Testing depth of suppression in childhood intermittent exotropia

Sarah R Hatt, David A Leske, Jonathan M Holmes, Robert J Henderson, Danielle L Chandler, David G Morrison, Allison I Summers, Susan A Cotter, Sarah R Hatt, David A Leske, Jonathan M Holmes, Robert J Henderson, Danielle L Chandler, David G Morrison, Allison I Summers, Susan A Cotter

Abstract

A test of suppression was developed to provide a standardized approach to detecting and grading density of suppression in children with intermittent exotropia when manifestly exotropic. This new Office Suppression Test is a three-step procedure to grade suppression on a 4-point scale (from 0 for "negligible suppression" to 3 for "dense suppression"). The test was performed in 57 children 3-13 years of age with intermittent exotropia (distance angle of 16Δ-35Δ, with spontaneous tropia) during enrollment in a randomized trial. Of the 57 children, 51 could complete testing: 28 (55%) had dense suppression, 12 (24%) had moderate suppression, 5 (10%) had mild suppression, and 6 (12%) had negligible suppression. In a subgroup of 20 untreated children, suppression was evaluated again at 8 weeks. There was moderate agreement between suppression scores at baseline and at 8 weeks (weighted κ = 0.65 [95% CI, 0.45-0.84]).

Copyright © 2021 American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

FIG 1.
FIG 1.
Three steps of the Office Suppression Test procedure, grading suppression on a four-level scale (0, 1, 2, 3). All testing is to be performed while the exodeviation is manifest and the patient is fixing at 6 meters.

Source: PubMed

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