Strabismus Infravergent

Strabismus is an abnormality in the development or functioning of the visual organs, due to which one of the eyes is tilted to the side and is unable to focus normally on the image. The term denotes both a congenital pathological form of deviation of the eyes and their focusing on one object, and a physiological natural model characteristic of many animals and insects. Strabismus is characterized by one-sided deviation of the eye outward or inward, but can affect both eyes or their movements. Deviation of the affected eye results in loss of the eye's ability to perceive objects on the retina in peripheral vision, focus on them, distinguish objects, and orientate oneself. Coordination of movements and orientation in space are also impaired. Many cases of strabismus do not require intervention and go away as the child gets older. In children from 3 months to one and a half years, it is preferable that the left and right eyes look in different directions. They overlap and learn different things such as speech and vision. However, around this time, children suffering from infravergent strabismus begin to exhibit this anomaly. The inability of the eyes to control the functioning of the visual cortex and nerves of the brain is the cause of inverted strabismus. Etiology: Illusions, headache, dizziness, eye pain, traumatic brain injury. Hereditary factors, some genetic changes, spasm of accommodation, toxic poisoning. Treatment groups can be distinguished: medication treatment (miotics and vasodilators), surgical treatment, hardware treatment, and others. All methods should be used only after consulting a doctor.