Principles of Prism for Strabismus - Treatment Options: Learn how to prescribe prism thoughtfully to improve comfort, function, and alignment
Lesson Summary
When managing a patient with double vision, it is essential to consider various treatment options, with prism being a primary intervention. Here is a detailed overview of prism usage, benefits, risks, and complementary treatments.
Benefits of Prism:
- Alleviates double vision quickly, especially in acute cases.
- Enhances binocular vision when the eyes can still work together.
- Improves quality of life and stabilizes vision.
- Non-invasive approach.
Considerations and Risks:
- Risk of prism adaptation, particularly with base-out prism, leading to dependency.
- Prismdemand can increase, complicating future treatments like contact lens use.
- Prism moves the image toward the apex, with base-out shifting image inward and base-in expanding visual space outward.
- Yoked prism (same base direction in both eyes) can be used, including vertical (base-up or base-down) and horizontal orientations, influencing perception in a 3D way.
Prescribing Prism - Five Key Tips:
- Measure alignment: Use unilateral and alternating cover tests and tools like phoropters in various head positions.
- Determine lowest effective prism: Start with small amounts (e.g., 0.5 to 1 prism diopter) to reduce symptoms rather than strictly aiming for orthophoria.
- Recheck findings after trial: Assess changes in near point of convergence or other clinical signs after applying prism in trial frames.
- Prescribe appropriately: Apply prism in the relevant prescription (distance or near) depending on when symptoms occur.
- Monitor closely: Follow up about a month after fitting to evaluate symptom improvement and prevent overprescription.
Types of Prism:
- Fresnel prism: Quick, temporary relief, ideal for acute cases; less optical quality and more visible on lenses.
- Ground-in prism: Used for stable, long-term double vision; allows small precise powers and better optical quality.
Strategies to Avoid Prism Adaptation:
- Prefer base-down prism over base-out when possible to avoid increased prism demands.
- Consider alternatives like narrow binasal occlusion and vision hygiene.
- Educate patients on visual rest breaks, relaxation, and vision therapy.
Additional Treatment Options Beyond Prism:
- Lenses: Small plus lenses may reduce eye strain and help with near-point triad issues; useful for both esophoria and exophoria.
- Binasal Occlusion: Blocks the nasal part of the lenses to reduce image overlap and ease binocular fusion, especially helpful in brain injury patients.
- Vision Therapy: Crucial for rehabilitation, often combined with prism or lenses to improve binocular function.
- Strabismus Surgery: Only recommended if the double vision is consistent, long-standing, constant, and comitant (similar in all gaze directions). Surgery is usually followed by vision therapy for best outcomes.
Summary:
- Start with the lowest effective prism power that improves comfort and symptoms.
- Regular assessments and patient monitoring are critical to avoid overprescription and adaptation.
- Consider multiple modalities—prism, lenses, binasal occlusion, vision therapy—tailoring treatment to individual patient needs.
- Surgery is a last resort under specific criteria, and post-operative rehabilitation is important.
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