Squint Treatment – Bharti Eye Foundation
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Muscles involved in squinting and eye movements
The six ocular muscles control eye movement. Our eyes moved by two muscles from top to bottom, two from left to right, and two more to help with rotation. When eye muscles are working properly, our eyes can sustain focus on a specific location. However, when the ocular muscles are not functioning properly, the eyes do not move together. The medical word for this is squint or strabismus. It could be fixed by squint treatment.
Squints (misalignments) come in three varieties: convergent (inwards), divergent (outwards), and horizontal (up or down).
Factors that lead to eye strabismus
Squinting techniques:
A congenital condition exists from birth. Children born prematurely who have retinal damage or those with an eye tumor.
If a gene connected to or linked to a disease, like down syndrome, it said to be hereditary.
- Squinting begins when six ocular muscles can govern and function effectively. The connected nerves and brain areas that control the extraocular muscles may in some manner be the cause of this disorder.
- a range of vision issues, such as myopia, hyperopia, and astigmatism. Conditions such as cerebral palsy, brain tumors, or hydrocephalus can all contribute to squinting (brain fluid).
Certain viral infections, including measles, can cause squinting.
There are four methods for treating squint:
- restoring vision and, if required, correcting it with eyeglasses.
- fixing an ocular alignment issue for cosmetic reasons.
- correcting deviations for functional reasons, such as regaining binocular vision.
- avoiding double vision
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