Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . The current study used IXTQ results from children aged 5 to 11 years (old enough to answer questionnaire) and ...
Stereoacuity deterioration or progression to constant exotropia was uncommon among children with intermittent exotropia who did not undergo surgical treatment, according to a study from the journal, ...
Exotropia is a form of squint in which an eye looks outwards. This may be persistent or intermittent. Intermittent exotropia can arise only when an individual looks at objects that are close by or far ...
Children under the age of 12 years, diagnosed with X(T) (of the true and simulated divergence excess and basic types) within the preceding 12 months and previously untreated, were eligible for the ...
Children and especially boys diagnosed with intermittent exotropia, a condition in which the eye turns outward (away from the nose) only some of the time, appear more likely to develop mental illness ...
Children whose mothers have a hypertensive disorder in pregnancy (HDP) may have an increased risk for strabismus, including exophoria and intermittent exotropia, new research shows. Preeclampsia and ...
Esotropia and exotropia could have shared genetic risk factors based on findings that genetif duplications on chromosomes were risk factors for the diseases. Genetic duplications in the second, fourth ...
Exophoria is when covering up one of your eyes makes it drift outward, away from your nose and your other eye. It's a type of strabismus. You could have it without knowing. But it may cause symptoms ...