Comparison of bilateral lateral rectus recession and unilateral recession resection for basic type intermittent exotropia in children.

TitleComparison of bilateral lateral rectus recession and unilateral recession resection for basic type intermittent exotropia in children.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsWang L, Wu Q, Kong X, Li Z
JournalThe British journal of ophthalmology
Date Published2013 May 4
Abstract

AIMS: To compare surgical outcome of bilateral lateral rectus recession (BLR-rec) and unilateral lateral rectus recession combined with medial rectus resection (R&R) for the basic type of intermittent exotropia (IXT) in children. METHODS: Eighty-five consecutive patients aged 3-15 years old with the basic type IXT who underwent surgery and had a minimum postoperative follow-up of 6 months were retrospectively reviewed. Thirty-eight patients underwent BLR-rec and 47 underwent R&R. Successful surgical alignment was defined as esophoria/tropia ≤5 PD (prism dioptres) to exophoria/tropia ≤8 PD in primary gaze while viewing distant or near targets. RESULTS: After a mean follow-up of 14.8±9.5 months, the subjects who had undergone R&R surgery had a significantly higher success rate than those who had BLR-rec surgery (85.1% vs 65.8%, p=0.037). The undercorrection rate was significantly lower in the R&R group than in the BLR-rec group (6.4% vs 23.7%, p=0.023) and there was no significant difference in the overcorrection rate between the two groups (10.5% vs 8.5%, p=1.000). CONCLUSIONS: R&R is more effective than BLR-rec surgery in the long term for the basic type IXT in children.

DOI10.1136/bcr-2013-009516
Alternate JournalBr J Ophthalmol