Eighty-five adults with horizontal concomitant strabismus were treated with an injection of a low dose of botulinum toxin A (BTXA) into the lateral or medial rectus muscle. The ocular deviation was reduced by an average of 60% independently of its size and whether or not surgery had previously been performed. The change was temporary, however, except in those cases with binocular functions, when fusion was re-established. Repeated low dose injections can maintain the improvement, but at higher doses, although larger reductions are produced, temporary local side effects - ptosis and vertical strabismus - are common. The technique is simple, well tolerated, and has no systemic side effects.
CITATION STYLE
Elston, J. S., Lee, J. P., Powell, C. M., Hogg, C., & Clark, P. (1985). Treatment of strabismus in adults with botulinum toxin A. British Journal of Ophthalmology, 69(10), 718–724. https://doi.org/10.1136/bjo.69.10.718
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