A prospective study was performed on 16 unoperated patients with frontal plagiocephaly to characterize the relationship between strabismus and abnormal head posture. Serial eye examinations were performed preoperatively and for 24 to 46 months following fronto-orbital advancement. In 14 patients (88 percent), preoperative clinical examination and CT scan indicated coronal plagiocephaly (synostotic); unicoronal synostosis was documented during fronto-orbital advancement in all these patients. Ten patients had abnormal head posture on preoperative examination, 9 of whom had strabismus at some time during the study. These 9 patients all had unicoronal synostosis with ipsilateral strabismus and a contralateral head tilt. All had eye muscle findings consistent with superior oblique paresis, although in 2 patients these signs first developed following fronto-orbital advancement. Strabismus resolved spontaneously in 2 patients between 2 and 8 months following fronto-orbital advancement; the remaining 7 patients underwent extraocular muscle surgery following fronto-orbital advancement, with early resolution of strabismus in all cases. The head tilt resolved or improved significantly in all 9 patients following resolution of the strabismus. Two patients had recurrent superior oblique paresis following surgical correction, necessitating secondary strabismus surgery. The present study indicates that extraocular muscle dysfunction is the major cause of abnormal head posture in patients with coronal plagiocephaly and emphasizes the need for long-term ophthalmologic surveillance in these patients.
Amblyopia is a cortical visual disorder caused by unequal visual input to the brain from the two eyes during development. Amblyopes show reduced visual acuity and contrast sensitivity and abnormal binocularity, as well as more "global" perceptual losses, such as figure-ground segregation and global form integration. Currently, there is no consensus on the neural basis for these higher-order perceptual losses. One contributing factor could be that amblyopes have deficiencies in attention, such that the attentional processes that control the selection of information favor the better eye. Previous studies in amblyopic adults are conflicting as to whether attentional deficits exist. However, studies where intact attentional ability has been shown to exist were conducted in adults; it is possible that it was acquired through experience. To test this hypothesis, we studied attentional processing in amblyopic children. We examined covert endogenous attention using a classical spatial cueing paradigm in amblyopic and visually typical 5-to 10-year old children. We found that all children, like adults, independently of visual condition, benefited from attentional cueing: They performed significantly better on trials with an informative (valid) cue than with the uninformative (neutral) cue. Response latencies were also significantly shorter for the valid cue condition. No statistically significant difference was found between the performance of the amblyopic and the visually typical children or between dominant and nondominant eyes of all children. The results showed that covert spatial attention is intact in amblyopic and visually typical children and is therefore not likely to account for higher-order perceptual losses in amblyopic children.
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