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. 2011 Nov-Dec;48(6):341-6.
doi: 10.3928/01913913-20110118-02. Epub 2011 Jan 25.

Improvement in visual acuity following surgery for correction of head posture in infantile nystagmus syndrome

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Improvement in visual acuity following surgery for correction of head posture in infantile nystagmus syndrome

Anand Kumar et al. J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus. 2011 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

Purpose: To report the effect of the abnormal head posture (AHP) correcting procedures on the visual acuity improvement in patients with infantile nystagmus syndrome (INS) and the visual acuity improvement outcomes in different AHP correcting surgeries in INS.

Methods: This was a prospective, non-randomized, interventional study. Twenty-eight patients underwent the Anderson-Kestenbaum procedure or the modified Anderson procedure with or without tenotomy of at least one horizontal recti for correction of AHP. Best-corrected binocular null zone acuity and degree of AHP was recorded preoperatively and compared with those done 1 month postoperatively.

Results: The average null zone logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution acuity was 0.42 preoperatively, which improved significantly to 0.33 postoperatively (P = .002). The AHP ranged from 10° to 40° (mean: 20.89°), which improved significantly to a mean of 3.21° (P = .000). No significant difference (P = .65) was found in the visual acuity improvement among patients who underwent the Anderson-Kestenbaum procedure or the modified Anderson procedure with or without tenotomy. No significant difference in the visual acuity improvement was seen in patients who underwent tenotomy of at least one horizontal rectus muscle along with the modified Anderson procedure compared to those who underwent the modified Anderson procedure alone (P = .28).

Conclusion: The procedures used mainly for correction of AHP in INS do yield significant improvement in the visual acuity. This improvement is seen in patients undergoing surgery for both horizontal and vertical AHP.

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