Hatt S, Gnanaraj L
International Centre for Eye Health, c/o Cochrane Eyes and Vision Group, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London, UK WC1E 7HT.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006 Jul 19(3):CD003737. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003737.pub2.
The clinical management of intermittent exotropia has been discussed frequently in the literature, but there is a lack of clarity regarding the indications for intervention, the most effective type and if there is a time point at which it should be carried out.
The objective of this review was to analyse the effects of various surgical and non-surgical treatments in randomised trials of people with intermittent exotropia, to report intervention criteria and determine the significance of factors such as age with respect to outcome.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials - CENTRAL (which contains the Cochrane Eyes and Vision Group Trials Register) on The Cochrane Library (2006, Issue 1), MEDLINE (1966 to March 2006), EMBASE (1980 to March 2006) National Research Register (2006, Issue 1), PubMed (searched on 13 March 2006; last 90 days) and LILACS (Latin American and Caribbean Literature on Health Sciences) (1966 to 2002). We manually searched the British Orthoptic Journal, proceedings of the European Strabismological Association (ESA), International Strabismological Association (ISA) and American Academy of Paediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus meeting (AAPOS). We contacted researchers who are active in the field for information about further published or unpublished studies. There were no language restrictions in the manual or electronic searches.
We included randomised controlled trials of any surgical or non-surgical treatment for intermittent exotropia.
Each review author independently assessed study abstracts identified from the database and manual searches. Author analysis was then compared and full papers for appropriate studies were obtained.
We found one randomised trial that was eligible for inclusion. This trial showed that unilateral surgery was more effective than bilateral surgery for correcting basic intermittent exotropia.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The available literature consists mainly of retrospective case reviews which are difficult to reliably interpret and analyse. The one randomised trial included found unilateral surgery more effective than bilateral for basic intermittent exotropia but there remains a need for more carefully planned clinical trials to be undertaken to improve the evidence base for the management of this condition.
间歇性外斜视的临床管理在文献中已被频繁讨论,但在干预指征、最有效的类型以及是否存在应进行干预的时间点方面仍缺乏明确性。
本综述的目的是分析各种手术和非手术治疗在间歇性外斜视患者随机试验中的效果,报告干预标准并确定年龄等因素对结果的意义。
我们检索了Cochrane图书馆(2006年第1期)中的Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL,其中包含Cochrane眼科和视觉组试验注册库)、MEDLINE(1966年至2006年3月)、EMBASE(1980年至2006年3月)、国家研究注册库(2006年第1期)、PubMed(于2006年3月13日检索;过去90天)以及LILACS(拉丁美洲和加勒比地区卫生科学文献)(1966年至2002年)。我们手动检索了《英国斜视杂志》、欧洲斜视协会(ESA)会议记录、国际斜视协会(ISA)会议记录以及美国儿科学会眼科与斜视会议(AAPOS)。我们联系了该领域的活跃研究人员以获取有关进一步已发表或未发表研究的信息。在手动或电子检索中均无语言限制。
我们纳入了任何针对间歇性外斜视的手术或非手术治疗的随机对照试验。
每位综述作者独立评估从数据库和手动检索中识别出的研究摘要。然后比较作者分析结果,并获取适当研究的全文。
我们发现一项符合纳入标准的随机试验。该试验表明,在矫正基本型间歇性外斜视方面,单侧手术比双侧手术更有效。
现有文献主要由回顾性病例综述组成,难以进行可靠的解读和分析。纳入的一项随机试验发现,对于基本型间歇性外斜视,单侧手术比双侧手术更有效,但仍需要开展更精心设计的临床试验,以改善对这种疾病管理的证据基础。