Peters Anomaly
29/12/2017
Nystagmus is a rhythmic and involuntary movement of one or both eyes that may occur at any age. The rhythmic movement has two phase: a rightward-moving quick phase and a leftward-moving quick phase. A pendular nystagmus is when the two phases are symmetrical in speed, and a jerk nystagmus when they are asymmetrical, meaning that the nystagmus is quicker towards one side than the other.
The defining characteristics of a nystagmus are: direction, range, frequency and intensity.
The most common conjugate nystamus.
We talk about when they eyes move simultaneously in the same direction, amplitude and frequency in the different eye positions. It is a disconjugate or disassociated nystagmus when the previously mentioned characteristics are not present.
Some patients present a neutral or blockage zone. This is an eye position where the nystagmus diminishes or disappears and that causes torticollis to move the eyes into the blockage position.
There are multiple classifications.
According to age of onset:
According to the cause:
Poor vision, photophobia, amblyopia (lazy eye), strabismus and torticollis point to infantile nystagmus associated with an eye pathology.
Oscillopsia (the feeling that the enviroment is moving), nausea, vomitting, loss of balance, ataxia and oculomotor nerve paralysis point to nystamus associated with a neurological pathology.
The causes are multifactorial. Among children they are many and varied in addition to being complicated to assess and diagnose. In general, we can differentiate between two large groups:
Nystagmus of eye origin
Nystagmus of neurological origin
In some nystagmuses, ocular and neurological causes coincide which is suitable for getting a correct diagnosis.
The aims of treatment are to improve visual acuity, reduce the amplitude and frequency of the nystagmus and correct or improve torticollis.
Medical treatment
Surgical treatment
Before considering it, you must consider whether the nystagmus has improved over time. The indication, the approach and muscles to be operated on, will vary depending on the type of nystagmus and torticollis induced. The surgery aims to moe the eyes from a blocked peripheral area to a central gaze position to avoid torticollis. Nystagmus is a complex clinical case which must be personalised for each patient.
There are different techniques based on the same principle:
Vertical torticollis
In torticollis with an elevated chin and blockage in depression, the inferior muscles are weakened. If the torticollis is greater than 25 degrees, resection of the antagonistic muscles must be required. We must rule out the fact that the torticollis is not induced by A V patterns or alphabet syndrome which would require another specific technique.
In torsional torticollis
They have a poor prognosis meaning that the surgical indication is usually for exceptional cases given the risk of undesired complications.
In nystagmus with torticollis and strabismus
We must opt for correcting both symptoms simultaneously. The fixating eye is operated on to reduce the torticollis and the non-dominant eye is operated on to correct the strabismus.