Abstract

To assess the outcome of free tenotomy of the medial rectus muscle in post-natal monkeys. The medial rectus muscle was disinserted in both eyes of 6 macaques at age 4 weeks to induce an alternating exotropia. After the impact on the visual cortex and superior colliculus was investigated, the animals were examined post-mortem to assess the anatomy of the medial rectus muscles. After tenotomy, the monkeys eventually recovered partial adduction. Necropsy revealed that all 12 medial rectus muscles had reattached to the globe. They were firmly connected via an abnormally long tendon, but at the native insertion site. Medial rectus muscles are able to reattach spontaneously to the eye following free tenotomy in post-natal macaques. The early timing of surgery and the large size of the globe relative to the orbit may explain why reinsertion occurs more readily in monkeys than in children with a lost muscle after strabismus surgery. [J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus. 2018;55(5):335-338.].

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