevalence of highly myopic strabismus among patients with severe myopia and to elucidate its anatomic mechanism. METHODS: The subjects (mean age 48.5 ± 17.8 years) were 452 Japanese patients (778 eyes) who presented between May 2011 and April 2012 and were diagnosed as severely myopic (objective refractive error ≥-6.00 D or axial length ≥ 27 mm). For diagnosis, the eye position at 0.33 m, axial length, and diagnostic positions of gaze were determined; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was also used. RESULTS: Sixteen eyes of 9 patients fulfilled the disease criteria, and strabismus fixus was observed for 3 eyes of 3 patients. Disease prevalence was 2.65 %. The mean age of the 12 patients was 65.5 ± 17.9 years. For 18 eyes for which the axial length could be measured, mean axial length was 28.9 ± 2.03 mm. For the 16 eyes examined by MRI the mean dislocation angle was 132° ± 14.0°. The axial length was 26 to <30 mm for 13 of the 16 eyes, dislocation angle was 110° to <150° for 14 eyes, and both axial length and dislocation angle were within these ranges for 12 eyes. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of the disease was 2.65 %. However, this was not a general epidemiological survey and the screening criteria did not adequately cover all disease cases. In addition, even for eyes that are still mildly-moderately myopic, this disease can develop in the presence of orbital pulley abnormalities.
PURPOSE: To survey the prevalence of highly myopic strabismus among patients with severe myopia and to elucidate its anatomic mechanism. METHODS: The subjects (mean age 48.5 ± 17.8 years) were 452 Japanese patients (778 eyes) who presented between May 2011 and April 2012 and were diagnosed as severely myopic (objective refractive error ≥-6.00 D or axial length ≥ 27 mm). For diagnosis, the eye position at 0.33 m, axial length, and diagnostic positions of gaze were determined; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was also used. RESULTS: Sixteen eyes of 9 patients fulfilled the disease criteria, and strabismus fixus was observed for 3 eyes of 3 patients. Disease prevalence was 2.65 %. The mean age of the 12 patients was 65.5 ± 17.9 years. For 18 eyes for which the axial length could be measured, mean axial length was 28.9 ± 2.03 mm. For the 16 eyes examined by MRI the mean dislocation angle was 132° ± 14.0°. The axial length was 26 to <30 mm for 13 of the 16 eyes, dislocation angle was 110° to <150° for 14 eyes, and both axial length and dislocation angle were within these ranges for 12 eyes. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of the disease was 2.65 %. However, this was not a general epidemiological survey and the screening criteria did not adequately cover all disease cases. In addition, even for eyes that are still mildly-moderately myopic, this disease can develop in the presence of orbital pulley abnormalities.
Authors: Sei Yeul Oh; Robert A Clark; Federico Velez; Arthur L Rosenbaum; Joseph L Demer Journal: Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci Date: 2002-07 Impact factor: 4.799
Authors: Toshiaki Goseki; Soh Youn Suh; Laura Robbins; Stacy L Pineles; Federico G Velez; Joseph L Demer Journal: Am J Ophthalmol Date: 2019-09-14 Impact factor: 5.258