Long-term Surgical Outcomes for Large-angle Infantile Esotropia.
Abstract
[PURPOSE] To report the long-term surgical outcomes for a cohort of children with large-angle infantile esotropia.
[DESIGN] Multicenter, nonrandomized clinical study.
[METHODS] Setting: Two tertiary-care pediatric hospitals.
[STUDY POPULATION] Children with large-angle (≥55 prism diopters) infantile esotropia.
[INTERVENTION] Surgical treatment of infantile esotropia.
[MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE] Success rate at final follow-up (postoperative deviation ≤ 10 prism diopters and no need for retreatment).
[RESULTS] A total of 88 patients with large-angle infantile esotropia were treated during the 13-year study period. Treatment was bilateral medial rectus muscle recessions in 70 patients, botulinum toxin-augmented surgery in 15 patients, and 3-muscle surgery in 3 patients. After a mean follow-up of 40 months, 20 patients (23%) had a successful outcome compared to 68 treatment failures (77%). Of the 68 treatment failures, 59 had residual or recurrent esotropia and 9 had sequential exotropia. On multivariate logistic regression, treatment modality was the only factor significantly associated with a successful outcome. Specifically, patients treated with botulinum toxin-augmented surgery were more likely to have a successful outcome compared to patients treated with bilateral medial rectus muscle recessions. For the 26 patients (30%) who underwent retreatment, the mean number of procedures was 2.1, and 7 (27%) had a deviation of ≤10 prism diopters at final follow-up.
[CONCLUSIONS] The overall success rate for treatment of large-angle infantile esotropia was poor in this cohort, with most failures owing to recurrent or residual esotropia. Botulinum toxin-augmented surgery was associated with a higher success rate at final follow-up.
[DESIGN] Multicenter, nonrandomized clinical study.
[METHODS] Setting: Two tertiary-care pediatric hospitals.
[STUDY POPULATION] Children with large-angle (≥55 prism diopters) infantile esotropia.
[INTERVENTION] Surgical treatment of infantile esotropia.
[MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE] Success rate at final follow-up (postoperative deviation ≤ 10 prism diopters and no need for retreatment).
[RESULTS] A total of 88 patients with large-angle infantile esotropia were treated during the 13-year study period. Treatment was bilateral medial rectus muscle recessions in 70 patients, botulinum toxin-augmented surgery in 15 patients, and 3-muscle surgery in 3 patients. After a mean follow-up of 40 months, 20 patients (23%) had a successful outcome compared to 68 treatment failures (77%). Of the 68 treatment failures, 59 had residual or recurrent esotropia and 9 had sequential exotropia. On multivariate logistic regression, treatment modality was the only factor significantly associated with a successful outcome. Specifically, patients treated with botulinum toxin-augmented surgery were more likely to have a successful outcome compared to patients treated with bilateral medial rectus muscle recessions. For the 26 patients (30%) who underwent retreatment, the mean number of procedures was 2.1, and 7 (27%) had a deviation of ≤10 prism diopters at final follow-up.
[CONCLUSIONS] The overall success rate for treatment of large-angle infantile esotropia was poor in this cohort, with most failures owing to recurrent or residual esotropia. Botulinum toxin-augmented surgery was associated with a higher success rate at final follow-up.
추출된 의학 개체 (NER)
| 유형 | 영어 표현 | 한국어 / 풀이 | UMLS CUI | 출처 | 등장 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 시술 | botulinum toxin
|
보툴리눔독소 주사 | dict | 3 |
MeSH Terms
Botulinum Toxins, Type A; Child, Preschool; Esotropia; Female; Humans; Infant; Male; Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Oculomotor Muscles; Ophthalmologic Surgical Procedures; Retrospective Studies; Treatment Outcome; Vision, Binocular
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