Literature DB >> 31986106

Phoria Adaptation: The Ghost in the Machine.

Michael C Brodsky1.   

Abstract

Importance: Phoria adaptation is a central tonus mechanism that provides plasticity to binocular alignment. However, its slow dissipation inevitably adulterates our clinical strabismus measurements.Purpose: To examine the role of phoria adaptation in normal binocular control, understand its neural substrate, and explore how it can alter our clinical measurements in common forms of strabismus.
Methods: Investigation into the role of phoria adaptation in maintaining binocular alignment and its role in altering clinical strabismus measurement.
Results: Phoria adaptation permeates all aspects of binocular alignment. It accounts for the stability of orthophoria, "latent" phorias, tenacious proximal fusion in intermittent exotropia, large fusional vertical amplitudes in congenital superior oblique muscle palsy, the "eating up" of prisms in accommodative esotropia, the smaller measured distance deviation in patients with high AC/A ratio or convergence excess, absence of physiologic skew deviation during head tilt, fusional divergence amplitudes, and spread of comitance. This binocular control system probably arises from a cerebellar learning mechanism that involves input via climbing fibers to the inferior olive, which provide a powerful timing and error signal to the cerebellar Purkinje cells to produce activity-dependent modification analogous to long-term potentiation.Conclusions: Phoria adaptation is generated by a central neural integrator that provides inertia, plasticity, and positional stability to human binocular vision.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Phoria adaptation; normal binocular control; strabismus

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 31986106     DOI: 10.1080/2576117X.2019.1706699

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Binocul Vis Ocul Motil        ISSN: 2576-117X


  1 in total

1.  Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Intermittent Exotropia According to the Response to Short-term Prism Adaptation Test.

Authors:  Young In Yun; Seong-Joon Kim; Jae Ho Jung
Journal:  Korean J Ophthalmol       Date:  2020-10-05
  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.