(S. A. Patney: Strabismology Desk Reference, chapter 42, JKA Publications)
NONPARALYTIC INCOMITANT RESTRICTIVE STRABISMUS:
ADHERENCE SYNDROME & GRAVES OPHTHALMOPATHY
Adherence syndrome
The term adherence syndrome has been used in two different contexts
as explained below under the heading of definition.
History
Johnson1 described adherence syndrome with pseudoparalysis
of the lateral rectus or superior rectus muscle in 1950.
Parks2 termed this postoperative condition as adherence
syndrome in 1972.
Definition
Johnson1 used the term adherence syndrome to describe a
condition in which there are adhesions between either of the two pairs of extraocular
muscles detailed below:
- The lateral rectus and inferior oblique muscles, leading to a
clinical picture of pseudopalsy of the lateral rectus.
- The superior rectus and the superior oblique muscles, giving rise to
pseudopalsy of superior rectus.
- Parks2 used the term the term adherence syndrome for a condition
that occurs after inferior oblique myectomy. There is proliferation of fibrofatty
tissue and adhesion of the proximal stump of the myectomized inferior oblique to the
tenons membrane or some other structure. There is hypotropia as a result with
limitation of elevation.
Prevalence
The condition described by Johnson is quite rare3 although
he described several variations of adherence syndrome1.
Adherence syndrome reported by Parks2 was seen relatively
commonly in the past (according my personal experience during more than 4 decades).
However, it is seen infrequently now and this is more than likely due to improved surgical
techniques and skills.
Parks found this complication in 13% of cases who underwent myectomy
at the insertion of IO and in 26% of patients in whom disinsertion of IO was done. Noorden
reports having seen it in only 2 cases in 35 years3.
Etiology
Johnsons adherence syndrome could be due to one of the
following two conditions:
Congenital anomalies of the muscle fasciae
Surgery involving either of the muscles named can cause severe
scarring and adhesions. Noorden describes a case3 in which surgery on lateral
rectus resulted in severe scar formation and adhesions between the lateral rectus and the
IO muscles.
- Parkss adherence syndrome
is always due to surgery on
inferior oblique. There is a possibility that the orbital septum may be injured during the
inferior oblique (IO) myectomy leading to the proliferation of fibrofatty tissue and
adhesions.
Symptomatology and clinical picture
- Patients suffering from Johnsons adherence syndrome present a
clinical picture of
:
- Lateral rectus palsy and have esotropia and a restriction of
abduction of the affected eye. When the lateral rectus is detached from the sclera and the
eye is forced into abduction there is resistance because of the adhesions.
- Superior rectus palsy and have hypotropia of the affected eye with a
limitation of elevation especially in abduction. When the superior rectus is detached from
the sclera, there is resistance to elevation of the eye on forced duction (elevation)
test.
2. Patients having Parkss adherence syndrome show a
hypotropia of the affected eye, restricted elevation, especially in adduction and a
positive forced duction test.
Management
The treatment of these conditions is surgical.
1. For the adherence syndrome described by Johnson he advises lysis
of the adhesions as follows:
- For the lateral rectus adherence syndrome, the muscle is detached
from its insertion and the globe is forcibly rotated medially to break the anomalous
attachments. The lateral rectus is then reattached and forced duction test repeated to
make sure of free abduction.
- For the superior rectus adherence syndrome it is detached from its
insertion on the sclera and the eyeball rotated inferiorly with force to break the
unwanted attachments. The forced duction test is repeated and if the elevation is now free
the superior rectus is reattached to its insertion.
2. For the Parkss adherence syndrome also surgery is required
to remove the excess fibrofatty tissue and severe the adhesions.
Graves Ophthalmopathy
Graves disease is also known as Parrys or Basedows
disease. It consists of a triad of symptom complexes: Hyperthyroidism with diffuse goiter,
ophthalmopathy and dermopathy. The three components of the triad are liable to run their
independent courses.
During the last several years the condition of Graves
ophthalmopathy has gained a lot of importance because of certain special features. If
these features are not recognized and correct diagnosis made the management is not likely
to succeed.
Definition
Graves ophthalmopathy is a component of the multiorgan
autoimmune disease that may give rise to the following:
- Lid retraction
- Proptosis
- Lid and periorbital edema
- Swelling and enlargement of extraocular muscles leading to limitation
of ocular motility, especially elevation
- Optic neuropathy
- Sometimes a rise of intraocular pressure (secondary)
History
Quoting Rolleston from his book Gorman4 states that the
association of eye disease with goiter was known in the 12th century.
Parry described the triad of hyperthyroidism, diffuse nodular goiter
and ophthalmopathy5 in his treatise published in 1825, after his death.
Graves in 1835 and von Basedow in 1840 noted the same association.
Shortly afterwards Graves name was given to the symptom complex.
For a more detailed account of history please refer to reference no.
5.
Terminology
Graves ophthalmopathy has been described by various names
because of our lack of understanding of the nature of relationship between the dysfunction
of thyroid gland and the associated oculomyopathy.
Some of the names are enumerated below:
- Exophthalmic ophthalmoplegia
- Endocrine ophthalmopathy
- Exophthalmic goiter
- Dysthyroid eye disease
- Endocrine orbitopathy
- Endocrine myopathy
- Infilterative ophthalmopathy
- Dysthyroid oculomyositis
Prevalence
Graves oculopathy is more common in females6.
It is rare in children. The incidence of thyrotoxicosis in
children is hardly 5% and the most common age of diagnosis is 10-15 years
It occurs most commonly in middle age6.
A retrospective study from 1976 to 1990 by Batley et al7
recorded an incidence of 86% in females in cases of Graves disease and oculomotor
anomalies. In females the incidence was 16 per 100000 and in males 3 per 100000. 90% of
these cases had hyperthyroidism.
Genetic transmission
Hollingsworth et al described 6 families with Graves disease11.
I all these families the mode of transmission seemed to be autosomal dominant with a
predilection for females. There was a mother to daughter linkage in several generations.
Some specific subtypes of human leukocytic antigen (HLA) from
chromosome 6 are increased in the patients with Graves disease. For the sequence of
events in these changes see the etiology below.
Etiology
The exact cause is not known but it is an autoimmune thyroid
disease. Like myasthenia gravis, Graves disease is also mediated by autoimmune
bodies to membrane receptors. Both the diseases have certain immunogenic features in
common.
As already mentioned under the heading of genetic transmission, some
specific subtypes of human leukocytic antigen (HLA) from chromosome 6 are increased in the
patients suffering from Graves disease. The suppressor T lymphocytes become
genetically abnormal.
The sequence of events leading to a full fledged picture of
Graves ophthalmopathy as described11, 12 is as follows:
Genetically abnormal suppressor T lymphocytes fail to abort the
formation and proliferation of abnormal plasma cells è production of autoantibodies è
coating of target somatic cell, in this case extraocular muscle fibers, with autoimmune
complexes plasma cell mediated release of muchopolysaccharides ç inflammation &
damage ç (sequence of events continued) è collagen formation è hypertrophy of the
extraocular muscles è congestion of orbital tissues & strabismus è restriction of
ocular motility (typical of Graves oculomyopathy) and other complications of
Graves disease.
Symptomatology
- Patients with Graves disease often give history of previous
undiagnosed and untreated episodes of hyperthyroidism8.
- A family history of myasthenia gravis may be present in cases of
Graves disease and vice versa9.
- Thyroid oculopathy may be associated with hyperthyroidism,
euthyroidism or even hypothyroidism6.
- It is also common in the patients who have undergone thyroidectomy8.
- It is important to look for signs of myasthenia gravis in all cases
of Graves disease, as there is general agreement about an association between the
two conditions. Both disorders are immunogenic in nature. About 5% cases of patients
having Graves disease have been reported to develop hyperthyroidism10.
However, only about 0.2% of patients with thyrotoxicosis develop myasthenia gravis10.
This is supposed to be due to the common immunogenic features shared by both these
diseases (see etiology).
- Symptoms
:
- Pain and a pulling sensation during the period of inflammation
and swelling of muscles.
- As the swelling subsides the pain disappears.
- Diplopia
is a more common symptom. It is a result of
incomitant-restrictive strabismus caused by muscle fibrosis.
- In longstanding cases the diplopia can be replaced by suppression
and even amblyopia.
Patients suffering from Graves disease may or may not complain
of symptoms like diplopia due to
Typical appearance of a case of Graves disease during the first
1-2 years is due to the inflammation and congestion of the extraocular muscles and the
other orbital contents. They are enumerated below:
- Edema of the eye lids may be present
- Periorbital edema is often seen, especially in older patients.
- Exophthalmos with upper lid retraction leading to a staring look may
be present. The lid retraction may be due to an increased effort at elevation of the eye
against the passive resistance of the fibrotic inferior rectus.
- Proptosis is there in some cases. It is due to the increase in the
volume of the orbital contents due to congestion, inflammation and swelling
- Conjunctival congestion, generalized or else local at the
insertion-sites of the extraocular muscles
- Conjunctival chemosis
- Sometimes there is a lid lag present (von Graefes sign).
- Other signs sometimes seen are convergence weakness, decreased
frequency of the blink reflex, a staring look, inability to hold fixation in lateral gaze.
- Sometimes there is fine tremor on gentle eyelid closure.
- After a period of 1-2 years the inflammation is replaced by fibrosis.
The result is a restriction of ocular motility due to fibrotic changes in the extraocular
muscles and infiltration of orbital tissues with mucopolysaccharide ground substance.
- Occasionally the stage of inflammation is either bypassed or is very
short lived and the patient presents with a restrictive strabismus. In such cases
the diagnosis may be missed especially if there are no obvious signs or positive tests of
thyroid disease.
- Sometimes the main presenting symptom is exophthalmos with or without
diplopia.
- The diplopia is usually gradual in onset. It is a result of varying
degree of fibrosis and swelling of various muscles leading to incomitant strabismus. It is
usually horizontal as well as vertical because of the involvement of both groups of
muscles.
- The first signs may be a periorbital edema and restriction of
elevation.
- The strabismus is not uncommonly of mixed type with
horizontal and vertical deviations present simultaneously. Sometimes cyclodeviation is
added to the others because of the fibrosis and tightness of the vertical muscles.
It is an incomitant deviation of restrictive type, not of paralytic
type.
The vertical deviation is usually most marked in elevation.
- As mentioned above the inferior rectus is the most commonly
involved muscle and often the most severely affected one also. I wonder if it
may be due to its close proximity to the inferior orbital septum. The resulting deviation
is a hypotropia with a limitation of elevation with a positive forced duction test for
inferior rectus.
Excyclotropia and exotropia may be added to hypotropia because of
the muscles secondary actions, i.e., excyclotorsion and adduction. A positive forced
duction test is present in abduction, which is restricted.
- Ocular Motility
: The various anomalies of ocular movements in
order of the frequency of their occurrence are:
- Restriction of elevation due to involvement of inferior rectus
- Restriction of abduction due to the effect on medial rectus
- Limited depression and abduction due to fibrosis of superior rectus
and medial rectus.
- The least often involved muscle is the lateral rectus, leading to an
adduction defect.
The defects of ocular movements are hardly ever symmetrical
and therefore the resulting strabismus is also incomitant but nonparalytic.
- Forced duction test
is positive for muscles showing
dysfunction (restriction of their action). It must be performed in every case, as it is
diagnostic of presence of fibrosis in the muscles.
- There is a resistance in the orbit to retropulsion of the
globe. That is to say when the eyeball is pushed backwards into the orbit there is an
increased passive resistance.
- The extraocular muscles are the most commonly affected tissue in
Graves oculopathy (orbitopathy). The range and degree of the extraocular muscle
involvement varies from case to case. It can be mild swelling of a few muscles to severe
swelling and enlargement leading to fibrosis of multiple or all the muscles.
- Course
: Usually the onset of diplopia is gradual. It is
frequently related to the onset of exophthalmos. Occasionally mild periorbital edema with
limited elevation may be the first sign. The deviation can reverse33, 34
usually postoperatively but spontaneously also. The latter may be due to the involvement
of the yoke muscle or improvement of the originally affected muscle32.
- The signs and symptoms of Graves oculopathy/orbitopathy
are of many types and various combinations of them present a formidable range. Several
efforts have been made to classify them13, 14, 15 but only one of these14
is widely in use. It is given below:
Werner/ATA (American Thyroid Association) system of
classification of the presenting symptoms of Graves disease:
(There are 6 classes that can be easily remembered by the
mnemonic "NO SPECS")
Class 0= No signs or symptoms
Class 1= Only signs like Lid lag, upper lid retraction and stare (no symptoms)
Class 2= Soft tissue involvement leading to signs and symptoms
Class 3=Ptoptosis
Class 4=Extraocular muscle involvement
Class 5= Corneal complications
Class 6= Sight loss due to the involvement of the optic nerve
Note: Every case does not pass through all these stages and then not
in that order. In some cases strabismus and motility problem come earlier and others get
the soft tissue changes, proptosis and the typical lid signs of Graves
ophthalmopathy before they get the extraocular muscle problems. However, the optic nerve
damage and the corneal complications are not usual before ocular motility problems.
- Atypical and difficult to diagnose cases
- Defects of ocular motility may be the only features in some cases.
All other diagnostic features may be lacking.
- Thyroid functions may be shown to be normal on blood chemistry tests.
- This basically bilateral condition may present as unilateral.
- Paresis of a muscle, e.g., lateral rectus and restricted ocular
motility may be present simultaneously. The former is supposed to be due to pressure on
the nerve supplying the muscle. This is because of an increase in the volume of orbital
contents in the posterior part of the cone. The restricted motility is due to infiltration
and fibrosis of the extraocular muscles (EOM).
NOTE: The diagnosis in such doubtful cases is made on the basis of
the following points:
- There may be limitation of elevation in one eye and the other eye may
appear to be normal, but on careful examination a mild restriction may be present in
another direction.
- Graves disease should always be suspected in every case having the
triad of signs as detailed below:
- Acquired incomitant strabismus with restricted elevation, unilateral
or bilateral with or without restriction of other movements
- Positive forced duction test
- Signs of ocular palsy absent
- Resistance, even mild to retropulsion of the globe
- Examination of a case of Graves oculo-orbitopathy
- Ophthalmological examination:
- Visual acuity is affected if there is a corneal haze due to exposure
of the cornea consequent upon the presence of exophthalmos/proptosis and /or pathology in
the optic nerve due to a pressure on it.
- Other findings, like those of the eyelids and conjunctiva etc. have
already been described.
- Proptosis/exophthalmos
- Exposure keratitis
- Nonparalytic-incomitant-restrictive Strabismus
- Increase in the intraocular pressure on attempted elevation because
of the pressure exerted by the fibrotic inferior rectus
- Optic atrophy because of the pressure on the nerve itself and its
blood supply.
- Orthoptic (ocular motility) examination:
- Cover test reveals a nonparalytic-incomitant-restrictive strabismus
- Ocular movements
are restricted in various directions depending
upon the muscles involved in fibrosis, most common being a limited elevation leading to
hypotropia.
- Measurement of angle of deviation
in all the cardinal directions
of gaze should be carried out, fixing each eye. It will confirm the incomitant nature of
the deviation and the diagnosis made on cover test and ocular motility examination.
The measurement of angle can be conducted on a major amblyoscope or
with prisms (prism bars).
It will also be useful for judging the future progress of the
disorder.
- Hess chart
will do the same as the measurement of the deviation
in cardinal directions of gaze.
- Diplopia test is done for near and distance and a chart is made in
the 9 directions of gaze.
- Field of binocular single vision (BSV)
is recorded for future
reference to judge the progress and/or the effect of treatment.
- Moorits and associates have suggested a method of charting the eye
movements16 whereby a modified perimeter is used to measure them in the
various cardinal directions of gaze.
- Laboratory tests:
- Forced duction test
(FDT, qualitative) and quantitative forced
duction test (QFDT): The simple qualitative FDT (see page 663) can be done in the clinic
but for the QFDT it is better to use the operation room. The former can be done under
local anesthesia except in young children and the later under general anesthesia in
children and local/general anesthesia in adults and older children.
In QFDT a length/tension graph is made. The curve is steep before
the operation to release stiffness by disinserting and then recessing the tight inferior
rectus muscle (or any other tight EOM, e.g., the medial rectus) after which procedure the
elevation is improved in range. The weight in grams is increased and the length of the
muscle measured step by step. After the weakening procedure the length/tension curve
becomes flatter24.
- Blood chemistry
: Positive results for the presence of thyroid
disease are not necessary for making a diagnosis of Graves oculomyopathy. However, if they
are positive that helps. As mentioned already this disorder may be present with normal,
hypo or hyperthyroid function.
If several of the typical clinical signs of thyroid oculopathy, as
enumerated earlier and some of them repeated below, are present, a clinical
diagnosis of Graves ophthalmopathy can be made even in the absence of definite
thyroid disease as indicated by the presence of normal blood chemistry:
Proptosis, exposure keratitis, lid retraction, lid lag on
depression, periorbital edema, restricted ocular motility particularly in elevation, adult
onset-nonparalytic-incomitant-restrictive strabismus, positive forced duction test for all
or most movements, especially elevation, optic nerve ischemia-atrophy and swollen/enlarged
muscle bellies with sparing of the tendons on CT scan/MRI.
- CT scan (computed tomography) of the orbits shows the swollen and
enlarged extraocular muscles. CT scan shows the muscles better (sensitivity >85%) than
does the MRI (sensitivity 61%)17. However, it should be a high resolution CT
scan. The swollen muscles stand out clearly against the translucent orbital fat.
There is an increase in the total and individual muscle volume18
and the degree of severity of the disease is directly proportional to the degree of
increase in the mass of the orbital contents.
- MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) also shows the enlarged muscles.
- Ultrasonography of the orbit: The positive findings on standard
echography are mainly due to the presence of edema and therefore of highly reflective
edema fluid and inflammatory cells in the swollen muscles19.
The positive findings generally observed on echography are as
follows20:
- Hypertrophied extraocular muscles (B-scan)
- Accentuated orbital walls (B-scan)
- High acoustic reflectivity of the extraocular muscles (EOMs) on
A-scan
- Increased reflectivity and heterogeneity of the EOMs
- Solid thickening of the nerve sheath of the optic nerve
- Swelling of the lacrymal glands
Differential diagnosis: Acute myositis also shows thickened
muscles but in this case the reflectivity is low and the tendons are also thickened.
- Electromyography (EMG) of EOM indicates the presence of a myopathic
lesion rather than a neurogenic etiology21, 22 as is the case with skeletal
muscles in cases of thyrotoxic myopathy.
The main feature is a decrease in the amplitude of action potential.
There is no effect on the number of motor units.
As has already been mentioned myasthenia gravis is more
frequently found in cases of Graves disease than otherwise. If it is present in a
certain patient suffering from Graves myopathy the EMG recordings will show a
fatigue of motor units. After an injection of tensilon (edrophonium) or even after simple
rest a recovery of the activity in motor units is observed. This result should make one
suspect coexistence of myasthenia gravis.
- Recordings of the saccadic velocity
do not show evidence of
muscle paresis except in cases with congestive type of Graves ophthalmopathy. This
finding also points to the restrictive nature of the muscle dysfunction22. If
however, a paretic element is added to the restrictive, the peak velocity of the
horizontal saccades will decrease. The paresis in the cases of Graves oculopathy is
primarily due to severe congestion and therefore is more likely to be found in the
congestive phase of the disease. When congestion is relieved as by orbital decompression,
the peak velocity increases.
- Infrared coulography
13, 25 also shows reduced peak
velocity on horizontal saccades in more severe cases with increasing congestion in the
orbits. It improves after orbital decompression.
- Assessment of active force generation (see page 661) in the EOMs
also
shows no evidence of palsy22.
Pathology
- The bellies of the extraocular muscles are the primary sites of the
disease.
- The sheaths of the tendons at the insertion are not usually affected.
- The inflammation of the muscle leads to the following as indicated in
the etiology earlier:
- Proliferation of fibroblasts
- Secretion of mucopolysaccharide
- Production of collagen
- Striated cells of the extraocular muscles (EOM) degenerate with the
collection of collagen
- Fibrosis of EOM takes place.
- Swollen and fibrosed muscles make the main mass of the increased soft
tissue contents of the orbit.
- The fibrosis of EOM leads to the defective ocular motility.
- The increase in the volume of the soft tissue contents of the orbits
leads to proptosis.
Differential diagnosis of graves ophthalmopathy (see table
42-1, below)
Table 42-1:
No |
Name of the condition |
Distinguishing clinical features |
CT scan/
B-scan |
1 |
Inflammations
of the orbit, e.g.: -Orbital myositis
-Orbital pseudotumor |
Usually
unilateral but could become bilateral
Pain on moving the eyes, inflammatory signs, vascular congestion,
proptosis, ophthalmoplegia
Good response to systemic corticosteroids
Usually unilateral and above mentioned signs except ophthalmoplegia
in acute stage |
CT scan may
show thickened Tenon's capsule & feathery orbital densities. B-scan: may show sub-Tenon edema & squaring off of optic nerve head.
In myositis tendon is also affected. |
2 |
Orbital
space occupying lesions, e.g., -Tumors like dermoids and
epidermoids, glioma, meningioma, lacrymal gland tumor, rhabdomyosarcoma23.
-Metastatic carcinoma breast and secondary malignant melanoma26
-Cysts |
Proptosis is
usually not central except in cases of optic nerve tumors. Palpation of the orbit may
help. Last resort is biopsy.
May cause orbital inflammation & enlargement of EOM, producing a
picture like Graves disease
May leak causing orbital inflammation producing a picture like
Graves disease |
CT scan / MRI /
Orbital ultrasonography help in differentiating. |
3 |
Orbital
vascular disorders: Vascular engorgement due to increased
venous pressure caused by carotid arterioven-ous fistula or a dural arterio-venous anomaly |
Vascular
engorgement leads to EOM enlarge-ment, conjunctival chemosis and congestion, proptosis and
ophthalmoplegia thus resembling Graves disease19. Last resort:
angiography |
CT scan / MRI /
Orbital ultrasonography may show dilated vessels. |
4 |
Orbital
involvement in systemic diseases: Lymphoma Sarcoidosis & Amyloidosis |
Nodular tumor
in superonasal orbit: ? lymphoma More common in trochlear area. They can cause muscular enlargement. All 3 can produce proptosis. Presence of
involvement of other organs and biopsy can decide |
|
5 |
Enlargement of
globe due to very high myopia27 |
Patient having high
myopia with restricted ocul-ar motility, enlarged globes & post.staphylomas |
|
6 |
Adjacent sinus
infection, e.g., Ethmoidal sinusitis |
May lead to orbital
cellulitis that can mimic Gravesdisease. Presence of fever and high leukocytic count
may help in diagnosis. |
|
Management
Conservative (non-surgical)
Surgical
- Conservative (non-surgical) management
:
Not surprisingly there are a number of therapies that are in use,
being tried, have some peoples support or are still mostly under trial. The various
non-surgical treatments are mentioned below:
- Medical treatment
- Radiation therapy
- Prismotherapy
- Denervation
- Plasmapheresis
(a) Medical treatment uses various drugs for the underlying
condition, the symptoms and the complications. Most of them are symptomatic.
It aims at relieving the symptoms and controlling the basic
pathology if possible. The following guideline applies to most cases:
- Treatment of thyrotoxicosis if indicated. The endocrine imbalance
must be corrected before considering surgery. However, the former does not affect the
strabismus or the restricted motility32, 33, 35.
- Artificial tears and decongestant drops for exposure keratitis and
conjunctival congestion and chemosis
- Corticosteroids for acute congestive stage of the disease. Although
they can not improve the fibrosis and the effects thereof, they do reduce orbital
congestion and proptosis. The visual acuity may improve thereby as the pressure on the
optic nerves is also reduced. They do not affect the ophthalmopathy.
A word of caution is in order here. The corticosteroids should not
be used except as a short-term therapy in the acute congestive phase. Long-term use may
lead to the well-known side effects.
- Immunosuppressive drugs have been tried for the treatment of
Graves disease, namely Cyclophosphamide, Azathioprine28 and Cyclosporine29.
The first two alone or together have been found effective in most patients during the
congestive stage, in about 50% they improved the muscles and in a few patients the
proptosis was reduced. Cyclosporine in combination with corticosteroids was effective in
reducing extraocular muscles abnormally large size and proptosis along with the
improvement of visual acuity.
(b) Radiation therapy
It is used in early stages of Graves diseases. If it is
combined with administration of corticosteroids, effectiveness is enhanced and the dose of
the later can be reduced30. It does not affect the restriction in motility and
strabismus. This mode of therapy does not work after the fibrosis has set in.
(c) Prismotherapy is indicated under the following
circumstances:
- If the surgery for strabismus is contraindicated and there is
bothersome diplopia.
- If there is diplopia and the surgery is delayed due to some reason
prisms can be used during the waiting period.
Special points regarding prescription of prisms:
- The main indication of prisms in the patients of Graves
ophthalmopathy is bothersome diplopia.
- Conventional prisms allow clearer vision. Fresnel prisms though
lighter and thinner, usually become yellowish after some time. The visual acuity is not so
good through Fresnel prisms31.
- Bifocal prisms can be prescribed for primary position and depression.
Because of the inferior rectus being the most common muscle to be severely fibrosed and
tight, the superior rectus action is defective and usually asymmetrical. There is
hypotropia of the worse affected eye. The deviation is maximum in elevation, lesser in
primary position and least in depression, hence the need for bifocal prisms.
- For smaller angles the deviation present in primary position is
corrected. If there is a refractive error needing correction the prism power can be ground
into the lenses.
- For moderate degree of strabismus Fresnel prisms can be given to get
rid of diplopia in primary position.
- Prisms do not work for large angles.
- The strabismus found in Graves disease is incomitant (varying
in various directions of gaze and fixing either eye). Its degree can also change from time
to time. Power of the prisms may therefore have to be changed repeatedly.
- Even after surgery the deviation is not corrected in all directions
because of the incomitant nature of the strabismus. In such cases surgery can be carried
out and postoperative residual angle can be corrected in primary position and depression
(for reading). The advantage of surgery is that only a small prism will be needed in the
postoperative period.
- Even after readjustable surgery the prisms may be required.
- Denervation: Botulinum toxin has been used with success in
acute stages of Graves disease. Fusion can be restored and if the basic condition is
controlled the benefit may be permanent. However, once the fibrosis of EOM has set in, any
improvement is usually temporary and the eyes go back to the pre-Botulinum injection stage
after its effect wears off.
- Occlusion has to be resorted to when the diplopia is
bothersome, it can not be corrected with prisms and surgery can not be carried out due to
some reason. Usually it is temporary and is used during the waiting period.
- Plasmapheresis is another mode of therapy being tried in acute
stages. It acts by getting rid of autoantibodies and immune complexes.
- Surgical treatment
The aim of surgery is to get rid of diplopia and achieve
binocular single vision in as many positions of gaze as possible but particularly in
primary position and depression (the positions most often used).
When to operate
- When the basic condition is well controlled with medicines and
inflammation has subsided.
- The angle of strabismus and ocular motility status is stationary for
at least 6 months35
- Patient does not want to wear prisms, especially high powered ones
- There is bothersome diplopia not relieved by prisms (either too big
or too incomitant)
What to do
- If orbital decompression is contemplated it should be done before
strabismus surgery*, 38.
- If there is a large esotropia along with a small vertical
deviation, only the horizontal deviation may be corrected to avoid an overcorrection of
the vertical tropia. The latter can be managed, if necessary with small prism or if the
fusion is present even that may not be required32.
- The reverse of the above also holds true. If there is a large
vertical deviation and a small horizontal one, the vertical is better corrected by
surgery and the horizontal, if not controlled by the force of fusion, can be corrected by
prisms to achieve fusion and get rid of diplopia.
- If elevation is restricted
and there is a hypotropia in primary
position a recession of the fibrosed (diagnosed by forced duction test) inferior rectus
is the usual preference. Special care should be taken during the dissection of the muscle
to free it from the Longwoods ligament to prevent a lower lid retraction. However,
it is not easy in these cases because of the tightness of the inferior rectus. After
recessing the inferior rectus the conjunctiva has to be recessed too for a good result.
- If there is esotropia due to fibrosis of medial rectus
and
restriction of the action of lateral rectus, a large recession of medial rectus is usually
effective. This procedure is also more effective if combined with recession of conjunctiva
in longstanding cases where conjunctiva and tenons membrane have become shrunken and
nonelastic.
- For the fibrosis of other extraocular muscles similar
procedures are quite effective.
- If there is significant hypotropia as well as esotropia,
medial rectus may well be involved in fibrosis but there is a possibility that the
convergent deviation is due to the fibrosis of the inferior rectus and not due to that of
medial rectus. To decide if such is the case, forced duction test should be performed
after disinserting the inferior rectus for recession/tenotomy. If the test is now negative
and abduction (as well as elevation) is free, there is no need to tackle the medial
rectus.
- If the muscle (inferior rectus, medial rectus or any other) is severely
fibrosed along with the tenons membrane and the conjunctiva due to the severity
of the disease and the long duration, a large recession may not be sufficient. In such
cases the recession is combined with a conjunctival recession. Alternatively a free
tenotomy has to be done occasionally along with a conjunctival recession. However,
this may be followed by a consecutive strabismus, e.g., exotropia and convergence
deficiency after medial rectus tenotomy.
- Sometimes there is fibrosis of the vertical recti, i.e., the superior
rectus and the inferior rectus. However, this is mostly discovered after the inferior
rectus surgery, even after the tying of adjustable sutures if they have been used. There
is postoperative hypertropia (overcorrection). It is important to rule out overcorrection
due to excessive weakening of the inferior rectus. CT scan, which shows the affected
muscles, can do this.
Complications
- Postoperative severe inflammation
- Lower lid retraction
- Late slippage of the tendon of inferior rectus
- A pattern exotropia after large bilateral recessions of inferior
recti
- Undercorrections and overcorrections
1. Postoperative severe inflammation is more liable to occur if the
surgery is carried out before the signs of inflammation due to thyroid ophthalmopathy have
subsided completely39. The signs reported in a case where bilateral surgery was
carried out with mild signs of inflammation in one eye and none in the other eye, were as
follows:
- Reduced visual acuity
- Severe conjunctival congestion, chemosis and echymoses,
- Corneal opacification, vascularization and thinning (almost melting)
- Marked proptosis
- Gross overcorrection leading to large hypertropia
- Gross limitation of downgaze: the eye could not be moved beyond
midline
As corneal perforation seemed imminent these problems were treated
with moisture chamber, hourly instillation of lubricants and systemic administration of
corticosteroids.
- Lower lid retraction may occur after inferior rectus recession of
more than 3 mm despite a thorough dissection, separation of all check ligaments and
severance of attachments of the muscle to the lower lid retractors. It is more liable to
occur because the amount of recession in these cases is really large.
To treat a lower lid retraction lateral tarsorrhaphy41
or stored (eye bank) sclera is used as a spacer at the lower end of the tarsal plate40,
41.
- Late slippage of the inferior rectus muscle from its recessed
position has been reported after adjustable suture surgery using absorbable sutures. The
eye shows progressively increasing hypertropia in the weeks following the recession. To
prevent it either adjustable suture technique is not used or nonabsorbable suture material
is used42.
- A pattern exotropia (XT)41 has been reported after
bilateral inferior rectus recession. The inferior rectus, besides being a depressor, is an
adductor also and when it is recessed on both sides the adduction becomes weak causing an
A pattern XT. The treatment consists of a simple medial displacement or transposition of
the insertions of both inferior recti by about ½ tendon breadth. Alternatively, if the
horizontal recti are to be operated on, the medial recti can be transposed upwards or
lateral recti downwards.
- Undercorrections and overcorrections are not really complications but
they do cause postoperative problems to be dealt with. These problems have to be corrected
if there is diplopia in primary position and downgaze. The underacting muscles may have to
be advanced (if not already tight) and the overacting ones recessed.
Prognosis
As regards as the relief of symptoms is concerned the results of
surgery are fairly gratifying, both for the patient and the surgeon35, provided
the disease has first been adequately treated medically and condition stabilized. However,
the picture is liable to change and repeated surgery may be required in future even though
the condition has been satisfactorily treated by one or more operations.
Special points
- The patient must be warned about the nature of the condition and the
possibility of recurrences and repeated surgery.
- Forced duction test is a useful tool to assess the degree of
fibrosis. It should be done preoperatively, intraoperatively (both before and immediately
after the operation) and postoperatively if indicated.
- Before deciding on surgery one must make sure that the endocrine
balance has been restored, the inflammation has subsided and the angle of deviation and
ocular motility are stable and that there is no further change in signs and symptoms for
at least 6 months. If this precaution is not taken the treatment may fail or give rise to
unforeseen complications.
- The inferior rectus may be so tight and fibrosed that during
dissection it is difficult to get a hook under its tendon. Utmost care should be exercised
to avoid a perforation of the sclera.
- The surgeon should be content with achieving alignment in primary
position and depression (walking, going up or down the stairs, reading, writing or working
position). One should not try to restore full motility in all the directions, as it is not
possible without causing complications like restricted motility in other directions.
Summary
- Noorden37 has aptly summed up the main points in the
definition of Graves ophthalmopathy as " It is a part of a multiorgan
autoimmune inflammatory disease that may cause periorbital edema, enlargement (and later
fibrosis) of the EOM, proptosis, lid retraction, optic neuropathy and (sometimes)
secondary rise of intraocular pressure".
- A case with the following features should be diagnosed as thyroid
ophthalmopathy unless proved otherwise36:
- An isolated acquired hypotropia with
- Positive forced duction test on the inferior rectus of the affected
eye
- The eye can not be elevated from its hypotropic position
Note: The above mentioned rule should be observed even if the tests
for thyroid dysfunction are negative.
- Symptoms are many and varied. They present a wide spectrum with
various degrees and combinations of signs and symptoms. There is inflammation, swelling
and enlargement of affected ECM followed by fibrosis and contracture.
- The most common muscles to be affected by fibrosis (after swelling,
inflammation and enlargement) are inferior rectus, medial rectus, superior rectus and
lateral rectus in that order.
- Status of thyroid may be anything from hyperthyroid, euthyroid to
even hypothyroid.
- The basic nature of the condition is not well understood but it seems
to be an autoimmune disease.
- CT scan and MRI show up the enlarged affected extraocular muscles.
- Management mainly consists of controlling the basic thyroid problem,
taking care of exposure keratitis and restoring binocular single vision at least in
primary position and depression, the two directions most used in daily life. Prisms and/or
surgery on the fibrosed EOMs to align the visual axes can control the diplopia.
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