Abstract

Surgical innovations in strabismus provide opportunities to improve visual function, eye alignment, and cosmesis in rare pediatric ophthalmological conditions. Monocular elevation deficiency is a rare and multifactorial disease in which the affected eye is equally limited in terms of elevation during adduction and abduction. We aimed to present a novel procedure for the treatment of acquired monocular elevation deficiency using the paretic superior rectus muscle as a globe suspender to resolve hypotropia. We report the case of an eight-year-old girl with left eyelid ptosis and hypotropia two months after draining a left orbital abscess. Left inferior rectus muscle recession was performed at five years, with residual left hypotropia. Ophthalmological examination revealed a best-corrected visual acuity of 20/20 OD and 20/100 OS. Severe left eyelid ptosis and poor levator function were also observed. Extraocular motility showed left hypotropia of 40 prism diopters with the left superior rectus muscle under action (-4) in the adduction and abduction positions. A force duction test negative for restrictions on the inferior rectus muscle was performed intraoperatively. To reduce the risks of the Knapp procedure, the left superior rectus muscle was split into medial and temporal halves. Double-armed sutures were secured in half, and the halves were detached from the sclera. The medial and temporal halves were reattached anteriorly to the medial and lateral rectus insertions, respectively. Eight weeks after surgery, the patient had nine prism diopters of hypotropia in the primary gaze. Ten weeks after surgery, there was no change in visual acuity. In the cover test, the patient exhibited residual left hypotropia of nine prism diopters with a restriction (-4) of elevation in adduction and abduction. The parents were pleased with the satisfactory cosmetic outcomes, and postoperative clinical photographs of the patient showed improved hypotropia and persistent minimal elevation of the left eye during adduction and abduction. Superior rectus muscle splitting and vertical transposition to the medial and lateral rectus could be safer and simpler alternatives to the Knapp procedure and may offer a lower risk of anterior segment ischemia. Further studies are required to confirm these findings.

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