The locus of fixation in strabismic amblyopia changes with increasing effort of recognition as assessed by scanning laser ophthalmoscope.
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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Page 1
The locus of fixation in
strabismic amblyopia changes
with increasing effort of
recognition as assessed by
scanning laser ophthalmoscope
Kirsten Siepmann,1Jens Reinhard2and Volker Herzau2
1Department of Diseases of the Anterior and Posterior Segment, University Eye
Hospital, Tu ¨ bingen, Germany
2Department of Pathophysiology of Vision and Neuroophthalmology, University Eye
Hospital, Tu ¨ bingen, Germany
ABSTRACT.
Purpose: We performed a qualitative assessment of fixation behaviour in rela-
tion to the fovea in patients with strabismic amblyopia.
Methods: Thefixationof25patientswithstrabismicamblyopiawasexaminedusing
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.
Results: 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.
Conclusions: 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.
Key words: strabismus – strabismic amblyopia – fixation – scanning laser ophthalmoscope (SLO)
Acta Ophthalmol. Scand. 2006: 84: 124–129
Copyright # Acta Ophthalmol Scand 2005.
doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0420.2005.00550.x
Introduction
Strabismic amblyopia is always unilat-
eral and is caused by active inhibition
within the cortical pathways of visual
input originating from the deviating
eye. It is thought to be due to an
abnormal binocular experience during
early childhood and has long been
deemed a deficit in visual resolving
capacity alone. Psychophysical investi-
gations have contributed greatly to a
better understanding of the amblyopic
process as an abnormal binocular
experience early in life. The light sense
of amblyopic eyes is normal (Schor
1983). However, the reduction in visual
acuity (VA) with decreasing luminance
is less than that of normal individuals
and much less than that of individuals
with reduced VA due to morphological
changes (Herzau et al. 1989, 1993).
Strabismic amblyopes exhibit a distor-
tion of space perception in the deviated
eye (Oppel 1962; Hess et al. 1978), as
well as impaired localization of objects
in space (Bedell & Flom 1981; Bedell
et al. 1985). Marked spatial uncertainty
and distortion occur in the deviated eye
of squinters with both normal and
reduced VA (Levi & Klein 1983) but
cannot be found in normal eyes in
which VA has been artificially reduced
(Stigmar 1971; Williams et al. 1984),
suggesting that uncertainty in strabis-
mic amblyopic eyes does not result
from reduced acuity. It has also long
been known that the locus of fixation
(normally the foveola) in around 50%
of all amblyopic patients is shifted to
an eccentric retinal area, without the
sensationof eccentric
(Mimura et al. 1984). Von Noorden
viewing
ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA 2006
124
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(1966) therefore suggested that eccentric
fixation may be caused by an abnormal
fixation reflex due to a shift of retinal
co-ordinates. We studied the fixation
behaviour in strabismic
using a scanning laser ophthalmoscope
(SLO)with the
whether fixational control was in any
way modulated by recognitional effort.
amblyopes
aimofanalysing
Materials and Methods
Patients
Twenty-five patients (12 females, 13
males) withstrabismic
(Table 1) were examined according to
thetenets of the
Helsinki. Their ages ranged from 7 to
64 years (mean 28.44 years). Seventeen
patients suffered from congenital eso-
tropia, six from exotropia and two
from consecutive exotropia. Of the lat-
ter two patients, one had suffered from
congenital esotropia in childhood and
had turned spontaneously exotropic in
her early teens, while the other had
undergone strabismus surgery abroad
amblyopia
Declaration of
as a child. The details of the operation,
however, could not be retrieved. Each
patient underwent a full orthoptic and
ophthalmicexaminationincludingassess-
ment of best corrected VA prior to the
SLO investigation. Nine patients had a
VA ? 0.1, whereas 16 had VA of 0.2
?0.8 in their amblyopic eye (Table 1).
All patients presented to our department
with the intention of undergoing squint
surgery.Patientsexhibitingastronglatent
nystagmus were excluded.
Scanning laser ophthalmoscopy
An SLO (Model 101; Rodenstock,
Munich, Germany) was used to image
the fundus (He-Ne laser) and to present
stimuli simultaneously
acousto-optic modulator.
grabber board was programmed to pre-
sent black stimuli that were generated
on a bright red background of 3.6 * 104
trolands (contrast 0.986). For fixation
targets three solid discs of 15, 10 and
5 degrees and Landolt Cs in decreasing
order of size ranging from a linear VA
of 0.01–0.2 in European decimals were
using
A
an
frame
used (Fig. 1.). This not only allows for
exact determination of the position of
the fovea in relation to the fixation target
and stimulus over time, but also for the
measurement of eye movements without
calibration. Although the SLO per se
allows presentation of smaller stimuli,
for the purpose of analysis, the gap of
thesmallestLandoltCcouldnotbesmal-
ler than two video lines corresponding to
approximately5minutesofarc,equalling
aVAof0.2.Thetemporalresolutionis50
video fields per second, and the spatial
resolution at least 12 minutes of arc.
Procedure
Each patient was asked to fixate on the
centre of each of the black discs as if
trying to aim at the centre of a target.
Then Landolt Cs in decreasing size were
presented (Fig. 2.) and the patient was
asked to identify the clock orientation of
the gap and then to fixate exactly on the
gap itself. When the subjective limit of
detection (i.e. the gap of the Landolt C
could no longer be located correctly) was
reached,theexaminationwasterminated.
All examinations were performed in both
the amblyopic and the sound eye.
Data analysis
A video-recording of each examination
was made on S-VHS tape. The fixation
was tracked using a semiautomatic
program using fundus images that
were digitized and transferred to a
PC. Fixational eye movements were
measured by marking a high contrast
landmark (e.g. vessel branching) in
every video field of a continuous
sequence of at least 4 seconds (200
fields) for each stimulus. The program
calculated the landmark’s change of
position (i.e. its vertical and horizontal
co-ordinates) field by field. By referring
all values to the anatomical fovea by
simple vector calculation (Fig. 1), a
continuous trace of fixation plotted as
x/y (fixational positions in relation to
the fovea) and x/t (motion over time)
could be drawn.
Results
When analysing fixation strategy two
very distinct patterns were evident:
One group of patients (patients 2, 3,
4, 8, 12, 21) fixated eccentrally far away
from the fovea. Although all patients in
Table 1. Summary of main patient data.
Sex Form of
strabismus
Amblyopic Visual acuity Fixation
eye (OD/OS)
Fixation
SLO
Foveal fixation
possible? (Visuscope)
F
M
F
Esotropia
Exotropia
Exotropia
(consecutive)
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Exotropia
(consecutive)
Esotropia
OD
OD
OS
0.1/1.0
CF/0.8
1.3/0.05
ND
ND
ND
Nasal/superior
Nasal/superior
Temporal
Yes
No
No
M
M
M
M
F
F
F
M
M
M
M
OS
OS
OD
OD
OD
OD
OS
OD
OS
OS
OD
1.3/0.05
1.0/0.2
0.3/1.3
0.7/1.3
0.05/1.0
0.5/0.3
0.6/1.3
0.6/1.0
1.0/CF
1.3/0.3
0.3/1.0
Nasal
ND
ND
Central
ND
ND
Central
ND
ND
ND
Central
Nasal
Temporal
Nasal
Central
Nasal/inferior
Nasal
Central
Nasal
Nasal/inferior
Nasal
Central
No
Yes
Yes
N/A
No
Yes
N/A
Yes
No
Yes
N/A
FOS 1.3/0.1Foveal
(wandering)
Central
Central
ND
ND
Central
ND
ND
Foveal
(wandering)
ND
ND
Nasal Yes
F
F
M
F
M
M
F
M
Exotropia
Exotropia
Exotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Esotropia
Exotropia
OD
OD
OD
OS
OD
OS
OD
OD
0.5/1.0
0.8/1.0
0.6/1.3
1.0/0.2
0.2/1.0
0.1/1.0
0.2/1.0
0.4/1.3
Central
Temporal/superior Yes
Temporal
Nasal
Nasal
Nasal/superior
Nasal
Temporal
N/A
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
F
F
Esotropia
Exotropia
OD
OS
0.1/1.0
0.8/0.2
Nasal
Temporal
Yes
Yes
N/A ¼ not applicable; ND ¼ not done.
Visual acuity provided in European decimals.
ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA 2006
125
Page 3
this group correctly identified the gap
orientation of the Landolt C (the smal-
lest Landolt C recognized defined the
highest individual recognitional effort),
the locus of fixation did not change to
any large extent and remained eccentric
throughoutthe
Figs 3B and 4C, D for examples of
fixation strategy and pattern). Four
patients in this group had VAs of either
0.05 (patients 3, 4, 8) or 0.1 (patient
21). Two patients in this group at
routine VA testing were able to count
fingers(CF) only.
examined with the SLO there was a
slight discrepancy (possibly due to the
high contrast of the SLO stimuli on the
bright red background). Both were able
to see the 0.02 or 0.03 Landolt ring,
respectively, and thus qualified for
analysis. None of the patients when
questionedhad the
‘indirect viewing’ and all confirmed
that the stimulus was ‘straight ahead’.
The larger group of patients (n ¼ 15),
which was also the cohort with better
VA (0.2–0.8), showed very clear and
consistent fixational strategies (Figs 3A
and 4A, B). Initially, fixation remained
eccentric when looking at the black discs
and the larger Landolt rings. However,
it was able to switch to the fovea as soon
as recognitional effort was required.
Although all the patients were able to
keep their fixation foveal as long as
they were looking at the required
examination (see
However when
impression of
circle
fovea
vessel
branching
V(t )
F(t )
F(t ) = V(t ) + VF
VF
patients view in the SLO:
01 : 19 : 30 : 12
Fig. 1. Snapshot of an SLO video sequence. The patient sees a black disc in the middle of a bright red field in the SLO (see inset). The retina and the
stimuli are simultaneously observed by the investigator. For offline analysis, the video sequences were digitized and the position of the vessel
branching was marked in every video field (50 fields per second). For technical reasons the origin of the co-ordinate system is set at the top left hand
corner of the video image. The program calculated the position of the fovea and its change over time.
15°
10°
5°
0,01
0,02
0,03
0,05
0,08
0,1
0,15
0,2
Fig. 2. Diagram of the stimuli that were presented at each examination. Patients were asked to
exactly fixate the centre of each disc or the gap in the Landolt C. All target stimuli were perceived
as in the subjective ‘straight ahead’ position.
ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA 2006
126
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stimulus, some very small nystagmic
jerks through the fovea (Fig. 3A) could
be detected in almost all cases.
The third group of patients (n ¼ 4)
fixated centrally
examination.
throughoutthe
Discussion
Strabismic amblyopes show distorted
space perception in their deviated eye
(Pugh 1958; Hess et al. 1978), as well as
an impaired localization of objects in
space (Bedell 1981; Bedell et al. 1985).
It has been shown that amblyopes
make large errors in partitioning hor-
izontal lines (Bedell 1981) as well as in
vertical alignment when compared to
strabismics without amblyopia (Bedell
1981; Bedell et al. 1985; Fronius &
Sireteanu 1989). Bedell et al. (1985)
speculated that reduced VA and abnor-
mal eye movements are not the causes
but, rather, the consequences of distor-
tions and uncertainty originating at a
central level, possibly ‘at the visual cor-
tex’. Strabismics with normal or nearly
normal acuity frequently exhibit oculo-
motor abnormalities such as unsteady
andeccentricfixation
Weymouth1961;
1979) and inaccurate pursuit tracking
(van Hof-van Duin & Mohn 1982).
These strabismics are often uncertain
in making visual discriminations and in
(Flom&
al.Ciuffreda et
eccentricity (degrees)
temporal nasal
time (seconds)
–12 –10 –8
(A)
–6–4–22468 10 12
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
0
eccentricity (degrees)
temporal nasal
time (seconds)
–12 –10 –8 –6–4 –2 2468 1012
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
0
(B)
eccentricity (degrees)
temporalnasal
time (seconds)
–12 –10 –8–6 –402468 1012
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
–2
eccentricity (degrees)
temporal nasal
time (seconds)
–12 –10 –8–6 –402468 10 12
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
–2
Fig. 3. (A) Fixation strategy of patient 20 (exemplary of group 2). The black line shows the sound eye, the grey line the amblyopic eye, respectively,
when fixating the target stimulus. ‘0 eccentricity’ describes the fovea. (B) Fixation strategy of patient 4 (exemplary of group 1).
ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA 2006
127
Page 5
performing visually guided tasks with the
deviatedeye(Pugh1958;Mayetal.1983).
Quantitatively more severe oculomotor
andsensoryabnormalities
strabismic amblyopic eyes (Flom &
Weymouth 1961; Ciuffreda et al. 1979;
Schor 1983),suggesting
abnormalities exist as a manifestation of
thesamephenomenonandmayberelated
roughly to the acuity level. It is indeed
importantto consider
between the fixation pattern and VA.
The normal decrease in VA is a func-
tion of the distance of the object image
from the fovea. However, this does not
hold true for the amblyopic eye, where
factors other than eccentricity of fixa-
tion alone determine the degree of
visual acuity (von
Helveston 1970), although eyes with
low VA tend to have greater eccentricity
oftheirfixationpattern(vonNoorden &
Mackensen 1962;Mackensenetal. 1967;
von Noorden 1969; von Noorden &
occur in
thatthese
the relation
Noorden&
Helveston 1970). Some amblyopic eyes
can be induced to assume spontaneous
central fixation relatively easily. Such
eyes do not, however, necessarily attain
normal vision, although it is also true
that unlessfoveolar
achieved, the physiological basis for a
normal VA is absent. There are basic-
ally two opposing theories with regard
to the pathogenesis of non-foveolar
fixation. The Cu ¨ ppers Theory, often
referred to as the ‘Correspondence
Theory’,states that
ahead’ sensation is no longer trans-
mitted by the fovea but rather by
some eccentric retinal area and due to
this shift the patient no longer fixates
withthefovea
Cu ¨ ppers equated loss of the straight-
ahead sensation by the fovea with loss
of the principal visual direction in
anomalous correspondence (Cu ¨ ppers
1956, 1961, 1966), as he never found
normalcorrespondence
fixationis
the‘straight-
(Cu ¨ ppers1956).
inpatients
with eccentric fixation. As a conse-
quence of this theory the degree of
eccentricity of fixation should be iden-
tical to the angle of anomaly, which
according to Cu ¨ ppers is true for 50%
of cases. A great deal of work has gone
into verifying Cu ¨ ppers’ claim and the
results obtained were equivocal (von
Noorden & Mackensen 1962; von
Noorden 1969). The other, even older,
theoryis the ‘Scotoma
according to which the amblyopic eye
fixates with that retinal area adjacent
to the scotoma that has the highest
resolving power (Bo ¨ hme 1955; Oppel
1962; Aggarwal & Verma 1980). This
theory has also failed to achieve unan-
imoussupport(Mackensen
Aulhorn 1967; Aulhorn & Lichtenberg
1972;Hess 1977;
Mimura et al. 1984). An alternative
explanation for the eccentric fixation
in strabismic amblyopes was given by
von Noorden (1969), who suggested
Theory’,
1957;
Avetisov1979;
fovea
fovea
fovea
fovea
00 : 44 : 29 : 2000 : 34 : 09 : 01
00 : 37 : 18 : 07
00 : 46 : 37 : 18
AC
DB
Fig. 4. Fundus images of patient 20 while fixating (A) the centre of the 15-degree disc (nasally eccentric) and (B) the gap in the Landolt C. Fundus
images of patient 21 while fixating (C) the centre of the 15-degree disc (nasosuperiorly eccentric) and (D) the gap in the Landolt C.
ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA 2006
128
Page 6
that eccentric fixation may be caused
by an abnormal fixation reflex. A
visual object falling on the peripheral
retina of a normal eye elicits a fixation
reflex that will cause the eye to move so
that the image is shifted from the per-
iphery to the fovea. In contrast to
acquired maculopathy, where patients
fixate eccentrically but still have the
sensation of ‘indirect viewing’, in stra-
bismic amblyopes the situation is quite
different. Due to suppression early in
life when abnormal conditions produce
abnormalvisual
decreased foveal VA leads the fixation
reflex to become associated with the
eccentric fixation area. This motor
adaptation will position the image of
an object of interest directly onto the
eccentric fixation area without placing
it first on the fovea. In that sense the
fovea has lost its ‘zero retinomotor
value’, which may now be found at
the eccentric fixation area. So far it is
unclear, however, whether this adapta-
tion is absolute and complete in all
cases or whether the abnormal fixation
reflex can be overcome by increased
recognitionaleffort.
laserophthalmoscope
unique way of carrying out real-time
examination of strabismic amblyopes.
It offers the advantage to the observer
of being able to visualize and simulta-
neously place an image onto the
patient’s retina. In our studies we
found that patients with a VA of
< 0.1 showed a stable area of fixation
in a location outside the fovea. In
amblyopes with better VA, fixation
became more and more ‘foveolized’ as
the recognitional effort increased.
Our observations provide further evi-
dence that eccentric fixation in strabis-
mic amblyopes is indeed part of a
spectrum of sensory and motor adapta-
tions of visual functions in patients with
strabismus. Some amblyopes (with bet-
ter acuity) may fixate randomly at the
margin of a central suppression scotoma
to obtain better vision when the non-
amblyopic eye is covered. In others
(with severely reduced VA) the adapta-
tion is more complete and the motor
component of the
becomes more stably associated with
thenew (eccentric)centreofretinomotor
orientation for fixational eye move-
ments. Further experiments under dif-
ferent viewing conditions are needed to
characterize the nature of this retinomo-
tor adaptation.
behaviour, the
Thescanning
providesa
fixation reflex
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acuity.Acta
Received on January 14th, 2005.
Accepted on July 8th, 2005.
Correspondence:
Kirsten Siepmann MD, PhD or
Professor Volker Herzau MD
University Eye Hospital
Schleichstrasse 12–16
72076 Tu ¨ bingen
Germany
Tel: þ 49 7071 298 4761
Fax: þ 49 7071 294 763
Email: kirsten.siepmann@web.de
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