Exotropia Essentials - Outward Eye Turn
- Definition: Outward deviation (divergence) of one or both eyes.
- Types & Features:
- Intermittent Exotropia (IXT): Most common type. Eye turn occurs sometimes, especially when tired, ill, or viewing distant objects. Good fusional control initially.
- Often closes one eye in bright sunlight (photo-occlusion).
- Diplopia rare, suppression common.
- Constant Exotropia: Eye turn present at all times. May be congenital or develop from IXT.
- Sensory Exotropia: Due to poor vision in one eye (e.g., cataract, optic atrophy). Eye with poor vision deviates outwards.
- Consecutive Exotropia: Develops after surgical overcorrection of esotropia.
- Intermittent Exotropia (IXT): Most common type. Eye turn occurs sometimes, especially when tired, ill, or viewing distant objects. Good fusional control initially.
- Basic Mechanisms: Imbalance between fusional convergence and divergence mechanisms. Innervational factors (e.g., high AC/A ratio in divergence excess) or anatomical factors.

⭐ Intermittent exotropia is the most common type of childhood exotropia, often manifesting between 1-4 years of age. Control is typically worse for distance fixation than near initially in many cases (Divergence Excess type).
Exotropia Evaluation - Spotting the Drift
- History: Onset, duration, frequency (constant/intermittent), triggers (distance, fatigue, inattention), family Hx.
- Visual Acuity (VA): Best corrected; rule out/quantify amblyopia.
- Cover Tests: Key for detection.
- Cover-Uncover Test: Detects manifest XT (eye drifts OUT, refixates IN on uncover).
- Alternate Cover Test (ACT): Dissociates; reveals total deviation (phoria/intermittent tropia).
- Prism ACT (PACT): Measures deviation in PD (distance & near).
- Ocular Motility: Ductions, versions; check A/V patterns, oblique dysfunction.
- Near Point of Convergence (NPC): Receded (>10-15 cm) suggests Convergence Insufficiency.
- Cycloplegic Refraction: Essential for accurate refraction.
- Sensory Evaluation:
- Worth 4 Dot: Fusion, suppression, diplopia.
- Stereoacuity: (e.g., Titmus, TNO) quantifies depth perception.

⭐ Control of intermittent exotropia is often assessed using the Newcastle Control Score (NCS), grading home and clinic control.
Intermittent Exotropia - The On-Off Squint
- Most common exotropia; intermittent outward eye turn, often with fatigue, illness, or distance viewing.
- Clinical Features:
- Onset: Typically 1-4 years.
- Symptoms: Asthenopia, photophobia; children rarely report diplopia.
- Signs: Intermittent deviation, initially good fusional control.
⭐ Closing one eye in bright sunlight is a characteristic sign.
- Types:
- Basic: Distance deviation ≈ Near deviation.
- Convergence Insufficiency Type: Near deviation > Distance deviation.
- Divergence Excess Type: Distance deviation > Near deviation.
- Management:
- Goal: Improve control, alignment, and binocular vision.
- Options:
- Observation: Small, well-controlled deviations.
- Non-surgical: Minus lenses (if high AC/A), occlusion, orthoptic exercises (convergence).
- Surgical: For poor control, ↑ deviation, or significant symptoms (e.g., bilateral lateral rectus recession).
Exotropia Treatment - Aligning the Gaze
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Goal: Ocular alignment, binocular vision (stereopsis), symptom relief.
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Non-Surgical:
- Observation: Small, well-controlled intermittent XT.
- Optical Correction: Full cycloplegic refraction for significant errors.
- Occlusion Therapy: Part-time, for amblyopia or to improve XT control.
- Orthoptic Exercises: (📌 Pencil Push-ups) For convergence insufficiency (CI) type or small intermittent XT.
-
Surgical:
- Indications: Constant XT, large angle (>20 PD), poor control, progression, asthenopia.
- Timing: Usually 4-7 years; earlier for constant XT.
- Procedures: Based on XT type & angle. Bilateral Lateral Rectus (BLR) recession (common); Unilateral Recess-Resect (R&R).

⭐ Surgical success for intermittent exotropia is often defined as alignment within 10 PD of orthophoria and improved fusional control.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Intermittent exotropia is the most common type, often presenting between 6 months and 4 years.
- Deviation worsens with fatigue, illness, or inattention; improves with visual focus.
- Monocular eye closure in bright sunlight is a characteristic sign.
- Amblyopia is less common than in esotropia but requires monitoring.
- Management includes observation, glasses (e.g., minus lenses for high AC/A), patching, orthoptics, and surgery.
- Surgical aim is often a slight initial overcorrection for better long-term alignment.
- Sensory exotropia results from poor vision in one eye.
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