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Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 412-413 (August 2007)


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Consecutive cyclic exotropia after surgery for adult-onset cyclic esotropia

Sunir J. Garg, MDaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Steven M. Archer, MDb

Received 19 November 2006; accepted 23 December 2006. published online 12 April 2007.

Cyclic esotropia—periods of esotropia alternating with periods of orthotropia, most commonly on a 48-hour cycle—is a rare condition seen mostly in children. Surgical correction of the maximum deviation generally corrects the esotropia without resulting in alternating periods of exotropia, as might be expected if the periodicity continued postoperatively.1 Unlike cyclic esotropia in children, the few reported adult cases have often been associated with severe acquired monocular visual impairment; however, the response to surgical treatment is reported to be the same as that in children. We report here an exception, in which an adult patient developed cyclic exotropia after surgical correction of her acquired cyclic esotropia.

a Retina Service, Wills Eye Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

b W. K. Kellogg Eye Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Sunir Jain Garg, MD, Wills Eye Hospital, Retina Service, 840 Walnut Street, Suite 1020, Philadelphia, PA 19107.

 The authors have no financial interest in any of the products or procedures mentioned.

PII: S1091-8531(07)00137-1

doi:10.1016/j.jaapos.2006.12.058


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