Moorfields Eye Hospital, London EC1V 2PD, UK
| INTRODUCTION |
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| SURGERY FOR CONGENITAL NYSTAGMUS |
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Four main surgical strategies have been advocated in management of congenital nystagmusKestenbaum surgery for compensatory head posture with null zone; artificial divergence surgery; maximum recession of horizontal rectus muscles; and rectus muscle anterior tenotomy.
Kestenbaum surgery
It has never been adequately explained why certain patients with congenital
motor nystagmus (CN) have a position of gaze where the intensity of their
nystagmus is minimal. Such patients discover that their vision is at its best
when their eyes are placed in the position of least ocular instability, and
commonly demonstrate a compensatory head malposition to bring the zone of best
vision into the straight-ahead position. In contrast, patients with
manifest-latent nystagmus (MLN), who typically fix with only one eye, may find
that their latent nystagmus, which invariably involves a nasalward drift of
the fixing eye, is minimized by adopting a face turn towards the fixing
eye.
In 1953, Anderson1 and Kestenbaum2 independently suggested that an abnormal head posture related to nystagmus could be alleviated by surgery. In the following year Goto3 made similar suggestions. Anderson's proposal was for recession of the pair of rectus muscles whose action was in the direction of the face-turn. Goto suggested resection of the antagonist muscles, and Kestenbaum favoured surgery on all four muscles, although he also suggested the two eyes should have sequential surgery. It is the Kestenbaum strategy, with modifications, that is normally performed today, and his name tends to be attached to this surgical approach to nystagmus.
Types of head posture
Face-turns to one side or the other are the commonest type of posture,
although minor degrees of head tilt or chin elevation or depression are seen.
Large degrees of chin up/down or head tilt are unusual. The typical head
posture is in moderately but not extremely eccentric gaze, and nystagmus
intensity will often increase again in gaze beyond this null
zone.
Care should be taken to identify, by history or examination, patients with variable head-turns, as these do not benefit from active treatment. Some patients find that pushing their eyes into either position of extreme horizontal gaze helps to stabilize the eyes. Others have the rare condition of periodic alternating nystagmus, or the even rarer periodic alternating null zone.
Measurement of compensatory head positions is notoriously difficult. The most extreme head positions are often adopted only when the patient is making a maximum effort to read a distant test-type. Frequently there is no head posture for near, and when vision is not critical the head tends to be kept in the most comfortable position, usually straight ahead. Various methods have been adopted. Many authorities make a subjective estimate. Sradj4 has devised a torticollometer. Others5 have used eccentric fixation on an array of light emitting diodes. Mitchell et al.6 utilized an orthopaedic goniometer.
Assessment before surgery
All cases require careful refraction, with cycloplegia if
indicated, since astigmatism and anisometropia are not rare. Even apparently
trivial refractive errors should be corrected, as such correction may
occasionally produce spectacular improvement in ocular stability. Contact
lenses move with the eye and therefore offer an improvement in potential
best visual acuity.
Prisms will allow the eyes to be placed in the eccentric null
position while the head is straight (i.e. change the direction of gaze). They
should be placed with the base towards the head-turn. Prisms may be very
useful as a guide to likely benefit from surgical treatment, but have little
to offer as a definitive therapy, since most head-turns are of 30° or
more, requiring around 60
of prism. If they are ordered as Fresnel
membrane prisms, acuity will be degraded. Solid glass prisms are unacceptably
heavy and obvious; they will also cause chromatic aberration.
Surgical treatment
The principle underlying surgical treatment is to rotate the eyes in the
direction of the head-turnin other words, to produce a relative gaze
palsy towards the side to which the eyes are normally directed. The technique
is essentially that advocated by Kestenbaum. However, he advocated recessions
and resections of only 5 mm, and this is not adequate to improve the head
position in the typical case.
Parks7 in 1973
suggested his popular (and memorable) 5, 6, 7, 8 procedure. This
dosage is based on the amounts felt to represent maximal surgery without
sacrificing rotationsi.e. recession of one medial rectus of 5 mm, and
one lateral rectus 7 mm, with appropriate resections of the other medial
rectus 6 mm and lateral rectus 8 mm. Calhoun and
Harley8 and later
Nelson et
al.9 suggested
augmented Parks surgery. Where the head-turn is up to 30°,
the surgical amounts are increased by 40%i.e. 7, 8.4, 9.8, 11.2 mm.
Where the turn equals or exceeds 45°, they advocate 60%
augmentationi.e. 8, 9, 11.2, 12.8 mm. On the other hand,
Pratt-Johnson10
obtained excellent results by making all recessions and resections 10 mm.
Other
authors11,12,13
have suggested various surgical dosages.
Most authorities agree that the early response to surgery wears off in some cases, with recurrence of the head posture. Reoperationfor example, re-resection of the previously resected muscles by 5 mm and a posterior fixation procedure on the previously recessed pair of musclesis safe and effective.
Vertical postures and head tilts are much less common, although many face-turns are accompanied by minor degrees of vertical head displacement. When chin elevation or depression is the main feature, the principle of rotating the eyes in the direction of the head posture should be followed. Therefore for chin depression, both inferior recti should be resected 4-6 mm and both superior recti recessed a similar amount. For pure head tilt, the intortor on the side of the tilt (e.g. the superior oblique) should be weakened and the extortor on the other side (e.g. the inferior oblique) strengthened. Conrad and de Decker14 operate on all four oblique muscle insertions, slanting the insertions to either increase or decrease their cyclotorsional effect. An alternative approach has been described by Spielmann15, who slants the insertions on all the rectus muscles of each eye. Both approaches seem logical.
The benefit of surgery is largely cosmetic, but Dell'Osso and Flynn5 have shown broadening of the null zone postoperatively. Best corrected visual acuity is usually unchanged.
Artificial divergence surgery
This surgical approach is based on the common observation that many
patients with congenital nystagmus show a significant reduction in its
amplitude on convergence. Their near visual acuity is therefore frequently
disproportionally better than distance acuity. In some patients, base-out
prisms suppress nystagmus and improve vision. The aim of surgery is to induce
a latent divergent ocular position (exophoria), which the patient will then
overcome by exerting fusional convergence, thereby damping the nystagmus.
Patients must have adequate fusional reserves to overcome the induced
deviation, so preoperative testing with prisms is mandatory. Sedler et
al.16 reported
26 patients assessed preoperatively with prisms. 20 responded to prism
adaptation and of these 17 did well with artificial divergence surgery; 3
patients required a combination of artificial divergence surgery with the
classic Kestenbaum procedure. 6 patients who did not respond to prisms had
Kestenbaum surgery as a primary procedure. Zubcov et
al.17 reported
18 cases treated with combinations of artificial divergence surgery and
Kestenbaum surgery with particular reference to visual acuity. 6 had
artificial divergence surgery alone: 2 gained one line of Snellen visual
acuity, and one gained four lines. 7 patients had standard Kestenbaum surgery:
one gained a single Snellen line of vision. 5 had a combined approach: 4
gained two or more lines of Snellen acuity.
Maximum recession of horizontal rectus muscles
This procedure is designed to symmetrically weaken the horizontal rectus
muscles and reduce the amplitude of the nystagmus, all congenital nystagmus
being either purely or largely horizontal in direction. It was first suggested
by Bietti and Bagolini in
196018, but was
then revived by von
Noorden19 and
Helveston20 in
1991.
All four horizontal recti are recessed to around the equator of the globe, the medials being 10 mm from their insertions, and the laterals at 12 mm. The procedure causes remarkably little reduction in horizontal rotations of the eye and distinctly improves vision. The Snellen acuity is only slightly improved, but nearly all patients report a decrease in the time taken to identify an object of regard. This has been studied by Sprunger et al.21.
Anterior tenotomy of rectus muscles
Dell'Osso et
al.22 have
recently reported some studies in an animal with naturally occurring
nystagmus, the achiasmatic Belgian sheepdog. Their thesis is that removal of
the tendon organ responsible for proprioception abolishes the nystagmus.
Anterior tenotomy of all rectus and oblique muscles certainly reduced
nystagmus in two animals, but the results in man are still awaited.
Neurosurgery
In 1988
Funahashi23
reported a series of 106 patients with congenital nystagmus of whom 10 (aged
18-42, mean 27) underwent stereotactic neurosurgical superior colliculectomy.
7 showed a reduction of nystagmus amplitude by 40%. There has been no
replication of this study.
| SURGERY FOR MANIFEST-LATENT NYSTAGMUS |
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| NYSTAGMUS SURGERY IN CHILDREN |
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| SURGERY FOR ACQUIRED NYSTAGMUS |
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Patients, especially adult patients, with nystagmus are seeking a therapy for an inherently incurable condition. They are understandably keen to try any therapy that might help. The condition can be very variable, with emotion, tiredness and stress all known to have effects on its severity. The placebo effect of any treatment, especially surgery, must be very great, and randomized trials of treatment are difficult to design. One should therefore try not to raise hopes of radical improvement with any therapy.
| CONCLUSIONS |
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| REFERENCES |
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