Magnetic resonance imaging of the medial rectus muscle of patients with consecutive exotropia after medial rectus muscle recession
- PMID: 20541264
- DOI: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2010.02.006
Magnetic resonance imaging of the medial rectus muscle of patients with consecutive exotropia after medial rectus muscle recession
Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the morphologic characteristics of the medial rectus muscle in patients with consecutive exotropia.
Design: Retrospective, nonrandomized, interventional study.
Participants and controls: Eleven eyes of 10 patients with consecutive exotropia were studied. Thirteen eyes of 13 age-matched normal subjects were studied as controls.
Methods: All of the patients underwent an advancement of a previously operated medial rectus muscle. Patients were divided into 3 groups based on the insertion of the medial rectus muscle: Normally recessed stretched scar, and slipped muscle.
Main outcome measures: A comparison was made of the clinical findings, intraoperative findings, and distance from the limbus to the medial rectus muscle measured on magnetic resonance images among the groups.
Results: The medial rectus of 4 eyes of 3 patients had normally recessed insertions and 7 eyes had abnormal insertions (3 stretched scars, 4 slipped muscles). The clinical findings were not different among the 3 groups. The magnetic resonance images showed that the medial rectus muscle was located closest to the limbus in the control subjects and most distant in the patients with a slipped muscle (P<0.005). The clinical findings in the patients with a stretched scar and with normally recessed were indistinguishable.
Conclusions: Magnetic resonance images of the medial rectus muscles of the control subjects and operated groups are significantly different morphologically. A slipped medial rectus muscle has characteristic magnetic resonance findings that are distinguishable from the muscle with normally recessed and stretched scar.
Copyright © 2010 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Comment in
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Consecutive exotropia.Ophthalmology. 2011 Jul;118(7):1490-1; author reply 1491. doi: 10.1016/j.ophtha.2011.04.006. Ophthalmology. 2011. PMID: 21724060 No abstract available.
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