Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectiveStrabismic amblyopia is a motor and sensory deficit produced by unilateral constant strabismus and binocular imbalance. The aim of this study was to analyse the retinal fixation pattern using microperimetry in subjects with strabismus with and without amblyopia associated, and to compare the results with those obtained in normal subjects.MethodsProspective comparative study conducted at the Optometric Clinic of the University of Valencia and Oftalvist Alicante (Spain) including 46 eyes with ages from 3 to 16 years. Three groups were differentiated: patients with persistent strabismic amblyopia after occlusion and active therapy (group 1, 7 patients, 30.4%), strabismic patients without amblyopia (group 2, 8 patients, 34.8%) and a control group (8 patients, 34.8%). Microperimetric analysis was performed with the Macular Integrity Assessment (MAIA) system (Centervue, Padova, Italy) and using the following parameters: P1% and P2% fixation indexes, and the ellipse areas (BCEA) for 95% and 63% of points for the first 10 seconds, 30 seconds, 60 seconds, and the total examination time.ResultsSignificant differences were found between groups for dominant eyes in P2 calculated at 30 (p = .04) and 60 seconds (p = .03). However, these differences between groups in non-dominant eyes were close to statistical significance (p = .07 and p = .08). Specifically, P2 was significantly lower in group 1 compared to control group (p = .01). Best corrected visual acuity was found to be significantly correlated (p ≤ .04) with total P1 (dominant eye, r = −0.51; non-dominant eye, r = −0.50), total P2 (dominant eye, r = −0.50; non-dominant eye, r = −0.50), and BCEA63 (dominant eye, r = 0.50; non-dominant eye, r = 0.40) and BCEA95 (dominant eye, r = 0.50; non-dominant eye, r = 0.40) measured at 10 seconds.ConclusionsThe preliminary results of this study seem to indicate that subjects with strabismus have fixation instability regardless of the presence or absence of amblyopia.

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