| Literature DB >> 26445526 |
Patrick Quercia1, Madeleine Quercia2, Léonard J Feiss2, François Allaert3.
Abstract
In this study, we looked for the presence of vertical heterophoria (VH) in 42 dyslexic children (22 males and 20 females) aged 118.5±12.9 months who were compared with a control group of 22 nondyslexic children (eleven males and eleven females) aged 112±9.8 months. Dyslexics presented a low-level (always <1 prism diopter) VH combined with torsion. This oculomotor feature clearly separates the dyslexic group from the normal readers group. It is independent of the type of dyslexia. The essential feature of this VH is a lability that appears during specific stimulation of sensory receptors involved in postural regulation. This lability is demonstrated using a vertical Maddox test conducted under very specific conditions in which postural sensors are successively stimulated in a predetermined order. A quantitative variation in this VH may be seen during the Bielchowsky Head Tilt Test, which reveals hypertonia of the lower or upper oblique muscles. Vertical orthophoria can be achieved by placing low-power prisms asymmetrically within the direction of action of the superior or inferior oblique muscles. The selection of power and axis is not only guided by elements of the eye examination but also from observation of postural muscle tone. All these elements suggest that the VH could be of postural origin and somehow related to the vertical action of the oblique muscles. VH and torsion are not harmful per se. There is no statistical relationship between their level and the various parameters used to assess the reading skills of dyslexic children. VH and torsion could be a clinical marker of global proprioceptive dysfunction responsible for high-level multisensory disturbances secondary to poor spatial localization of visual and auditory information. This dysfunction might also explain the motor disorders concomitant to dyslexia.Entities:
Keywords: dyslexia; oblique muscles; ocular torsion; postural control; prism; proprioception
Year: 2015 PMID: 26445526 PMCID: PMC4590632 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S88497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Figure 1How to indicate the position of the line without changing the position of the tongue.
Notes: Thumb up represents red line above the light, horizontal thumb represents red line strictly in the center of the light, and thumb downward represents red line under the light.
Index of lability
| Conditions | (1) Sitting in natural position
| (2) Sitting straight up without plantar support
| (3) Tip of the tongue firmly touching the central retro-incisor papillae
| (4) Lips tightly serrated
| (5) Tip of the tongue planted against the lower incisors
| (6) Standing in a natural position
| (7) Standing in a natural position with a foam insole
| |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| h | H | O | H | h | H | h | H | O | H | O | H | O | O | No of the condition giving VO | Index of lability | |
| Points for lability index | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 4 | |||||||
Note: Each time that the type of VH changes as a result of the stimulation of one sensor (when compared to the previous stimulation) gives 1 point.
Abbreviations: VH, vertical heterophoria; O, line in the middle of the light; h, line over the light; H, line under the light; VO, vertical orthophoria.