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Exophthalmometry

Exophthalmometry. Dr. Diana Shechtman. Introduction. Orbital disorders can be associated with forward protrusion or backward displacement of the eyes Proptosis (exophthalmos) Abnormal forward protusion of the eyeball

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Exophthalmometry

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  1. Exophthalmometry Dr. Diana Shechtman

  2. Introduction • Orbital disorders can be associated with forward protrusion or backward displacement of the eyes • Proptosis (exophthalmos) • Abnormal forward protusion of the eyeball • orbital volume is fixed, thus, excess in volume will result in protrusion of the globe • Orbit is made out of BONE…It does not yield to increase pressure within it • Enophthalmos • abnormal posterior displacement of globe • Sinking of eyeball into orbit mni.mcgill.ca/neuroimage/

  3. Causes of proptosis & enophthalmos Proptosis • Graves Disease • #1 causes (endocrine) • Orbital Cellulitis • Orbital Infection • Orbital Inflammation • Orbital Tumor (neoplasm) • Cavernous Sinus Fistula • vascular anomaly Enophthalmos • decrease orbital fat • age • degenerative atrophy • Orbital Fracture Mnemonic for proptosis: VEIN

  4. Orbital examination • May include** • Case Hx • Prelims • VA, CV • Neuro evaluation: pupils & EOMs • SL evaluation • Conjunctival injection • Lid position • Tonometry & DFE • Globe evaluation • Observation • Above, below and from the side • Resistant to retropulsion & FD testing • Displacement measurement (Exophthalmometry) ** orbital examination is not restricted to above mentioned tests

  5. Proptosis Evaluation: Direct Observation • Family album tomography (FAT) • old photos • View from above • position of lids under the brow • Detect relative position of cornea under lids

  6. Exophthalmometry • Measurement of position of globe in the orbit • relative to lateral angle of the orbital rim • anterior corneal projection is commonly used as landmark for anterior position of the globe • cornea is viewed in profile Casser’s Atlas of primary care

  7. Why perform exophthalmometry? • Exophthalmos appearance is not always confirmed by direct observation • proptosis may be subtle • pseudo-proptosis appearance may be cause by • contralateral ptosis • Presence of lid retraction • normal asymmetry of palpebral fissure

  8. Clinical use of exophthalmometry • differential b/t pseudo and true exophthalmos/enophthalmos • detection of • exophthalmos • enophthalmos • monitoring disease process associated with exophthalmos

  9. Examples of clinical use Proptosis as CC Proptosis obs. during exam • Enophthalmos • 2nd to blow-out fracture Orbital tumor suspect Orbital cellulitis or inflammation Pt with Grave’s disease

  10. Other indications • Rule out pseudoproptosis • Long axial length (case discussed later) • Asymmetrical palpebral fissure • Congenital glaucoma • Orbital asymmetry

  11. Determining globe position • CT • Optical 3D imaging eyecasualty.co.uk

  12. Common ways to determining globe position: Exophthalmometers • Allows for images of corneal apex to project on a mm ruler • Hertel (1905)1 • Most common • Criticizes in literature for low reliability1 • Luedde (1938)

  13. The Hertel Pictures: store1.yimg.com/I/ Marco’s uses prisms B&L’s or Lombart’s mirrors incline at 45 degrees from sagittal plane

  14. The Hertel • Foot-plates (or yokes) “ grooved arc” fit over bony temporal margin of lateral orbital rim • crossbar • Establish baseline to allow for biocular reading Lock **B&L’s or Lombart’s design

  15. The Luedde • Transparent plastic mm ruler • Notch conforms to angle of lateral orbital rim • scale readings: 0mm (end of notch**) to 40mm • parallax is minimized by using scale on both sides of the rod** ** Are advantages of using Luedde over a standard ophthalmic mm ruler

  16. ExophthalmometrySet up • Pt to look straight ahead • Palpate the bony ridge • locating deepest angle of the orbital rim

  17. Hertel Procedure • Loosen the lock (B&L or Lombart) • slide mirrors or prisms along the horizontal bar to adjust footplates with corresponding lateral orbital rims • Bring Hertel forward toward pt, keeping it parallel to floor with crossbar scale visible in front • pt eye should be closed Casser’s Atlas of primary care

  18. Hertel Procedure • Position footplates against each lateral orbital rim independently Casser’s Atlas of primary care

  19. Hertel Procedure • pts eye open widely & at your eye level • Look at the mirror • Take mm measurement where apex of cornea(lower) is superimposed on the mm scale (upper) • corneal reflex lower mirror & mm scale upper mirror • OU

  20. Hertel Procedure • Read of the cross bar scale (near BASE)

  21. Luedde Procedure • Place notch against orbital rim • Scale should face out on the side • Keep luedde perpendicular to plane of face • move your head until mm rule numbers are superimposed above and below • Read the mm scale where corneal apex intersects • On temporal side Casser’s Atlas Clinical Pearlyou may shine a penlight on cornea from below to enhance corneal apex

  22. Hertel vs. Luedde • Hertel • biocular reading • baseline for sequential readings • parallax cues • Luedde • Strabismus • Facial asymetry • Since facial asymmetry can cause measurement error in particular with Hertel, Luedde are use for those occasions • parallax cues

  23. Recording • measurement is made in mm • For Hertel measurement record finding for each eye along with separation of instrument (BASE)

  24. Example • Hertel • 17/18mm @ 100 • OD 20mm & OS 21mm @ 115 • Luedde • OD,OS 17mm

  25. Analysis measurements • Eyes are compared… • Comparative • Relative • Absolute

  26. Interpretation • Comparative • serial exophthalmometry readings of the same eye are compared over time • Use same instrument • best to use Hertel over Luedde • Base reading • Commonly employed as a test on pt’s with Grave’s disease

  27. Interpretation • Relative • comparison of readings b/t two eyes • norm: </= 2mm • Absolute • comparison of readings to norms • whites 12 to 20 mm1 (10-22mm)2 • average 15 -17mm • blacks 12 to 24 mm1 • average 2mm higher than whites 1: Atlas 2: Eskridge

  28. Exophthalmometry interpretations • Age • lower readings for children • average 14mm • b/t age 10-18 there is a 3mm increase • Sex • males have higher readings • ~1mm • Posture • In supine position NORMAL eyes sink back 1-3mm • Grave’s disease pt’s eye are not affected by this phenomena

  29. Exophthalmometry interpretations • Ethnicity • Blacks have higher reading • 12-24mm • Asian have smaller ranges • 12-18mm

  30. Final Note • Reliability may be affected by • poor fixation or convergence • parallax errors (tilting instrument) • minor deviations in position result in gross variations in reading • Narrow base on Hertel • Blepharospasm • Facial bone dysformity may cause unreliable measurements due to unparallel placement of device Inter-observer variation is common problem associate with reliability

  31. AFTER exophthalmometry measurements:When to further evaluate… • Difference of >/=3 mm b/t eyes • Readings greater than the norm

  32. Further testing • Ultrasonography • CT scan • Evaluation of bony components of orbit • MRI • Valuable in displaying orbital contents • Endocrine evaluation • Grave’s disease is most common cause of proptosis

  33. CASE ANALYSIS • 34 y.o. WF • no complaints • here for annual exam • POHx: amblyopia OS since very young • PMhx: LME 2M ago • “clean bill of health”

  34. CASE ANALYSIS • VA(d)cc • 20/20 OD CF at 5 ft. OS • Pupils: (-) APD • EOM: SAFE OU • CF: FULL OD, OS

  35. CASE ANALYSIS • M: • -1.00 -0.50 X 180 20/20 • -12.00 sph 20/70 • General observation • proptosis OS • Exophthalmometry • OD17mm/22mm @ 109 www.scielo.br/img/

  36. References • Eskridge’s Clinical procedure in optometry • Glaser’s neuro-ophthalmology

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