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Re: Torsional Diplopia
Scott Seidman
25 Jan 2007 20:38
Simon Dean <sjdean@simtext.plus.com> wrote in news:51sgsfF1lvu49U1 @mid.individual.net:
> Now, would any prism glasses help with the decompensation, or would > prism glasses help all the time to relieve any mental/physical strain > with having to compensate all the time (if indeed that's what Im doing)?
If the diplopia is truly torsional, I don't think that a prism would help. Possibly, you might be able to use prisms to bring the eye to a horizontal/vertical position where secondary and tertiary muscles would resolve the torsional disparity, but it wouldn't be the same as using prism to resolve a horizontal disparity. I think there would be a low probability of success, and would require alot of trial and error, in any case.
The good news is that torsional fusion is more forgiving than vertical and horizontal, so you don't need to get as close.
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Simon Dean
25 Jan 2007 20:05
Ok,
So,
Let's say, I have a 4th Nerve Palsy which is causing a torsional diplopia. My fusional amplitudes are pretty good and I converge the images correctly most of the time, unless I go for those dissociation tests such as W4D and Maddox, but every now and again in the real world, I begin to decompensate.
Now, would any prism glasses help with the decompensation, or would prism glasses help all the time to relieve any mental/physical strain with having to compensate all the time (if indeed that's what Im doing)?
Am I getting a hang of these things now? Think I finally understand it.