Article Text
Abstract
Aims The purpose of this study was to explore the microstructural properties of the major white matter (WM) tracts in constant exotropia (XT) before and after strabismus surgery, and further investigate the association between microstructural alterations and the ocular dominance (OD).
Methods We collected diffusion tensor imaging data of patients with XT before (n=19) and after (n=15) strabismus surgery and 20 healthy controls and evaluated OD and stereopsis. The probabilistic streamline tractography of the 24 major WM tracts was reconstructed by using the automated fibre quantification package. Fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity (MD) along each tract were estimated, and their differences between the groups were examined. Furthermore, we evaluated the relationship between OD and the absolute value of altered microstructural parameters.
Results While all postoperative XT patients restored normal stereopsis, most of their OD remained aberrant (9 out of 11). Compared with that of preoperation, the MD of postoperative patients decreased significantly along left anterior thalamic radiation (ATR), left arcuate fasciculus (AF), left corticospinal tract (CST), left cingulum cingulate (CGC) and left inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus. Moreover, OD was negatively correlated with the absolute value of MD changes in left ATR, left AF, left CST and left CGC.
Conclusion Microstructural alterations after surgery in the visuospatial network tracts may contribute to the stereopsis restoration. Additionally, the results of the correlation analysis may signify that the balanced binocular input may be more conducive for the restoration and improvement of binocular visual function, including stereopsis. Thus, restoring normal ocular balance after surgical correction may be necessary to achieve more substantial improvements.
- treatment surgery
- visual perception
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Footnotes
Correction notice This article has been corrected since it first published. The provenance and peer review statement has been included.
Contributors Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work: YW, XW and LF. Contributions to the acquisition, analysis or interpretation of data: YW, HS, LX, JD, JDDU and DZ. Drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content: YW, XW, ANB, YL and BQ. Final approval of the version published: BQ and LF.
Funding This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant number 81701665).
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
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