Effectiveness and repeatability of eye-tracking-based test in strabismus measurement of children
Leilei Zou, Tian Tian, Tamara Wygnanski-Jaffe, Oren Yehezkel, Shu Wang, Avital Moshkovitz, Xinghuai Sun, Hong Liu, Rui Liu
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To assess the effectiveness of an eye-tracking-based test (ETBT) to measure eye deviation angle vs. a manual prism alternating cover test (PACT) in children with strabismus. DESIGN: The prospective, masked, cross-sectional study included 95 children aged 1.8 years and older. Eye deviation was tested twice by each of ETBT and PACT. Each subject underwent four strabismus measurements, two by the ETBT and two by PACT. In each test, subjects were fixated on accommodative targets at 50 cm, with habitual optical correction allowed. Masked examiners compared the manual PACT results with those of the ETBT. RESULTS: < .002). Age, strabismus type, and eye deviation measurement did not affect repeatability of ETBT. However, in PACT, results could not be correlated between the two examiners when the deviation was larger than 40 prism diopters. CONCLUSIONS: The ETBT was effective in measuring eye deviation in children as young as 1.8 years. The ETBT showed higher repeatability compared to PACT.