Abstract

To quantify a passive range of cyclorotation using a smartphone application and evaluate its associations with fundus torsion and rectus muscle cyclorotation in superior oblique palsy (SOP) and V-pattern strabismus. Fifty-two patients showing overelevation in adduction (30 with congenital SOP and 22 with V-pattern strabismus) underwent forced cyclorotation on the photographs. A photograph of the globe was taken in maximally excyclorotated and incyclorotated positions after marking at the 6 and 12 o'clock limbus under general anaesthesia, and the rotational alignment of these markings was read using the toriCAM application. The degrees of forced cyclorotation were compared between the two groups. Disc-fovea angle on fundus photographs and rectus muscle cyclorotation in the coronal view on orbital computed tomography were correlated with the range of forced excyclorotation. The range of forced excyclorotation was greater in V-pattern strabismus than that in SOP (58.5° vs. 46.8°, p < 0.001), whereas the ranges of incyclorotation were similar between the two groups (39.0° vs. 39.0°, p = 0.543). Regression analysis revealed a significant increase in the range of excyclorotation with the degree of rectus muscle excyclorotation, after accounting for age and angle of hypertropia (r2 = 0.475, p = 0.001). The range of excyclorotation did not correlate with the amount of fundus extorsion and grade of overelevation in adduction. The range of excyclorotation was correlated with the rectus muscle excyclorotation in these populations, suggesting that the results from this forced cyclorotation test may reflect orbital alignment and oblique muscle status.

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