FACIAL ASYMMETRY AND TENDON LAXITY IN SUPERIOR OBLIQUE PALSY

Citation
Ea. Paysee et al., FACIAL ASYMMETRY AND TENDON LAXITY IN SUPERIOR OBLIQUE PALSY, Journal of pediatric ophthalmology and strabismus, 32(3), 1995, pp. 158-161
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Ophthalmology,Pediatrics
ISSN journal
01913913
Volume
32
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
158 - 161
Database
ISI
SICI code
0191-3913(1995)32:3<158:FAATLI>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Both facial asymmetry and superior oblique tendon laxity are associate d with congenital superior oblique muscle palsy (SOP). It is unknown w hether facial asymmetry and tendon laxity are related to each other, p erhaps even causally. We evaluated 29 patients with SOP for presence o f facial symmetry, tendon laxity, or both, and correlated these findin gs with presence or absence of chronic head tilt. Sixteen of 21 (76%) unilateral congenital SOP patients had facial asymmetry and 17 (81%) h ad tendon asymmetry. Ninety-four percent had either or both abnormalit ies, but only 57% had tendon laxity (palsy) on the side opposite the f acial hypoplasia. All patients with facial hypoplasia had a head tilt toward the hypoplastic side of the face, regardless of which side the palsy was on. These findings, along with previous studies of congenita l muscular torticollis, infer that the two anatomic abnormalities asso ciated with congenital SOP (facial asymmetry and tendon asymmetry) do not occur as part of the same developmental sequence, but the facial a symmetry develops as a consequence of a chronic head tilt from a young age.