Why do babies develop strabismus?

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Horwood, A. orcid id iconORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0886-9686 (2018) Why do babies develop strabismus? In: 39th Meeting of the European Strabismological Association, 13th-15th September 2017, Porto, Portugal, pp. 33-37.

Abstract/Summary

Purpose. To present evidence for the mechanism of the development of infantile esotropia. Methods. Our laboratory has used surveys, remote haploscopic photorefraction and clinical tests to study the development of ocular alignment, convergence, accommodation and their linkages in typical and atypical infants. An overview of our results is presented alongside other research evidence. Results. Neonatal misalignments are common, but mostly resolve before the time when cortical binocularity emerges. Early instability of ocular alignment and accommodation usually resolves by 8-9 weeks of age. Proximal cues appear more influential in early convergence and accommodation than the binocular disparity cues that become the major drive in older children and adults. Studies of premature and full term infants suggest the development of convergence and accommodation are “hard wired”. Conclusion. Infantile esotropia develops from neonatal biases to convergent eye movements that persist if normal binocular vision and stereopsis do not develop. The potential for suppression afforded by cortical binocularity, some aspects of which may be experience-dependent, on unstable eye alignment may provide an explanation why premature infants are more at risk for infantile esotropia.

Additional Information Not available online. Access to publication via author or European Strabismological Association
Item Type Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/80023
Refereed No
Divisions Life Sciences > School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences > Development
Life Sciences > School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences > Perception and Action
Additional Information Not available online. Access to publication via author or European Strabismological Association
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