2013
DOI: 10.1167/iovs.12-10586
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Postural Control in Nonamblyopic Children with Early-Onset Strabismus

Abstract: PURPOSE. In healthy subjects, the postural stability in orthostatic position is better when fixating at near than at far. Increase in the convergence angle contributes to this effect. Children with strabismus present a deficit in vergence. We evaluated postural control in children with respect to the vergence angle as they fixated at different depths, thereby engaging in active vergence movements. METHODS.A TechnoConcept platform was used to record the postural stability of 11 subjects (mean age 11.18 6 4.02 y… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…The results suggest that sustained convergence and active vergence eye movements are both beneficial for postural regulation in patients; controls studied here showed similar benefit. The results are in line with those previously reported by Kapoula and Bucci [42] for dyslexic children, and Gaertner et al [43] in strabismus children. The hypothetical mechanism of action of vergence on posture has been discussed elsewhere [42].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…The results suggest that sustained convergence and active vergence eye movements are both beneficial for postural regulation in patients; controls studied here showed similar benefit. The results are in line with those previously reported by Kapoula and Bucci [42] for dyslexic children, and Gaertner et al [43] in strabismus children. The hypothetical mechanism of action of vergence on posture has been discussed elsewhere [42].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Shortening vergence latency could help better integration of visual vestibular and somesthetic subtending postural control. This interpretation is in line with prior studies showing that vergence eye movements are important for postural control (Gaertner et al 2013;Matheron et al 2016).…”
Section: Postural Control After Orthoptic Re-educationsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Our second hypothesis (hyp.2) concerns oculomotor control: there is strong evidence that vergence improves postural control [ 21 24 ], while saccades entail small changes in postural control (only a mild decrease of the standard deviation of the antero-posterior sway–see [ 25 ]), hence, we hypothesize that the plantar stimulations will act upon vergence neural networks only. Moreover, saccade is a significantly faster movement than vergence (50 milliseconds v.s 300–400 –see [ 26 ]) and podal inputs need between 100 and 200ms to be treated [ 16 , 27 ], which does not seem compatible with an influence upon saccades.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%