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A manifest lack of parallelism of the visual axes of the eyes. SYN: crossed eyes, heterotropia, heterotropy, squint (1). [Mod. L., fr. G. strabismos, a squinting]
- A-s. 1. s. in which esotropia is more marked in looking upward than downward; 2. s. in which exotropia is more marked on looking downward than upward. SYN: A-pattern s..
- alternate day s. SYN: cyclic esotropia.
- alternating s. a form of s. in which either eye fixes.
- A-pattern s. SYN: A-s..
- comitant s. a condition in which the degree of s. is the same in all directions of gaze. SYN: concomitant s..
- concomitant s. SYN: comitant s..
- convergent s. SYN: esotropia.
- cyclic s. a s. that appears and disappears in rhythym, most frequently at 48-hour intervals.
- incomitant s. SYN: paralytic s..
- vertical s. a form of s. in which the visual axis of one eye deviates upward (s. sursum vergens) or downward (s. deorsum vergens).
- X-s. s. in which exotropia is more marked when looking upward or downward than when looking straight ahead.
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stra·bis·mus strə-'biz-məs n inability of one eye to attain binocular vision with the other because of imbalance of the muscles of the eyeball called also heterotropia, squint compare cross-eye
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n.
squint: any abnormal alignment of the two eyes. The strabismus is most commonly horizontal - convergent strabismus (or esotropia) or divergent strabismus (exotropia) - but it may be vertical (hypertropia, in which the eye looks upwards, or hypotropia, in which it looks downwards). In rare cases both eyes look towards the same point but one is twisted clockwise or anticlockwise in relation to the other (cyclotropia). Double vision is possible, but the image from the deviating eye usually becomes ignored. In cyclotropia the image is not separated from the normal one but rotated across it. Most strabismus is concomitant, i.e. the abnormal alignment of the two eyes remains fairly constant, in whatever direction the person is looking. This is usual with childhood squints. Strabismus acquired by injury or disease is usually incomitant, i.e. the degree of misalignment varies in different directions of gaze. See also cover test, deviation, divergence, heterophoria.
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stra·bis·mus (strə-bizґməs) [Gr. strabismos a squinting] an eye condition in which the visual axes cannot be directed at the same point of fixation under normal conditions of seeing. The various forms of strabismus are spoken of as tropias, with their direction indicated by the appropriate prefix, such as cyclotropia, esotropia, exotropia, hypertropia, and hypotropia. Called also cast, heterotropia, manifest deviation, and squint. strabismal, strabismic adjMedical dictionary. 2011.