Disease or Syndrome
strabismus

stra·bis·mus [ struh-biz-muhs ]
Subclass of:
Ocular Motility Disorders
Etymology:
Greek strabismos = a squint
In English since 1684.
In English since 1684.
Definitions related to strabismus:
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A misalignment of the eyes so that the visual axes deviate from bifoveal fixation. The classification of strabismus may be based on a number of features including the relative position of the eyes, whether the deviation is latent or manifest, intermittent or constant, concomitant or otherwise and according to the age of onset and the relevance of any associated refractive error.Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO)The Human Phenotype Ontology Project, 2021
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Misalignment of the visual axes of the eyes. In comitant strabismus the degree of ocular misalignment does not vary with the direction of gaze. In noncomitant strabismus the degree of misalignment varies depending on direction of gaze or which eye is fixating on the target. (Miller, Walsh & Hoyt's Clinical Neuro-Ophthalmology, 4th ed, p641)NLM Medical Subject HeadingsU.S. National Library of Medicine, 2021
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Strabismus is the intermittent or constant misalignment of an eye so that its line of vision is not pointed at the same object as the other eye. Strabismus is caused by an imbalance in the extraocular muscles which control the positioning of the eyes. Strabismus is normal in newborns but should resolve by the time the baby is 6 months old. In older children with strabismus, the brain may learn to ignore the input from one eye, and this may lead to amblyopia, a potentially permanent decrease in vision in that eye if not corrected.NCI ThesaurusU.S. National Cancer Institute, 2021
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(heterotropia) Manifest deviation of the visual axes not controlled by fusion.Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO)The Human Phenotype Ontology Project, 2021
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Strabismus is misalignment of the eyes, which causes deviation from the parallelism of normal gaze. Diagnosis is clinical, including observation of the corneal light reflex and use of a cover test. Treatment may include correction of visual impairment with patching and corrective lenses, alignment by corrective lenses, and surgical...Merck & Co., Inc., 2020
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Strabismus refers to a misalignment of the eyes. If strabismus develops in adults, it can cause diplopia (double vision) and visual confusion (seeing different objects in the same location), and it is an important cause of amblyopia in children. Whereas normally both eyes fixate (look at) the object of interest, in strabismus one eye...Athenahealth, Inc., 2019
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Strabismus, misalignment of the eyes. The deviant eye may be directed inward toward the other eye (cross-eye, or esotropia), outward, away from the other eye (exotropia), upward (hypertropia), or downward (hypotropia). The deviation is called "concomitant" if it remains constant in all directions...Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 2020
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