Walsh & Hoyt: Skew Deviation and the Ocular Tilt Reaction

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Identifier wh_ch19_p910_2
Title Walsh & Hoyt: Skew Deviation and the Ocular Tilt Reaction
Creator David S. Zee, MD; David Newman-Toker, MD, PhD
Affiliation (DSZ) Professor of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University; (DN) Associate Professor, Departments of Neurology, Ophthalmology, & Otolaryngology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Subject Ocular Motor System; Ocular Motility Disorders; Skew Deviation; Ocular Tilt Reaction
Description Skew deviation is a vertical misalignment of the visual axes caused by a disturbance of prenuclear vestibular inputs to the oculomotor nuclei. Torsional and horizontal deviations may be associated findings. The hypertropia may be the same (comitant) in all positions of gaze, or it may vary and even alternate (typically with an alternating abducting hypertropiai.e., right hypertropia on right gaze, left hypertropia on left gaze). When skew deviation is incomitant, it may mimic an isolated superior or inferior oblique palsy by the Bielschowsky three-step test. In such cases, however, it appears that the addition of a fourth step, assessment of ocular torsion in both eyes, may be able to distinguish skew deviation from isolated oblique weakness: with skew mimicking superior oblique palsy, the hypertropic eye is incyclotorted (rather than excyclotorted, as one would expect if the hypertropia were the result of superior oblique weakness). By analogy, when skew mimics inferior oblique palsy, the hypotropic eye is excyclotorted (rather than incyclotorted, as one would expect if the hypotropia were the result of inferior oblique weakness). It remains to be seen, however, whether the addition of this fourth step will reliably distinguish between superior oblique palsy and all forms of skew deviation, or whether some cases will simply be indistinguishable at the bedside.
Date 2005
Language eng
Format application/pdf
Type Text
Source Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology, 6th Edition
Relation is Part of Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology Walsh and Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology
Collection Neuro-ophthalmology Virtual Education Library: NOVEL http://NOVEL.utah.edu
Publisher Wolters Kluwer Health, Philadelphia
Holding Institution Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah, 10 N 1900 E SLC, UT 84112-5890
Rights Management Copyright 2005. For further information regarding the rights to this collection, please visit: https://NOVEL.utah.edu/about/copyright
ARK ark:/87278/s6s78qtj
Setname ehsl_novel_whts
ID 186264
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6s78qtj
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