FIGURE 1. Final position of lateral rectus (LR) and accessory bands. A 3.5-year-old boy presented at the University of California Los Angeles–Olive View Hospital with abnormal eye movements present since birth. His parents noticed that his left eye always appeared smaller than his right eye and that he had a right head turn. On examination, the patient demonstrated a 5 right head turn. In forced primary position, he had an exotropia of 6. He had 2 limitation to adduction and abduction and13 overelevation in adduction (upshoot) in the left eye. The decision was made to perform surgery consisting of a lateral rectus recession with Y-splitting for presumed exotropic Duane syndrome with a significant upshoot. Preoperative forced duction testing revealed moderate restriction to adduction and no restriction to abduction. The surgical video demonstrates the presence of 2 accessory bands posterior to the lateral rectus muscle. All 3 structures (the lateral rectus and the 2 accessory bands) were recessed to 17 mm from the limbus in a V-shaped configuration (Figures 1 and 2). At postoperative month 1, the patient was orthotropic in primary position, and his upshoot had resolved. His adduction improved to 1 but his abduction worsened to 3. First reported in 1893 by Nussbaum, accessory muscles have been well described in disorders such as Duane syndrome and congenital fibrosis of the extraocular muscles. They should be suspected in patients with atypical patterns of restrictive strabismus, globe retraction in directions other than adduction, or in patients with severe upor downshoots. Lueder described 3 types of accessory bands in his 2002 review: (1) structures arising from extraocular muscles and inserting in abnormal locations, (2) fibrous