PubMed ID: 8424728
Author(s): Kushner BJ, Fisher MR, Lucchese NJ, Morton GV. Factors influencing response to strabismus surgery. Arch Ophthalmol. 1993 Jan;111(1):75-9.
Journal: Archives Of Ophthalmology (Chicago, Ill. : 1960), Volume 111, Issue 1, Jan 1993
Based on analyses in a series of 116 patients, we found that the response to strabismus surgery (degrees of change of ocular alignment per millimeter of rectus recession) correlated significantly with the preoperative deviation for esotropic and exotropic patients. The prediction of response to strabismus surgery was not improved significantly with the inclusion of axial length, age, and/or preoperative refractive error beyond the prediction provided with use of only the preoperative deviation, even though we have previously suggested that the response to strabismus surgery should be related to axial length. We believed that larger eyes should have a smaller response for the same number of millimeters of surgery than smaller eyes. We now believe that although the response to strabismus surgery does correlate significantly and inversely with axial length, this correlation may not be clinically important given the much stronger influence of preoperative deviation.