Article

The locus of fixation in strabismic amblyopia changes with increasing effort of recognition as assessed by scanning laser ophthalmoscope.

Department of Diseases of the Anterior and Posterior Segment, University Eye Hospital, Tübingen, Germany.
Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica (impact factor: 1.85). 02/2006; 84(1):124-9. DOI:10.1111/j.1600-0420.2005.00550.x pp.124-9
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT We performed a qualitative assessment of fixation behaviour in relation to the fovea in patients with strabismic amblyopia.
The fixation of 25 patients with strabismic amblyopia was examined using a scanning laser ophthalmoscope (SLO). A digital frame grabber board was programmed to scan onto the patient's retina single solid black discs of 5, 10 and 15 degrees in diameter and Landolt Cs in different orientations and corresponding to a visual acuity (VA) of 0.01-0.2 in European decimals. The relative position of the fovea was video-recorded. Fifty video fields per second were plotted as x/y (fixational positions in relation to the fovea) and x/t (motion over time) graphs.
Three main groups of patients were seen. Group 1 (n = 6), with a VA of < 0.1, showed a grossly eccentric and unstable locus of fixation independent of size/type of test stimulus used. Group 2 (n = 15), with VA of 0.1-0.8, initially used an eccentric retinal area for fixation that, however, shifted to the fovea with decreasing size and increasing detail of the target for fixation. Group 3 (n = 4), with VA of 0.3-0.8, had stable central fixation throughout.
We speculate that the reduced VA associated with strabismic amblyopia is due to a defective motor control of fixation that can be modulated by recognitional effort.

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1 May 2013

Keywords

15 degrees
 
25 patients
 
decreasing size
 
defective motor control
 
different orientations
 
digital frame grabber board
 
eccentric retinal area
 
European decimals
 
fixational positions
 
Group 1
 
Landolt Cs
 
patient's retina single solid black discs
 
recognitional effort
 
reduced VA
 
scanning laser ophthalmoscope
 
size/type
 
stable central fixation
 
strabismic amblyopia
 
unstable locus
 
video fields